64-bit ARM Servers coming Sooner than expected, thanks to Apple A7 waking up the 64-bit opportunity

CNET has a post on 64-bit ARM processors catching ARM and other fabs flat footed.

Phone and tablet makers are rushing to embrace 64-bit designs, surprising even those executives behind the chip platform.

Tom Lantzsch, ARM's executive vice president of corporate strategy, spoke with CNET after the company reported first-quarter earnings on Wednesday.

ARM supplies virtually all of the basic processor designs for phones and tablets running on Android.

"Certainly, we've had big uptick in demand for mobile 64-bit products. We've seen this with our [Cortex] A53, a high-performance 64-bit mobile processor," he said.

This caught the chip designer's executives off guard, as they believed that 64-bit ARM would only be needed for corporate servers in the initial phase of the technology's rollout.

"We've been surprised at the pace that [64-bit] is now becoming mobile centric. Qualcomm, MediaTek, and Marvell are examples of public 64-bit disclosures," he said.

Past assumptions is only large memory addressing would address the need for 64 bit chips.  But, thanks to Apple’s A7 the market has found a new feature to differentiate on.

This echoes comments from a Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. executive last week, who said the conversion to 64-bit has in the mobile device industry accelerated in the last six months after Apple made its 64-bit A7 processor -- also an ARM design -- announcement.

How soon are the 64-bit chips showing up?  By Christmas.

So, when will the transition to 64-bit processors happen for Android phones and tablets?

"We believe the capability will be there for a 64-bit phone by Christmas," he said, referring to phones and tablets with 64-bit bit processors.

A Techie's View of Mobile in 3D graphics market

The market for 3D software continues to grow and their users can have different views on what they need.  I found this post on Tech Soft 3D by their founder on Trends for Mobile App Development.

His first comment is on Tablets which I agree with.

Tablets are currently about consumption. Almost all developers building apps for mobile devices are focused on “consumption” rather than “creation.” In other words, 3D models are usually created or stored in one place, and then later viewed and interacted with by people working away from their desks. This mirrors how tablets are used in general – to consume media such as video, books, web pages, etc.

Tablets will soon move past consumption. This is happening already, to some extent. We edit photos and videos, post to Facebook, compose emails, and with keyboard extensions, we might even write documents and create presentations. Devices are becoming more powerful and developers are figuring out the UX models that make creation more feasible. An example is Autodesk’s SketchBook app, which is already wildly popular for professional-grade painting and drawing. Skepticism about engineering on tablet devices reminds me of how we once wondered whether a PC or even a Mac would ever be used for “serious” engineering work. There is no inherent limitation that makes me think that this will not happen in due time. It’ll probably even come faster than we think.

Then he tackles the iPad vs. Android.

iPad is the favorite for consumers and execs. Apps designed for consumers generally are available on the iPad first. It also seems that apps built for the iPad are often targeted at showing simple views of projects or “dashboards” to execs, rather than doing much work. Think of these as fancy “reporting” apps.  You know how we execs are –suckers for pretty graphics!

Android users are hungry for more. I’ll go out on a limb and say that compared to the typical iPad user, Android users are either a) more technical, b) more focused on what they would consider “real work” or c) both. As a result, they seem to be pushing for more and more advanced applications on their devices.

Given so much of the 3D engineering software market is on Windows he makes the observation on Microsoft tablets.

Windows-based tablets shouldn't be counted out. Much has been made in the media about how much Microsoft is lagging behind in terms of tablet market share. Those numbers aside, I would hardly count them out. Why? Because many large enterprises rely heavily on a backbone of Microsoft technology. As they consider their “mobile strategies,” Microsoft remains a strong incumbent for enterprises that use Microsoft and greatly favor predictability and integration with existing processes over speed. They will wait patiently, and Microsoft will no doubt continue to heavily focus development on this enterprise market. Unlike iPad, (but like Android), the hardware will come from many sources, so expect to see plenty of purpose-built tablets for use out in the field and on shop floors by people with dirty hands in rugged locations. Look for some interesting things here.

