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How Does the Internet Work? - Glad You Asked S1 - YouTube
Channel: Vox
[2]
<i> ( music playing )</i>
[5]
Wait. That's the cable?
[9]
I was expecting something
so much bigger.
[11]
That's the internet.
[13]
To get across the ocean,
nearly all internet traffic
[17]
has to use a cable
like that one.
[19]
- It's tiny.
I'm so surprised.
- You're actually surprised.
[22]
I know, I could tell.
Love it.
[24]
All right, let's go get
some hard hats.
[27]
Cleo:<i> If you're watching
this YouTube video</i>
[29]
<i> anywhere outside
of the United State,</i>
[31]
this is probably
how it's getting to you.
[32]
<i> For most of us,
the internet is virtual.</i>
[35]
<i> It's made of Instagram posts
and e-mails and YouTube videos.</i>
[39]
<i>But it's also a physical thing,</i>
[40]
<i> and what it's made of
and where it goes matters</i>
[44]
<i>for how we use the internet now</i>
[46]
<i> and who will be benefit
in the future.</i>
[49]
<i> So I want to know how does
our internet really work</i>
[52]
<i> and what comes next?</i>
[53]
<i> ( music playing )</i>
[66]
<i> ( music playing )</i>
[74]
The decade I was born,
people were still learning
about the internet,
[77]
and they didn't exactly
consider it crucial.
[80]
But, you know,
I think about this.
[82]
What about this
internet thing?
[83]
What the hell
is that exactly?
[85]
And they call it
the World Wide Web.
[86]
You can e-mail anyone.
[88]
What the hell is e-mail?
[90]
Man: Can you believe
what's possible these days?
[92]
Conversations
through your computer.
[94]
Cleo: But now it seems we can't
even function without it.
[95]
Jobs require online
applications.
[98]
Parents around
the country know
[99]
that their kids can't get
an adequate education
[101]
without internet access.
[103]
I mean, people tweeting
that they needed
[104]
to be rescued
and a boat came in.
[106]
It's truly been life saving.
[108]
The internet has
become essential to us,
[109]
but a lot of us
still don't know how it works.
[117]
Okay, I need you
to close your eyes.
[119]
- All of us?
- Just trust me.
Just close your eyes.
[121]
Yeah, for real.
I'm serious.
Close your eyes.
[122]
What's the craziest thing
she could show us
[124]
- when we open our eyes?
- ( laughs )
[126]
- I hope it's kittens.
- Okay, now you can open them.
[129]
( screams )
[131]
- Joss: Tiny people!
- Alex: They're us.
[133]
Christophe:
It's tiny us.
[135]
So I know that there are three
major parts of the internet.
[138]
We are on this outer ring.
They call it the last mile,
[142]
but really it's the first
and last mile.
[144]
So it's the texts we send,
[145]
the notifications we receive,
the apps we use.
[148]
Everything we do to connect
or receive information
from the internet
[152]
happens in this first
and last mile.
[154]
And we are inside...
[158]
the Vox office.
[160]
Also out in this outer ring
are houses.
[163]
- You guys wanna help me
put these down?
- Yes.
[165]
- Trees.
- So all of the--
[166]
all of the trees
and all of the houses,
[168]
all Wi-Fi,
which uses routers
[170]
somewhere in our office
or somewhere in your home,
[173]
and all cell service,
[175]
which means that
you're paying a cell tower
[177]
a little bit further away,
[178]
but still pretty close by.
[180]
All this wireless technology
uses radio waves
[183]
to send signals into
and out of the internet.
[185]
I'm gonna show you
how this works.
[187]
But first,
I'm gonna take a selfie.
[194]
Perfect. Okay.
[196]
So this is our selfie.
I-- ( laughs )
[200]
- Joss, you've nailed that face.
- Yeah, it's my go-to.
[203]
So I'm just gonna send this
to you via e-mail.
[205]
- Typical e-mail.
- Typical e-mail.
[207]
- There it is.
- Boom.
[209]
- Ta-da.
- So my goal is to figure out
[213]
how my e-mail got
from my phone to yours.
[222]
In order for my e-mail
to get from here to here,
[227]
my phone takes that photo
[231]
and cuts it up
[234]
- into more manageable packets.
- No!
[238]
- We've been decapitated.
- Just--
[241]
- Christophe: Just me.
- Just you.
[243]
- So, imagine each packet
like a letter in an envelope.
- Uh-huh.
[247]
So, each envelope
gets a header,
[250]
which is a little bit more
information that includes--
[252]
- Christophe: Where it's from.
- Where it's from
and where it's going to,
[255]
and a bunch of other things
that we're not going
to talk about.
