Five Things Nokia Needs To Do To Improve Our Lives _BEST_
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5G will provide the fabric for a better world. We offer a broad innovative portfolio of solutions to underpin a more digital and sustainable world. 5G will deliver many things, from instant data, access and experiences to more efficient, productive and sustainable industry. Above all, it will be the great enabler, improving lives and creating a safer, more sustainable society. 5G provides the foundation for more productive, sustainable and prosperous society. It will underpin and bring together the power of Artificial Intelligence, Virtual and Augmented Reality, Blockchain and other new technologies and enable smarter working and living.
The transition to 5G is expected to be unlike any previous development in mobile communications. The order of magnitude improvement 5G will generate in data transmission will support a wide range of innovative technologies and business transformation needs.
We'd like to spare you any more storm analogies, but let's just say that the thunderclap of tech news continued this week with the first wave of reviews of Apple's new iPad Mini, Microsoft's big launch event for Windows Phone 8, and a refresh from Google on its Nexus smartphones and tablets. Here are five things you need to know about this week in tech:
I think different companies were grasping at the same factors but it was a different operating environment. Again, you can look twenty years out and see undeniable demographic data that we are going to have this number of Baby Boomers reaching retirement. The data is there, you know it's coming, you just have to decide what to do with it. Three to five years ago we were looking at a much more closed technology environment where it was going to have to be a Microsoft solution, an IBM solution or an HP solution. It was probably much more focused on doctor's technologies that were more focused on purely clinical or medical in their nature. Developing an application for just one of the handsets makes it much more difficult to scale up, but in the past four or five years across so many technology areas we have seen an opening of platforms. This has allowed more things to connect to other things -- devices connecting to platforms. Now you can take a somewhat open mobile platform, in the sense that there is a software development kit for an iPhone or an Android phone and anyone can write for it. It really opens up the gates of innovation. On the one side, on the innovation side, that's a key factor: There are so many more points of entry into this market now than there were five years ago is remarkable.
I think carriers are more comfortable but that's not to imply that the importance of these liability issues have diminished at all. It's more about finding ways to manage them. Already, operators carry emergency services communications and I think they will find ways to solve that problem. The opportunity is too great. If you look five or ten years down the road and start to talk about a SIM card in every device, in every medical device, then yes, they are going to want that opportunity. They will want to take advantage of it. They will find ways to work around it, deal with it or to maybe develop multiple tiers of service. It's probably no different from non-medical wireless services that have mission critical status. Emergency services for police are a great example. Finding ways to meet the various reliability needs of different markets is something they have done in the past. I am sure people like IBM and Qualcomm are on that right now. We often tend to forget as we are looking at consumer markets how much is happening in non-consumer markets that is much more heavy-duty and reliable.
But more than just for its entertainment and recreational value, 5G internet can actually save lives. It will boost the performance of self-driving softwares in autonomous cars and improve remote tele-surgery, among other technology that relies on the internet to facilitate operation.
Cellular phones have had a major impact on our lives and the way that we perform every day tasks. Many of these changes are apparent, while others we may not even be aware of.Cell phones have brought a whole new meaning to the term multitasking. Twenty years ago, it was not possible to talk to the office while you were at the grocery store picking up some necessary items. You could never have had a three-way business conference while you were fixing dinner or been able to deal with a business client from home while caring for a sick child. Cell phones have enabled us to do various tasks all at the same time. (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});Cell phones have also enabled families to keep in closer touch with each other. Children can contact you if they have missed their ride form soccer practice and your spouse can call while he is stuck in traffic to let you know that he is going to be late for supper. Teenagers are able to call to ask permission to go somewhere, and with GPS features that are now available on some cell phones, you are able to check to make sure that they are where they are suppose to be.Many of these advantages we do not even notice. Have you ever arrived at the grocery store and realized that you have forgotten your grocery list? The first thing you would probably do is to call home and have one of your children read the list off to you. In the same situation in past years, you may have forgotten things or have had to drive all the way back home to get it. If your car breaks down, you automatically call for help instead of having to walk to find a pay phone. Cell phones have certainly made our lives much more convenient.Cell phones have also changed the way that people interact with each other. When we call someone, we are actually calling the person and not a place. This enables us to be more spontaneous when making plans as you rarely get a busy signal and unlike a land line telephone, someone is always home. Cell phones also enable us to call if we are going to be late for an appointment, although this has led to cell phone users running late more often than those who do not have cell phones. These users seem to have adopted the attitude that appointment times are not concrete and use their cell phones to renegotiate their arrival time.One of the greatest disadvantages of the cellular phone is the fact that we do not talk to strangers when traveling anymore. In the past, several people waiting for a bus would engage in a conversation while they were waiting. People who traveled the same routes every day might develop friendships along the way. This situation does not happen anymore. Today when people are waiting for a bus, they just pull out their cell phones and speak with old friends, missing out on the opportunity to make new ones. In large cities, many people do not know their neighbors, even though they may have lived in the same neighborhood for years. As a society, we are beginning to lose the face-to-face contact that was such an important part of our lives in the past.Cell phones are a great asset in aiding in our every day lives. You should remember, however, to hang up every once in a while and pay attention to the world around you.
Despite the stratospheric cost of third generation (3G) licence auctions in Europe, operators will achieve payback within five years of kicking off the services, says Nokia. Unsurprisingly Nokia is coy when asked what the payback period would have been if the auctions hadn't wound up raising $30 billion-plus a pop (Two weeks? Three weeks?), but the company has some interesting things to say on the subject of why 3G licences should be profitable, even after hyper inflation of the prices. 2b1af7f3a8