The one part I disagree with is his point on phones.  I would say almost all of his users of Desktop PCs would agree, but i don’t.

 ….But not on phones. Now that I just said “never say never,” I will go ahead and say that the form factor of today’s phones means they will only be used for lightweight consumption. I can’t imagine a usage model that would make creation feasible. No one is building anything more complex than a simple viewer for phones and I don’t anticipate that happening due to the limitation of screen size. Now that I said it, someone will surely prove me wrong, but there you have it…

The power of a Samsung Galaxy Note with Stylus and having it with you all the time is just beginning to change things.

AT&T announces its Embracing Cloud Principles for its Network

AT&T announced its User-Defined Network Cloud which is kind of puzzling.  So, the current network is a non-user defined specialized equipment environment where people (mostly men) picked their favorite equipment in self serving perspectives thinking of their jobs and users should trust these people to be the experience they wanted? This was the old way, but technology is moving too fast, and users expectations are growing.  Here is a graphic that illustrates the change AT&T is making.

NewImage

NFV aims to address these problems by evolving standard IT virtualization technology to consolidate
many network equipment types onto industry standard high volume servers, switches and storage that
can be located in data centers, network PoPs or on customer premises. As shown in Figure 2, this
involves the implementation of network functions in software, called VNFs, that can run on a range of
general purpose hardware, and that can be moved to, or instantiated in, various locations in the
network as required, without the need for installation of new equipment.

The document that has this graphic is here.

Here is another graphic that shows the change.

NewImage

Here is the blog post from AT&T’s John Donovan.  I think if John had added these simple graphics to his blog post it would have communicated much more clearly what AT&T is doing.

I found this information thanks to GigaOm’s Kevin Fitchard post.

Software is eating the mobile network, too, as AT&T begins its journey into the cloud

 

6 HOURS AGO

2 Comments

cloud-cell-tower
photo: Gigaom Illustration
SUMMARY:

AT&T is taking the first steps toward transforming its network into a data center. It’s not touching the cellular network — at least not yet — but it will start virtualizing its mobile core and application infrastructure.

Will Facebook's acquisition change Whatsapp's policy of not storing chat history?

I was reading Om Malik’s post on Facebook’s Irrationality of buying Whatsapp.

The irrational rationality behind Facebook’s $16 billion acquisition of WhatsApp

 

14 HOURS AGO

22 Comments

facebook-gold
SUMMARY:

The huge price tag attached to Facebook’s purchase of WhatsApp — one of the largest web deals in history — actually makes more sense than you might think at first glance.

And, one of the questions that occurred is whether Facebook will want to store the chat history from Whatsapp?  Currently the history is not stored.

WhatsApp communication between your phone and our server is fully encrypted.

We do not store your chat history on our servers. Once delivered successfully to your phone, chat messages are removed from our system.

Even though data sent through our app is encrypted, remember that if your phone or your friend's phone is being used by someone else, it may be possible for them to read your WhatsApp messages. Please be aware of who has physical access to your phone.

Cheers, 
WhatsApp Support Team

Facebook has the budget and infrastructure to store chat history.

Here is more information from Arstechnica referencing a Wired article.

On whether governments have demanded access to WhatsApp servers

"There really is no key to give," Koum says. The US National Security Agency, he insists, has no access to users' messages. "People need to differentiate us from companies like Yahoo! and Facebook that collect your data and have it sitting on their servers. We want to know as little about our users as possible. We don't know your name, your gender… We designed our system to be as anonymous as possible. We're not advertisement-driven so we don't need personal databases." This is more than a business position for Koum. "I grew up in a society where everything you did was eavesdropped on, recorded, snitched on," he says. "I had friends when we were kids getting into trouble for telling anecdotes about Communist leaders. I remember hearing stories from my parents of dissidents like Andrei Sakharov, sentenced to exile because of his political views, like Solzhenitsyn, even local dissidents who got fed up with the constant bullshit. Nobody should have the right to eavesdrop, or you become a totalitarian state—the kind of state I escaped as a kid to come to this country where you have democracy and freedom of speech. Our goal is to protect it. We have encryption between our client and our server. We don't save any messages on our servers, we don't store your chat history. They're all on your phone."

