Tracing human civilization from stone age, we find migration to avail better living conditions and opportunities a 60,000 year old phenomenon. Will this trend end if goods and services move worldwide without human relocation and bring prosperity to your doorstep
2. 60,000 years ago the ‘San’ tribe or bushmen of South Africa were the first stone age human inhabitants
3. They were hunters and gatherers who lived in groups of 30 to 40, and who moved from place to place in search of herds of animals to hunt
4. They communicated by the means of the !XU language, which comprised of 141 distinct clicking sounds resembling water drops or clicking hooves, almost like beats of a digital instrument
5. They created more than 40,000 rock art paintings in the caves of Southern Africa's snow covered Drakensberg mountains, telling a story of their way of life. This was possibly the only way of communicating the knowledge of the terrain and the animals, among the often migrating semi- nomadic tribes
6. The communication through rock art was probably an early effort to create content or data banks of information from which subsequent generations could know about; not only the patterns of food , animal migration and livelihood but also about shifting landmasses, climate change and nature’s mysteries which affected them. A communication which could have made this nomadic man trek 5000 miles east, over the glacial Pleistocene to the safety of Australasia, in 40,000 B.C
7. 40,000 years ago the African bushmen migrated through land and over frozen seas to Australia
8. The earliest Australian hunter gatherer was the aborigine tribe better known as the Mungo Man
9.
10. ‘ The birth of the platypus’ is the oldest known story – over 100,000 years ago The invention of the boomerang was a story told at least 25,000 years ago The dreaming story of how death came into the world The dreaming story of the birth of Sun are among the many famous aborigine dreaming stories.
11.
12. Stories networked through Txt, sms, micro blogging, telephone, pitch presentations, internet, video, audio, print media, cinema and television Content is the story, the soul of virtual networking. Networking makes the throw more powerful than the boomerang or the modern missile Content is the deliverable. Networking is the launch vehicle Content is the single largest product on the globe. Networking can pitch forth content to propel any and all products, services & relationships. Networking enables deliver services worldwide.
13. Networking drives content Content drives thought Together they make or break the world Content Delivery Systems : News Content Delivery System Entertainment & Arts Content Delivery Systems : Social Media Content Delivery Systems : Advertisement and promotion
14.
15. Virtual world Web 2.0 Web 3.0 Grid 1.0 Canadian Apples Indian Textiles European Machinery Chinese Computers Japanese Robots African Minerals American Networking Global Content
16. Virtual networking needs no H1B Virtual networking needs no work permit Virtual networking needs no office space Virtual networking saves resources, is eco-friendly Virtual networking is available 24x7 Virtual networking reduces cost Will virtual networking end human migration?
17. Our heartfelt thanks to Google images, Wikipedia, South African and Australian tourism culture and arts sites, aborigine culture stories, Drakensberg rock art and other social and cultural groups, besides image sites without which this presentation would not be possible. Our goal is to help promote clean, safe and eco-friendly practices in economy and ecology worldwide, balanced, efficient and a little more sustainable.