There is a LOT of hype and talk about 5G ...
the network equipment - most the doom & gloom from the US government again Huawei,
5G phones and having blazing speeds,
What 5G will usher in ~ focus on the push towards automated driving and turning your existing electric Tesla into an on-demand robotaxi when you’re not using it,
Lastly the other top news of 5G is from the one company not releasing a phone by end of 2019 to have chipset to include 5G; yours truly the iPhone.
Of all this hype the only reasonable, and immediately tangible useful bit is the Tesla-robotaxi. This will work especially since Tesla has proven great automated driving success above their on-road & yet to be produced competition. Using 5G telecommunications with the near negligible latency and bandwidth for real-time cloud and infrastructure communication for autopilot (think real world K.I.T.T.) along with intermixing manual drivers and dangers of pedestrians (people walking, biking, skateboarding and scooters; manual/electric) as well as emergency response teams and vehicles will be huge.
The part that gets me is phones using 5G. Beyond using the phone as a modem, it’s not going to give us much beyond apps that can stream to take full advantage if that.
iOS’ Safari has barely sped up in rendering webpages faster since 3GS over 3G vs iPhone X over LTE. Compare the network speeds vs Wi-Fi on 5Ghz with no contention and you’ll see noticeable difference yet not as eye popping as it was when the 3G vs 3GS was. We’re not going to see any improvement in terms of end user speeds with:
Safari, Notes, find my iPhone from iCloud portal, etc.
My point: the core is of these phones (Android vs iOS) will need some significant changes to how we can use them before these expensive chips are worth implementing.
What is Apple going to do with iOS in 2020 and what do you expect to evolve then as well when a 5G iPhone debuts?!
As more data becomes available at a much rapid pace so too should our ability to rapid work with and use it. Right now, iOS is a mixed bag of limitations vs polish and arcane use: “handling a simple attachment on a email is smoking-ball's task”!!!
Why do you have to tap’n’hold to bring up contextual menu in iOS Mail to change font, add attachment, then scroll to another screen (be careful it’s tricky) to add a photo!?????! Tooo damn sloooow! Does their employees actually use Mail!?
the network equipment - most the doom & gloom from the US government again Huawei,
5G phones and having blazing speeds,
What 5G will usher in ~ focus on the push towards automated driving and turning your existing electric Tesla into an on-demand robotaxi when you’re not using it,
Lastly the other top news of 5G is from the one company not releasing a phone by end of 2019 to have chipset to include 5G; yours truly the iPhone.
Of all this hype the only reasonable, and immediately tangible useful bit is the Tesla-robotaxi. This will work especially since Tesla has proven great automated driving success above their on-road & yet to be produced competition. Using 5G telecommunications with the near negligible latency and bandwidth for real-time cloud and infrastructure communication for autopilot (think real world K.I.T.T.) along with intermixing manual drivers and dangers of pedestrians (people walking, biking, skateboarding and scooters; manual/electric) as well as emergency response teams and vehicles will be huge.
The part that gets me is phones using 5G. Beyond using the phone as a modem, it’s not going to give us much beyond apps that can stream to take full advantage if that.
iOS’ Safari has barely sped up in rendering webpages faster since 3GS over 3G vs iPhone X over LTE. Compare the network speeds vs Wi-Fi on 5Ghz with no contention and you’ll see noticeable difference yet not as eye popping as it was when the 3G vs 3GS was. We’re not going to see any improvement in terms of end user speeds with:
Safari, Notes, find my iPhone from iCloud portal, etc.
My point: the core is of these phones (Android vs iOS) will need some significant changes to how we can use them before these expensive chips are worth implementing.
What is Apple going to do with iOS in 2020 and what do you expect to evolve then as well when a 5G iPhone debuts?!
As more data becomes available at a much rapid pace so too should our ability to rapid work with and use it. Right now, iOS is a mixed bag of limitations vs polish and arcane use: “handling a simple attachment on a email is smoking-ball's task”!!!
Why do you have to tap’n’hold to bring up contextual menu in iOS Mail to change font, add attachment, then scroll to another screen (be careful it’s tricky) to add a photo!?????! Tooo damn sloooow! Does their employees actually use Mail!?