 

Clouds coming to Carriers Telecom Gear - NFV (Network Functions Virtualization)

In data centers we take Virtualization for granted.  The software defined data center with software defined network and storage are part of the package.  Another part though is the Network Functions Virtualization (NFV) for Telecom Carriers.

Wind River has their press release announcing HP partnership.

Wind River to Create Carrier Grade NFV-Ready Server Platform with HP
NEWS HIGHLIGHTSWind River products in certification include open source real-time kernel virtualization, a market-leading embedded Linux distribution, and carrier grade software registered with CGL 5.0 specification.Wind River and HP are enabling complete carrier grade servers ready to address an evolving network infrastructure with demanding NFV and IoT needs.Wind River will become a preferred software vendor for HP NFV-ready servers. ALAMEDA, Calif. — Feb. 19, 2014 — Wind River®, a world leader in delivering software for intelligent connected systems, has announced that it is working with HP to certify Wind River networking and communications software on Network Equipment Building System (NEBS)-compliant HP ProLiant servers.-

Both HP and Dell have web pages for NEBS compliant servers.

HP carrier-grade servers

HP carrier-grade platforms—reliable, flexible, scalable, and ready to support your NFV project.

http://h22168.www2.hp.com/us/en/oem/carrier-grade.aspx#tab=TAB2 

Dell’s OEM Solution for telecommunications blends Network Equipment Building System (NEBS)-certified reliability, cost-effective components for high volume, and Dell’s established, high-ranking services and support. These pre-configured servers are based on open standards to help maximize compatibility, scalability and expandability for the highest possible level of stability, when and where you need it most. That way, Dell’s NEBS-compliant solutions can bring you lower operational expenses, better profitability and simplified operations so your technology leaders can focus on what matters: truly innovating to better serve your customers and the world.

http://www.dell.com/learn/us/en/555/oem/telecommunications

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

You have the traditional equipment with their NFV efforts.  Also today is Alcatel-Lucent.

Alcatel-Lucent delivers suite of virtualized network functions, ushering in the next phase of mobile ultra-broadband for service providers

Alcatel-Lucent's bold NFV roadmap, including virtual EPC, IMS and LTE RAN helps Mobile Network Operators become more efficient, responsive and innovative

  

PARIS, Feb. 19, 2014 /PRNewswire/ -- Alcatel-Lucent (euronext paris and nyse:ALU) is delivering a portfolio of virtualized mobile network function applications – evolved packet core (EPC), IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS) and radio access network (RAN) - and extending them to the cloud. Mobile operators will deploy these network applications to drive breakthrough scalability and elasticity, becoming more agile, efficient and responsive as they innovate with new service offerings, speed deployments on a massive scale and expand into new markets.

Last week Ericsson.

 

Launch: Evolved Packet Core provided in a virtualized mode industrializes NFV
2014-02-12 Categories: Press Releases Download: 
  • Virtualization enables fast time to market of new business solutions such as M2M, enterprise and distributed cloud MBB for fast growing markets 
  • Ericsson's industry-leading Evolved Packet Core solution provided in a virtualized mode with feature compatibility for efficient cloud transformation 
  • End-to-end support provided for operator  transformation to cloud and NFV 

Network Functions Virtualization (NFV) provides important mechanisms to make operator networks more agile and operationally efficient. Ericsson (NASDAQ: ERIC) is now bringing NFV to an industrial scale with a full suite of virtualized network applications, combined with consulting and systems integration services. Based on an open, telecom-grade cloud execution environment, efficient end-to-end solutions and more flexible deployments are enabled.