No, I don't see that the technology will be always chasing its tail.
There are two levels or flows of technology that have been going concurrently. The first is the increased bandwidth. We've been able to increase the amount of bandwidth that we've been able to shove down the pipes and provide to the people. My God, when I got 3G, I remember in 1998 reading an article about Korea launching their five-megabyte phone service. It was a huge flop because nobody used it except for making phone calls. Nobody had developed an app or a smartphone yet. There was this infrastructure that was built way ahead of what the technology, on the one side, was able to use. Then the phone came in and overwhelmed the broadband capability for how much was required.
The parallel I'm talking about is that at the same time as you had speeds increasing, you had people working very hard on codecs to reduce the video compression technology. They were using less and less bandwidth at the same time as the growth. As for a gigabyte of data, I don't know, but I can't imagine right now how one would use a gigabyte of streaming data. I just can't imagine it. I think that if you had a gigabyte up and down, there would just.... I can't imagine what you would use to take up that much bandwidth. I just can't imagine it.