[257]
So the format of each header
follows a set of rules,
[260]
and you can think
about these rules
[261]
like the rules
of the online postal system.
[264]
How everything is packaged
and sent and received
on the internet.
[268]
So you've probably
heard people say that
everything that happens
[270]
in our computer
is ones and zeros.
[272]
- Right? Binary.
- I have. Yeah.
[274]
Cleo:
Which we can think of
[275]
as a kind of Morse code
your computer understands.
[277]
And everything that you send
over the internet
[279]
- is also binary.
- Mm-hmm.
[281]
Christophe:
( gasps ) What?
[284]
- Ta-da!
- When did this happen?
[286]
- What?
- I do magic now.
[289]
- Okay.
- Incredible.
[291]
So, each one or zero is a bit
[293]
and eight bits is a byte.
[298]
So, if this photo
was 1.1 megabytes
[302]
that's 8,800,000 ones
and zeros.
[307]
So, somehow
these binary ones and zeros
[310]
have to get onto radio waves
to be transported
[314]
- to the router, right?
- Exactly. Yes.
[316]
- Okay.
- And that's where
I got stuck.
[319]
So, I called up
Sundeep Rangan,
[321]
who specializes in
computer engineering at NYU.
[325]
How does a wave carry
binary information?
[328]
Ah, that is a very good
question.
[330]
So, the simplest thing
you could do
[332]
is every time you want
to transmit, say, a zero,
[335]
you could transmit
one frequency.
[337]
And every time you want
to transmit a one,
[339]
you transmit
a different frequency.
[340]
And then as long
as the receiver can detect
[343]
which frequency it is,
it can know it's a one or zero.
[345]
That's actually called
frequency modulation.
[347]
Is it also fair then to say
[349]
that at its most basic,
a cell phone is a radio?
[354]
Sundeep:
It is a radio.
[355]
It is absolutely a radio.
[356]
Okay, so waves
with binary information
[360]
have to get from my phone
to the router.
[362]
But then at the router,
they have to be turned
into something else
[365]
that can go out
the back of that device
[367]
along cables to get
to their next location.
[370]
Depending on what
the wire is made of,
[372]
it's either gonna be
pulses of electricity
[374]
if the wire is copper,
or pulses of laser light.
[379]
Sundeep:
So, it's a laser
and it just turns on
[381]
when there's a one,
it turns off when it's zero.
[382]
So, faster than this.
[384]
- A little bit faster than that.
- Faster than this?
[387]
So our photo went
from binary to radio waves
[391]
- to little flashes
of laser light, right?
- Yes.
[394]
Where does it go after that?
[396]
We're about to find out,
[398]
but I'm gonna take Alex.
[399]
- You're not taking me?
- No.
[400]
It's his turn. I gotta go.
[403]
Ooh.
[405]
So, the wires out
of the back of our router
[408]
connect to other wires
inside out office,
[410]
which are owned by our
internet service provider
[413]
- or ISP.
- Alex: Okay.
[414]
And they're responsible
for looking at the header
[416]
of each of those envelopes
[418]
and figuring out
the most efficient route
[420]
to get to its next location,
which is an internet hub.
[424]
- Alex: And where would that be?
- Cleo: Right there.
[426]
That's an internet hub.
[428]
- Alex: This old building?
- Cleo: Yeah.
[430]
- All right, let's go.
- It looks just like every other
[433]
office building
I've ever seen.
[435]
Greg Sisk: Well, it started as
Western Union's headquarters.
[438]
So, it supported telegraph
operators back in the day,
[441]
and it's migrated to today
[443]
where it's supporting
the internet
[446]
- here in lower Manhattan.
- That's poetic.
[449]
So all those wires all need
to come to a place like this
[452]
to connect between networks.
[454]
So, for our example, our ISP
in the office has a network.
[458]
And AT&T, which is
Christophe's cell provider,
has a network.
[462]
And in order for my e-mail
to get from my phone
[464]
into Christophe's phone,
[466]
all of those networks have
to send those ones and zeros
[469]
across those wire pathways.
[472]
There's so much that happens
[473]
in that split second
that you connect.
[475]
So there's really
no such thing as a cloud
[477]
or any type of magnanimous--
[480]
- The cloud is a marketing term.
- Yeah.
[483]
Cleo: The thing that
I find really amazing is that,
[485]
like, my e-mail is one
of the millions of messages
[489]
flowing through these cables.
[490]
That feels really abstract,
but it's actually--
[493]
there's a message
to somebody's mom
[496]
and there's
a college application
[497]
and there's a job offer.
[500]
And there's a dank meme
in here somewhere.
