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Editorials Linux and Mobile Computing: Where Next?
Does Linux have a prominent place in the future of mobile computing?
By: Mark R. Hinkle
Jun. 14, 2005 08:00 AM
Linux has built its reputation as a server operating system as a premier platform for the Web servers that power the Internet and a key building block in grid computing. But does it have a prominent place in the future of mobile computing?
So what role does Linux play in all of this? Well perhaps the place Linux enables this new mobile society is to provide the infrastructure as a new type of wireless broadband ISP emerges. Building new communications systems can be expensive but leveraging commodity hardware and Open Source software could keep down the total cost of entry for new service providers. WiMAX (www.wimaxforum.org), the IEEE 802.16 standard, is technology that would transmit wirelessly for a range as far as 30 miles. This solves the last mile problem rather nicely and would give us more freedom. New wireless ISPs can provide the connectivity to large geographies but they still need to provide the authentication and other services that go along with it. Enter Open Source. Using Linux servers that provide authentication databases stored in OpenLDAP (www.openldap.org) or providing billing data and other information stored in MySQL databases (www.mysql.org). Caching could be provided by Squid (www.squid-cache.org) to help speed performance. Other services like e-mail and Web mail could be offered on Linux servers too. Finally, Linux could be the basis of a new best-of-breed mobile device that uses power so efficiently that my batteries last all day, if not forever, maybe with some kind of kinetic charger that adds battery life when you drop it. Since Linux doesn't have a graphical system hard-wired into the kernel maybe some creative group of programmers could come up with a new interface that works even on those tiny portable screens. Maybe something as unique as Sun's Project Looking Glass (www.sun.com/software/looking_glass/) but that uses the handheld's real estate more efficiently. What might make the device more interesting is to make it completely stateless, a thin client that logs you into the network via biometrics like your thumbprint so if it was stolen it would be useless and your personal information would be safe on secure servers not the device. So why, you may ask, would this happen as an Open Source product rather than a proprietary product? The answer is collaboration. The next-generation device and ISP have a better chance of success by virtue of the collaborative model where no one organization takes the risk of failure and everyone can share in the success of a new product. A truly open collaborative platform would allow a number of vendors to leverage each other's work into a solution that could really power next-generation mobile devices. Well I am off, I'm out of milk, my refrigerator didn't tell me I was running low. Reader Feedback: Page 1 of 1
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