5G

Mobile World Congress 2018- Banana Phones and So Much More!

Nokia's banana phone relaunch was a huge hit

Nokia's banana phone relaunch was a huge hit

The kinetic bustle of the 2018 edition of the Mobile World Congress began to taper mid-afternoon last Thursday, after a non-stop week of product launches, keynotes, rabid networking, and general spectacle. There’s always a certain amount of FOMO anxiety at the beginning of the week, given the near-infinite number of people to meet and things to see, but I’d doubt any attendee leaves disappointed given the smorgasbord of activity to choose from.

That said, adrenaline regularly spars with exhaustion during MWC, as the sheer size of the event and its myriad offerings can quickly take their toll, this despite the superheroic logistical and organizational skills of the GSMA and the Fira Barcelona, the week’s hosts.

Indeed, you can easily spot the seasoned MWC veterans from their near-orthopedic footwear choices.

Ericsson alone constructs what’s essentially a complete city of 6,000m2 in one of the eight halls at the conference. I mean, you can see the thing from space.

My two fitness trackers dutifully reported that I scampered about at a decent clip, clocking over 50 kilometers in total- not bad for a work week. Also, it snowed! In Barcelona!

Amidst the swirl and twirl of 107,000 attendees and more than 2,300 exhibiting companies, a few trends stuck out:

5G Networks

Everybody talked about it non-stop. Disappointingly though, in an echo of 2017, there seemed to be more breathless exaltation of future promise than concrete use cases, at least so far. Regardless, large operators are trundling along with plans for launch, with many vowing to be the first/biggest/most robust 5G provider. Devices still don’t seem like they’ll be readily available until 2019- there were a handful at the show- so all this full steam ahead does seem a bit premature. That said, T-Mobile wants to build out 30 5G networks this year in major US cities, Huawei said it signed MOUs with 45 operators to offer 5G services, etc. Key takeaway: hurry up and wait. Let’s see what comes to the table at MWC19.

Tech For Good

MWC can often seem an abandon of tech worship heedless of consequence, focused on the next big thing and how best to commercialize it.

Increasingly though, it seems like real substantial tech is being applied to global inequalities, with progressive result.

For example, Kathy Calvin of the United Nations Foundation highlighted the issue of “the unconnected,” alluding to the world’s population still without internet access, and the challenge of bringing the internet to them. Referring to great swathes of humanity as “the unconnected” somehow elicits visions of a zombie-apocalypse army rattling the gates of the world’s internet providers, but I get her point.

There still remain significant barriers to internet access for huge numbers of people- not only affordability and the concomitant knowledge set required to really harness its benefits, but also, the relevancy of the content.

This latter point requires more attention- is there content, in my language, that’s really useful to me? For healthcare, finance, community building? If not, finally getting internet access won’t make much difference.

Also falling under the heading of connecting the unconnected, I spent some time with the team from MasterCard discussing IoT and Artificial Intelligence for payments. They’ve developed an M-Pesa system in Kenya for mobile payments that allows people in rural or underserved communities without access to traditional financial services to build credit. IoT takes an even more prominent role when eventually the ecosystem becomes sophisticated enough to be used to purchase transport services, pay to use washing machines, etc.

The World Bank and GSMA also announced they’ll work together to harness IoT data for everything from economic growth to tracking epidemics. Excellent.

Very happy too to see a robust Women4Tech program at MWC this year, with many female founders, CEOs, CTOs, CMOs, etc. sharing the limelight. Also excellent.

Emerging Industrial IoT Verticals

For industrial IoT, my one true love, I looked a lot for applications in non-traditional verticals. We typically think of hardware and platforms geared more towards manufacturing, transport and logistics, energy systems, etc. but lots of other verticals are beginning to flourish in an increasingly rich and diverse IoT ecosystem.

Turkcell for example had a new service in their Lifecell OTT system which they’re beginning to market to other operators. I spent a great hour with their guys learning about their IoT solutions for agriculture. Field towers with sensors for temperature, humidity, air conditions, soil quality etc. that can cover up to a football field of range increase efficiency and reduce cost and waste for farmers. Well done.

Turkcell had a great industrial IoT sensor solution for agriculture

Turkcell had a great industrial IoT sensor solution for agriculture

Wearables Exhaustion?

Wearables are generally more the purview of the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas each January, but the theme still pops up at MWC. I had a great chat with a Finnish start-up, Haltian, which has been developing a beautifully designed silver-finish ring with embedded sensors that can monitor everything from heart rate to activity tracking to sleep patterns.

Haltian's sensor-embedded design ring

Haltian's sensor-embedded design ring

There did seem to be some sense of wearables-exhaustion though. With dozens of devices on the market metering everything from daily steps to sneeze frequency, I’ve heard backlash that people are ready to fling off their FitBits and climb their staircases in peace. I do think though that as the market shakes out and consolidates great solutions will continue to develop for at-risk populations like the elderly, individuals with chronic illnesses such as diabetes that need frequent monitoring, etc.

Also, Nokia Launched a Banana Phone- Cute!

In the absence of any really transcendent device launch from Samsung, Huawei and the like, Nokia continued to be a beacon of quirky, retro delight. MWC’s 2017 nostalgia winner was the relaunch of the Nokia 3310, while this year’s 8110 model was even more charming. I mean really, what’s more refreshing than a sturdy banana phone after you’ve cracked your iPhone screen for the hundredth time?

