On the Relationship between Internet and Traditional Communication Industry
Abstract
China's history and culture are long. It is the famous state of etiquette. People through a certain form of rituals and a certain way of cultural activities to carry out their thoughts and feelings. In real life, everyone often uses a series of applications such as traditional letters, business cards, stickers, announcements, essay inscriptions, couplets, modern such as telegraph, fax, express mail, e-mail and so on. These applications include rich ritual content, with a strong cultural color of the Chinese nation. From the earliest Pigeon biography to today's videophone, the traditional communications industry has a complex development process. At diff erent times have diff erent roles, and also has a lot of convenience and inconvenience. Because of this inconvenience, Internet in real life is more widely used, so to a certain extent make up for this shortcoming, this article will focus on the Internet and traditional communications industry in order to explore the relationship between both and the future development trend.Copyright (c) 2018 Junlong Fang

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
Copyright on any open access article in a journal published by PiscoMed Publishing is retained by the author(s).
Authors grant PiscoMed Publishing a license to publish, copy, distribute, and convey the article.
The current adopted license, the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0), formalizes these and other terms and conditions of publishing articles. The license (CC BY 4.0) means:
Share: Everyone can copy and redistribute the open-access content in the journal.
Adapt: Materials in the articles can be remixed, reused, and reanalyzed for any purpose.
Attribution: You must cite the source with the correct license if some changes to the materials are made, but that does not mean that the licensor endorses you or your use.
Authors should ensure that the content of the article is not involved in a copyright dispute before submitting it. For previously published articles, authors should obtain permission from the copyright holder if the material is under a more restrictive license.
References
(US) Kemo, Lan Xiaofeng translation, 'internet technology foundation', 2003;
Zhang Yan, 'network management and maintenance master', 2008;
Xu Jingdong, Zhang Jianzhong, 'Internet (Internet) tutorial', 2004;
Shen Subin, 'Network Security Principles and Applications', 2005;
Heilin, 'strategic management of technological innovation', 2001;
(English) David Lee, 'get more profi ts', 20