[502]
<i> ( music playing )</i>
[508]
Okay, so my e-mail became
a series of waves of light
[511]
that travels over the tubes
of the internet.
[514]
But what if I wanted to send it
somewhere really far away?
[517]
Somewhere on the other side
of the world?
[519]
We're in
Newington, New Hampshire,
to go to a factory
[521]
that's gonna show us
how the internet works
at long distances.
[524]
<i> We're headed
into the third layer,
the internet backbone.</i>
[528]
Oh, that's the cable highway.
[530]
What's the cable highway?
[532]
Cleo:<i>
That's where the cables go</i>
[534]
<i> from the factory down
to the dock.</i>
[536]
<i>The company we're gonna go see,</i>
[537]
<i> SubCom, is one of the top four
submarine cable providers</i>
[540]
<i> in the world.</i>
[542]
There's the ship.
[545]
- All right.
- Hi.
[547]
- Hi. I'm Alysia.
- Hi. I'm Cleo.
[548]
- So nice to meet you.
- Nice to meet you.
[550]
Alysia:
This is the SubCom Decisive.
[553]
She is a custom-built
cable installation
[556]
and maintenance vessel.
[557]
She's 139 meters long,
[559]
which is about 450 feet.
[560]
- Wow.
- Yeah.
[563]
Cleo:<i> The engineering and
material science at work here</i>
[565]
<i> are incredibly complex.</i>
[567]
But the basic process
is actually really simple.
[571]
Light goes in
on one side of the ocean
[573]
and comes out on the other.
[574]
So, as the Decisive moves
across the ocean,
[577]
the internet cable
is gonna come out the back
[579]
and be laid down behind it.
[582]
And sometimes it's gonna
be buried in the ocean floor
[584]
by that machine right there.
[587]
But most of the time
it's just gonna lay there
[590]
on the bottom of the ocean.
[592]
So, these are the two types
of cable that we have,
the two basic types.
[596]
So this one, this is called
lightweight cable.
[598]
So that's the one
that we would use
in the middle of the ocean.
[600]
And then this piece
is the stuff that we use
[603]
the plow to install
and actually bury.
[605]
And the cable is engineered
to be super strong
in a lot of ways,
[608]
but it is also very delicate
in a lot of other ways.
[611]
Cleo:<i> The wires that carry
the light waves themselves</i>
[614]
<i> are typically made
of fiberglass,</i>
[615]
<i> literally just
a continuous strand of glass</i>
[618]
<i>about the size of a human hair.</i>
[620]
Why is it that there are
so few fibers?
[622]
We're working on trying
to put more fibers
inside the cable
[625]
to get more data
into each fiber to make it
[628]
so that we can send more
information than what
we already have.
[630]
<i> ( music playing )</i>
[636]
Whoa!
[638]
- So that's the cable tank.
- Whoa.
[645]
Slow, slow.
We got the pipe.
We got the pipe.
[647]
Alysia:
Work it over.
Work it over.
[650]
What we're doing
is we're loading it
into the tank
[652]
in a continuous spool, right?
[655]
Is it, like, 10 tons,
50 tons?
[658]
Oh, we're loading
ten tons in a day.
[660]
Cleo:
Oh, my God. Cool.
[662]
Alysia: It's gonna end up being
about 60 days of plowing.
[664]
- Wow.
- Yeah.
[666]
Alysia:<i> So, 70 days total
to prep and install it.</i>
[673]
Okay, on the highway you have
two minutes until cable starts.
[676]
What do you want?
[678]
Cleo:<i> What blows me away
is just how much</i>
[679]
<i>hard physical labor is required
to make the internet work.</i>
[686]
Thank you.
[687]
<i> The craziest thing
is that this cable</i>
[689]
<i> is one of about 400
exactly like it</i>
[692]
<i> that create a web
around the Earth.</i>
[694]
- Oh.
- Wow!
[697]
So we're just gonna lay down
[699]
the undersea cables
of the internet
[701]
so that we can see
where they go.
[703]
Christophe, you get Africa,
[705]
and I'll give you
part of Europe.
[707]
Joss: I love the one
that goes across
the Great Lakes.
[710]
Cleo: You guys wanna see
what the internet
actually looks like?
[712]
- Yeah, totally do.
- Okay.
[714]
- Whoa.
- Wow.
[715]
- Whoa!
- That's crazy.
[717]
Oh, there's, like,
all this metal in here.
[720]
Seems like a shark
could take a bite out
of that pretty easily.
[722]
- I was gonna say
the same thing.
- I'm so happy you said that.
[726]
- Does that happen?
- Yes.
[728]
So there's this video
of a shark
[730]
biting a cable like this
of the internet.
