Mobile phones will become distributed computing platforms in the future,
according to Nokia.
Bob Iannucci, head of Nokia's research centre, told
vnunet.com of a fundamental shift in mobile
phone technology as handsets develop from relying exclusively on embedded
software, to more open platforms that can be configured by users.
Phones will become distributed computing devices, a trend driven in part by
power and performance limitations with existing technology, Iannucci said.
"There is about a 3w limit for phones, any more than that and it starts to
get too hot," he explained.
"It is possible to use the phone as part of distributed computing network,
splitting the application between phone and network. This saves power and allows
application developers to try new techniques."
Iannucci said that the first mobile phones were developed by engineers who
specialised in embedded software that could not be changed. They were referred
to as terminals, as in the 'end of the network'.
Nokia now sees the phone as a mobile computing platform on which people will
want to customise the software they use. The handset also acts as a gateway to
third-party services.
As the internet moves towards an architecture built around web services the
opportunity to split applications between the phone and the network could cut
power consumption and open up new uses for the phone.
These could include content distribution via a
BitTorrent-style
application, or adding continual updates to an online community.
"We are already seeing the first stages of this," said Tapani Ryhänen, head
of multimedia devices research at Nokia.
"The phone is turning into an essential interface device to which we add lots
of information around us. It is also a networking device, with standards like
Universal
Plug and Play."
Ryhänen added that in the future the mobile phone would be an essential part
of any home network.
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