How to stop Facebook and Apple from taking over the mobile phone industry

Streaming operating systems, virtualizing base stations


By Kieren McCarthy in San Francisco 14 Sep 2017 at 20:33
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2017/09/14/stopping_facebook_apple_taking_over_mobe_industry


Cloudflare Internet Summit:  At the launch of the Mobile World Congress earlier 
this week, the mobile industry begrudgingly accepted that tech giants like 
Facebook, Apple and Google were increasingly influencing its business.

At the same time, a new report from the mobile industry pointed – with a degree 
of desperate hope – toward virtual reality, smart cities and homes, fitness 
trackers and smartphones as the answer to the looming power of these few but 
powerful digital dictators.

The more applications, the more operating systems, the more uses that the 
mobile operators need to serve through their networks, the more say they will 
have over how things work. Not everything will be built around the iPhone.

At the Cloudflare Internet Summit on Thursday, a different path to freedom was 
discussed: building next-generation networks that tip the balance of power the 
other way.

Cole Crawford is CEO of Vapor IO – a platform for edge clouds that pushes cloud 
computing closer to devices themselves and allows for more autonomous data 
center ops – and Chaitali Sengupta is a consultant with Qualcomm Datacenter 
Technologies looking at the new opportunities that the latest technology offers.

Both of them are confident that new virtualization software and faster 5G 
networks – they will arrive en masse at the end of next year – will see a 
radical shift in how mobile networks actually work.

Instead of a centralized system where your mobile device is constantly talking 
to a far off (both physically and in network terms) system to get information, 
they expect to see a much more decentralized and virtualized system.

Need for speed

The base stations that you walk past and constantly switch between in the real 
world will become less dumb terminals and more their own servers, holding 
cached information and services. That means your mobile experience becomes much 
faster and more efficient.

It also means that mobile operators can maintain their competitive advantage in 
a market that the tech giants are starting to impinge on.

Crawford notes that Facebook has set up a network of its own base stations in 
India, using unlicensed spectrum to effectively bypass the traditional mobile 
networks altogether.

"We must not be out-innovated," he warns. And to that end, the mobile industry 
is working hard on coming to a consensus faster on new standards so they can be 
rolled out sooner and more effectively. Crawford cites claims from T‑Mobile 
last week that it will be able to roll out 5G networks in just six months, 
where its previous network upgrade took 24 months.

According to Crawford, that mobile connection – from your phone to the base 
station – is "just as real as glass in the ground," meaning that the mobile 
connection is as important as the physical telecommunication networks that 
connect up the world.

Of course, this comes from a man whose entire business is based on their edge 
connection, but nevertheless with the world increasingly accessing the internet 
and tying in their everyday lives to what they bring up on their phones, the 
importance of that connection is increasingly critical.

But even if mobile networks can continue to offer the best mobile-to-internet 
connection against competition from Facebook, Google and others, there is still 
the issue of operating systems.

Leverage

With the effective death of Microsoft's phones, the whole mobile world is 
relying on Apple's iOS and Google's Android – and that gives those companies 
enormous leverage over what does and does not happen.

Crawford warns that iOS and Android are going to remain the standards "for a 
long time," but he also points to the extra speeds of 5G and the ability to 
shift intelligence to the edge as a possible harbinger of a wildly different 
future. In short, OSaaS – operating system as a service.

"We are entering a phase where you could stream an operating system to a phone 
over 5G," he noted. And that really could explode things. No longer would you 
have to rely on the operating system that comes with your over-priced iPhone 
and the walled garden that comes with it.

Instead, the next generation of mobile devices could simply stream their 
open-source operating system – and with a whole world of applications and 
services that don't require Apple or Google's official sign-off.

It's one view of a future world where those in Cupertino and Mountain View 
start to lose their growing stranglehold over everything to do with computing. 
Will it happen? We'll have to wait and see.
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