[733]
- Oh, there he is.
- He's a big boy.
[736]
Big boy. Nom.
[739]
- Oh, doesn't taste good.
- Oh, that probably
hurt his teeth.
[742]
- I know, poor guy.
- He didn't like it.
[744]
So, after that video
went viral in 2014,
[747]
the Internet Cable
Protection Committee,
[750]
released this report
that has my favorite title
of any report of all time,
[753]
which is
"Sharks are not the Nemesis
of the Internet."
[757]
The vast majority of faults
are caused by human activity.
[761]
- It's, like,
fishing, anchors.
- Anchors.
[764]
- Drilling. Yeah.
- Stuff like that.
[766]
Woman:<i>
The kingdom of Tonga</i>
[767]
<i> has faced a cell phone
and internet crisis</i>
[769]
<i> after a fault in a fiber optic
submarine cable</i>
[773]
cut its main connection
with the world.
[775]
Cleo: In January 2019,
experts believe
[778]
that an oil tanker
dragged an anchor across
the seabed here,
[783]
which of course caused a really
big problem for Tonga.
[786]
What is the problem?
If it's in land,
[788]
when it's in land,
it's all in land in Fiji,
a quick fix.
[791]
But if it's in the water?
Ooh-ya, ooh-ya, ooh-ya.
[794]
It's gonna take a long,
long time.
[797]
And it took 13 days
to get the internet back.
[801]
- 13 days.
- Long days and nights.
[803]
That's a long time.
[805]
So if you live in one of these
heavily connected places
[808]
like the United States or many,
many other parts of the world,
[811]
it is very, very unlikely
[813]
that an anchor cutting
a part of your internet
[816]
is gonna interrupt
your service.
[818]
But what happened in Tonga
does call attention
[821]
to how important
this infrastructure is
[823]
and how much we rely on it.
[824]
I feel like, I mean,
I've never lived in a time
[826]
when all of these tools
were not part of my daily life.
[829]
It's kind of sad
that it's not something
that's available to everyone.
[833]
Yeah, exactly.
[834]
There are lots
of people that still
[836]
don't have reliable internet
access in the first place.
[839]
<i> I wanted to find out more
about how we could actually
solve that problem.</i>
[842]
<i> ( music playing )</i>
[847]
So we're here in Nevada
to see a company
[849]
that's helping more people
get access to the internet.
[851]
But before we get there,
I have some maps to show you.
[857]
This is a basic map
of the internet backbone
in the United States.
[860]
You can tell just
by looking at this map
[862]
why it might be that
some people have a hard time
[864]
getting low cost,
high speed internet.
[866]
Companies aren't as incentivized
to lay fiber optic cabling
[869]
where there are fewer people
there to pay them for it.
[872]
The same applies
to low income areas.
[873]
This map shows the areas
that researchers call
[876]
uneconomic for companies in red,
[879]
meaning that the typical
monthly costs
[880]
exceed the expected
monthly revenue.
[884]
In many of these red areas,
people only have one
[886]
or two options for
internet service providers,
[888]
meaning that those service
providers can jack up the costs.
[893]
The darker the country,
the more people there
[895]
are paying
for internet service.
[897]
So there's a lot of variety
around the world
[899]
and even within countries
in terms of who has access
[902]
to the internet
and at what cost,
[903]
and that has a huge impact
on people.
[906]
<i> ( music playing )</i>
[910]
If you haven't heard about 5G,
[912]
get ready for a faster
internet connection.
[914]
Man: 5G could end up
being 100 times faster
[916]
than what we have now.
[918]
Instead of having a cell tower
every few miles,
[921]
- Woman: Yeah.
- 5G requires that
we literally need
[923]
an antenna
on every square block.
[926]
Okay, hold on.
[927]
What really is 5G
and why would it be so fast?
[931]
Well, remember
those radio waves?
[933]
One of the major innovations
of 5G is the ability
[936]
to use higher frequency waves.
[938]
Because at higher frequencies,
you can pack more information
[941]
into each wave.
Here's the catch.
[944]
At higher frequencies, it's
easier to block those waves.
[947]
I mean, visible light is
very high frequency
[949]
and I can block it with my hand.
[951]
That's not a problem
for fiber optic cables
[953]
because they're basically
long glass laser light tunnels.
[956]
But 5G has to reach you
wirelessly wherever you are,
[960]
so that would mean
they would need a lot more
[962]
physical infrastructure.
[964]
Of course, new infrastructure
costs money.
[966]
Companies have
the same incentives
[968]
for where to put 5G
that they had before.
[970]
Cities, not rural areas,
[973]
rich communities,
not poor ones.
