NIN.Earth proves the Future of the Internet

 

NIN.Earth proves the Future of the Internet

The Internet Now Needs 'Space'

The real-world position where we stand is defined by GPS/GNSS coordinates, and these coordinates match the coordinates of the Digital Earth.

In the AR/VR era, our physical location naturally becomes a gateway into digital space.

However, today’s internet still stays at the level of simple 'page-to-page links.' It is not deeply integrated with real-world location data.

As AR & VR technologies become common, a new internet structure, one that connects content through real-world coordinates, will become essential.


The Web Operating on the Digital Earth

With the rise of smart glasses and AR/VR headsets, the internet is shifting from simple connections to a spatial, real-world-linked structure.

NIN.Earth was built on the belief that the web should operate on top of the Digital Earth, the most accurate virtual representation of our physical world.


The Internet(Web) is humanity’s largest information network. The Digital Earth is a virtual space built over decades by scientists and engineers to reflect the real world with high precision.

When these two systems come together, the Internet(Web)’s connectivity and the Digital Earth’s real-world spatial layer expand each other. 

This combination forms the new Internet structure needed for the era of Smart-Glasses.


Core Structure: The Domain Space

NIN.Earth divides the entire Digital Earth into hexagonal tiles and allows each tile to be directly linked to a domain name.

We call this structure the 'Domain Space'.

A Domain Space tile can connect a web-page, AR object, and VR environment all through a single real-world coordinate.

This creates a new type of Internet—one that has locations you can access from anywhere.


The Change Has Already Begun

Users are already learning this new structure faster than expected and turning it into real business opportunities.

Shops are using AR Monuments to promote their stores and even run events that give drinks to customers who capture 3D objects.

Another user receives payment from local businesses to design Monument images and edit promotional videos.


These activities all operate on real-world coordinates, which makes them clearly different from existing AR platforms.

They demonstrate the first real signs that NIN.Earth’s new Internet structure is connecting directly to the real economy.

As Smart-Glasses become mainstream and traditional screens fade away, the Internet will naturally evolve toward structures like the Domain Space.