The Future of Everything

The future of networking technology

Apr 10, 2026
Keith Winstein, a Stanford computer scientist who builds low-latency systems and studies verifiable computation, explores how networks create shared digital fictions. He talks about computational truth, naming and auditing computations for accountability, redesigning cloud incentives, and engineering ultra-low-latency systems for live music and theater. Short, provocative, and playful takes on networking’s technical and social stakes.
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INSIGHT

Digital Shared Fictions Of Networking

  • Networks create shared digital fictions where computers agree a meeting or stream exists only because they act as if it does.
  • Keith Winstein explains TCP streams and applications like Zoom or games are illusions synthesized by communicating machines.
INSIGHT

Missing Provenance Of Computations

  • Current tools track data composition well but forget computational relationships that produced results.
  • Winstein highlights missing links: which script ran which data to produce a graph is typically not recorded or shared.
ADVICE

Shift Cloud Pricing To Pay For Results

  • Move cloud billing from pay-for-effort to pay-for-results to incentivize efficiency and innovation.
  • Winstein contrasts per-millisecond metering that rewards slowness with a proposed commodity: a verifiable computational result F(x)=y.
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