[975]
So 5G could be an exciting way
to improve internet service
[978]
for people who have
fast access already.
[981]
But the tech required
means it's unlikely to help
people who don't.
[984]
At least not any time soon.
[985]
<i> ( music playing )</i>
[988]
Cleo:<i>
We're here to see Loon,</i>
[990]
<i> and what they do
is they send balloons</i>
[992]
<i> into the stratosphere
to provide internet access</i>
[994]
<i> to people below radio waves.</i>
[996]
Loon is a connectivity company
[998]
that's really focused
on the unconnected
and the under-connected.
[1002]
Cleo:<i>
Loon is owned by Alphabet,
which also owns Google</i>
[1005]
<i> and YouTube,
who funded this show.</i>
[1006]
<i> but Loon didn't have any say
over our editorial.</i>
[1009]
So, they can't actually
launch a balloon today,
[1011]
because there was
a huge storm yesterday,
[1013]
which kind of also
goes to show
[1015]
how finicky
a lot of this stuff is.
[1017]
But what you have to imagine
[1019]
is that there's
a balloon in there
[1021]
and then it launches
from that large red thing
up into the sky,
[1025]
and it uses stratospheric winds
[1027]
to navigate
to its next location,
[1029]
which could be on
the other side of the world.
[1031]
<i> ( music playing )</i>
[1037]
So, you can see a number
of balloons over here
[1040]
in South America,
and you can see
[1042]
what altitude they're at,
like, at 60,000 feet,
[1046]
and basically
where they're flying.
[1047]
<i> ( music playing )</i>
[1049]
This is the hatchery.
This is where we build
[1052]
and test all
of our flight systems
[1055]
before they
go out to launch.
[1057]
- So this is the balloon.
- This is the balloon.
[1059]
And then the part that flies
with the balloon--
[1061]
- It's this flight system
here and the solar panels.
- Got it.
[1064]
And the brains of it
are in that box...
[1067]
- This box?
- ...that's being cooled by
those fans right now.
[1069]
And so what we do
is we put a ground station
[1071]
in a point of vantage
where it can see the sky.
[1073]
And then from there,
it can actually talk to
one of our balloons.
[1076]
<i> Our balloons can talk
to each other</i>
[1078]
<i> and they're talking
via radio waves.</i>
[1080]
<i> And then from one
of those balloons</i>
[1083]
<i> that's over the top
of your phone,</i>
[1084]
<i> there's transmit
and receive frequencies</i>
[1086]
<i> that are going down
to your phone.</i>
[1089]
What are some
of the best examples
[1090]
that you've been most
excited about where--
[1092]
Yeah, when Hurricane Maria
[1093]
hit Puerto Rico
and the Caribbean Islands,
[1096]
we were able to fly balloons
over the top of Puerto Rico.
[1099]
And within a couple weeks,
we were able to serve
[1101]
about a quarter million
subscribers.
[1102]
- Wow.
- And it's enough to know
[1104]
that a user on the ground
[1106]
was able to get out
a text message or an e-mail
[1109]
or a note to a loved one
or something like that.
[1111]
<i> ( music playing )</i>
[1115]
Amazon has Project Kupier
and SpaceX has Starlink.
[1119]
It seems like
this is becoming something
that more and more
[1121]
- companies are focusing on.
- Yeah, absolutely.
[1123]
The more the merrier,
because there's a lot
of people to connect.
[1126]
Cleo: These are all space
or near space systems
[1128]
that use radio waves to get
people access to the internet.
[1131]
And that's one reason
why it's unlikely
[1132]
that they're gonna replace
good old cables.
[1135]
Radio waves and laser light
[1137]
and all of these different
types of technology
[1139]
that help us get access
to the internet
[1140]
all in the end
need to work together.
[1143]
We don't seek to replace fiber
or replace satellites.
[1146]
They're very complementary
technologies.
[1148]
Going into space
is still a new thing.
[1149]
I'm pretty confident
about my job prospects
[1151]
for at least the next while.
[1153]
The internet isn't a luxury.
We don't just want to connect.
[1157]
We need to to be a part
of this massive,
[1160]
crucial, sometimes infuriating
global community.
[1164]
So as you check the news
or message a friend
[1166]
or watch a YouTube video,
consider this,
[1169]
our connections
have never been virtual.
[1171]
They're physical,
and they're still very much
a work in progress.
[1177]
Hey. Want more episodes
of "Glad You Asked"?
[1180]
You can find them here,
[1181]
and you can find more
from YouTube Learning here.
[1184]
"Glad You Asked,"
"YouTube Learning."
[1186]
"Glad You Asked,"
"YouTube Learning."
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