Uppity Sailfish Keep The Operating System Battle Interesting

Also, what? A competitor operating system? Bless the improbable longshot taking a go at iOS and Android.  The team from Jolla is gathered from a group of ex-Nokia staff, and developed the Sailfish operating system and a smattering of phones and an ill-fated tablet to go with it, but it seems that a few years later Finnish ingenuity just keeps on trucking, against all odds. It may seem bonkers to compete with Android and iOS but it’s important to keep the ecosystem diverse and healthy by having underdogs nipping about, especially when Android seemed to completely dominate MWC this year. Time will tell how much traction Sailfish gets- the Russian government implemented it, so there’s that- but you have to admit it takes guts to go up against such heavyweight competitors. The team said Sailfish 3 will be publicly available in Q3 this year. 

#mwc #5G #IIoT #Nokia8100 #Sailfish #Women4Tech

Mobile World Congress Barcelona 2018 – What I’m Looking Out For

Another Mobile World Congress is upon us! Last year’s edition broke yet another attendance record, rounding out at 108,000 visitors and occupying every last corner of the substantial conference space that the Fira de Barcelona boasts. The congress extends its reach far into the city over the course of the week, with restaurants, hotels, and hot nightspots teeming over with visitors and booked out far in advance.

For the last several years I’ve been lucky to visit firsthand as an attendee, first during business school at ESADE and now representing the IoT Solutions World Congress. My team and I will be there with our partner, the Industrial Internet Consortium, and will meet with industrial IoT companies, tech clusters, governmental organizations, etc. developing projects in the sector.

No matter what your goals are for MWC, the week inevitably results in an exhausting but very fulfilling experience. As part of the noisiest mobile gathering globally, every organization that participates is vying for a snippet of your attention; indeed many organizations reserve their most important and creative launches for Mobile World Congress, so it’s worth keeping an eye open for upcoming trends and new players in lots of different verticals.

That said, one can’t be everywhere at once, so each year I narrow down a list of a few curated highlights that I’d really like to focus on.

Last year’s MWC theme was a slightly ambiguous “The Next Element,” while this year’s is “Creating a Better Future,” which seems marginally more concrete. There does appear to portend a focus for 2018 on the transformational capabilities of certain technologies, for example 5G and AI.

Some major themes I’ll be sniffing around:

5G Networks

Last year there was a lot of buzz around 5G proofs-of-concept, with much effort devoted to simply explaining what the new standard might do for networks and hypothesizing the verticals that could consequently see the most benefit.

From what I’ve seen, some early 5G-connected devices will be on show, and companies will bring use cases for everything from first network rollout plans to consumer IoT to more mature enterprise solutions. I’m curious to see how genuinely commercial the products and services on offer are, as opposed to still in concept mode.

Artificial Intelligence

This is by far my favorite theme for MWC18. Artificial Intelligence will be omnipresent across all verticals, platforms, devices; you name it. There seems to be equal push for both consumer and enterprise AI, while in the case of IoT by comparison, the wow-factor will be weighted on the enterprise side.

As usual with AI, performance boasts need to be taken with a measure of skepticism, since reciting out a weather forecast isn’t nearly as complicated as, say, getting a device’s AI assistant to determine which type of flowers to send to a friend, or more complex behavioral algorithms or machine learning, for example.

Regardless, many companies will be peddling their AI wares at MWC so I’ll stop by a few places like LG for example, meant to be doing AI in its mobile devices. Curious to see how it compares with the Siri-Alexa-Cortana sisterhood. I’ll also look to see who’s working on the nexus of blockchain, industrial IoT, and AI.

Net Neutrality

More political than almost any other topic at MWC18, net neutrality will definitely elicit some strong opinions this year. The subject continues to tumble around regulatory circles with combative legal pushes from both tech heavy-hitters and consumer groups.

Ajit Pai from the FCC (now under investigation for corruption charges) is still scheduled to attend MWC after skipping CES in Las Vegas last month due to death threats over net neutrality. I’m not expecting that anything truly tectonic will be negotiated during MWC, but there should still be some interesting conversations regardless.

Smartphones Galore

Both Samsung and Huawei were reported to be presenting new top-of-the-line models at this year’s MWC. I’ll definitely try to get some time with the Samsung Galaxy S9 and S9+, if I can wiggle in among the crowds. Huawei seems to have backed off a launch of its new P-series but perhaps we’ll have a last-minute surprise. Other groups presenting new devices are said to be Asus, Sony and Lenovo, for example, so I’ll keep an eye out for that.  

I expect some hallway chatter too about whether all the fuss around 5G might actually hinder device sales, as consumers and enterprise purchasers potentially forego investment decisions until they see which devices will be 5G-capable.

What’s Coming From China?

Both myself and the IoT Solutions World Congress are looking east lately. After a fascinating visit to Shanghai and the World Internet Conference in WuZhen last December, I’m interested in seeing what China brings to the MWC table this year. I’m looking forward to closer inspection of Huawei, AliBaba, Baidu, China Mobile, and a gaggle of smaller players to see what’s coming down the pipeline. Huawei and Baidu for example recently signed a deal to co-create a new artificial intelligence platform, which may have some interesting pre-promotion.