Showing posts with label mobiilid. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mobiilid. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 18, 2018

2G is not dead — or the many ways of phasing it out.

This was written in reply to a post on Slashdot about the possibility of future 2G phaseouts around the world.

Developing economies, like Venezuela, are very unlikely to shut down 2G and 3G networks even in the long term. Venezuela in particular is also unlikely to introduce 5G within the next five years.

Venezuela was once a rich economy pursuant to its extensive oil wealth, but unfortunately, did not become an advanced economy, as the country did not diversify its economy, and let the generation of any form of local produce atrophy. Calling the country's sad state a 'developing economy' is at best generous, or aspirational.

wrt 2G and 3G, Africa and South Asia are just as unlikely to phase these technologies out; though 5G is likely to be introduced in some markets, after 5G implementations in Northern Europe will be rated stable. 5G was launched on 27 June 2018 in Finland and Estonia.

The situation with mobile tech adoption in India is mixed. On one hand, Reliance have switched 2G off, and their subsidiary Jio has 4G from the outset. On the other hand, Airtel have not shut their 2G network down, and I can imagine, that there may be smaller mobile providers that still offer 2G service.

Countries with large 2G-only and 3G-only userbases are unlikely to shut these networks off anytime soon, and will opt for a gradual migration.

Some of the reasons in favour of gradual migration:

* Late adoption of new technologies owing to reasons economic, or geographical: 3G was never implemented until very recently; so, the entire mobile network is based on 2G (GSM), and a large amount (if not most) people have 2G-only phones. Wealthier subscribers may have phones that support 3G, but are unable to use the technology because of non-existent infrastructure;
* 2G and 3G have become plain utilities akin to landline phones, and can therefore be harder to phase out for their entrenched status, since:

* many of their subscribers might not be able to afford anything else;
* upgrading would increase the rate of planned obsolescence (lots of useless handsets); and
* would add to large amounts of electronic waste
— despite being labeled a legacy technology.

* Countries, where the 2G/3G adoption ratio per population is small (percentage-wise), can afford to upgrade faster.

* Countries, where 2G/3G adoption is perhaps in single digits, can choose to:
** adopt 2G/3G either to quickly get more subscribers for less;
** or where there is no 2G/3G in the first place, said countries can leapfrog existing standards, and implement 4G from the outset, but with the downside, that not all people will be able to afford mobile telephony until the market is reasonably saturated, as newer technologies are also more expensive. Nepal is one of those.
* Operators in very large and very wealthy economies have both monetary and security incentives to upgrade, and most of their userbase is probably using 3G devices at the very least (think lots of iPhones with at least iPhone 3G). The United States and Australia are examples of this upgrade model.

A historical example with the quick phaseout of 1G in favour of the 2G GSM:
In Estonia, the 1G NMT (Nordic Mobile Telephone) network was launched in 1991, and sunset in December 2000. In a country of 1.3 million, the greatest amount of NMT subscribers at EMT (then a major operator; now Telia) was about 19,000. By early 2000, the number of subscribers was 9600. And by December 2000, there were only 351 hold-outs left, after EMT announced in May that year, that they were going to shut the NMT network down in that same month of December. NMT was then still working in Finland, Sweden, and Russia.[Source: Ärileht, 11.12.2000]

Reasons for the shutdown of NMT in Estonia were the overall low and declining subscriber numbers, and the legacy status of the analogue 1G NMT network, which, compared to GSM, was not secure.

In time, 2G/GSM has in Estonia become an entrenched technology, relied on by people who choose to have a featurephone because of its high reliability, or because they're unable to afford a smartphone (pensioners). In 2016, Telia (then Elion) turned off WAP. The status of 2G in Estonia is similar to the rest of Europe: Despite the reasonably early adoption of 3G, GSM remains widespread, is in some ways entrenched, and operators have chosen a softly-softly approach with gradual migration.

The approach taken in Pakistan is different to that of India. In Pakistan, 3G and 4G were launched on 23 April 2014, which is quite late compared to China and the Philippines (both 2008). While four years ago may seem like a long time, then it really isn't. This late adoption of 3G and 4G means, that the number of GSM-only subscribers with 2G-only phones is still substantial.

That GSM is entrenched in such a way, is not a bad thing. It could be called 'deep adoption', which means, that the service is essential, widespread, and available to most everyone. Especially, when landlines are scarce. GSM was the first mobile standard adopted worldwide, and joining and using a GSM network is affordable to a very large number of people. GSM is like a well-managed regional bus service: One could use it to travel across the country, but not quickly. Removing it in the absence of viable alternatives would substantially reduce the level of development in the country, and would reduce its inhabitants' quality of life.

3G and 4G are faster: 3G is like inter-city bus service, and 4G like a high-speed express train. Neither is essential, not all territories are covered by it, but they have their uses and customers.

Other parallels: Radio is like 0G; analogue tv = 1G; DVB-T (digital terrestrial tv) = 2G (MPEG-2 or 4, non-HD); DVB-T2 = 3G (with full support for Full-HD broadcasts in MPEG-4); and cable tv (based on IPtv) is like 4G.

Thursday, July 6, 2017

What a simple Nokia 1616 featurephone can do

I have a very sturdy Nokia 1616 featurephone that I got as a present from a sister.

The phone has an FM radio, a flashlight, a 3.5mm headphone jack that supports compatible headsets, and great battery life.

Its built-in software includes a speakerphone (basically an external speaker), an alarm (duh), a talking clock ("Time is..."), a calendar with reminders, a timer, stopper, calculator, converter, an expenses ledger, three games (Sudoku, Forbidden Treasures, and Solitaire), and the possibility to add preset images to favourite contacts.

And, of course, phone calls and SMS messages, including picture messaging (rarely used now, but this is not MMS).

The clock and calendar also work beyond 2016 and 2017, unlike the two Samsung featurephones I have.

Of all things, an FM radio (with RDS) in a phone of any type is a given feature outside the United States (and maybe the entire North America).

I wrote this in response to a post shared in Google+.

Thursday, September 17, 2015

Nutitelefoni valimine (09.2015)

Ehk peamised kriteeriumid mobiiltelefoni mitte-telefoni funktsioonidele.

Kombineerida saab olemasoleva eelarve piires; heast poest on võimalik osta ka kasutatult, aga uurimistööd tuleb teha rohkem.

Omadused on toodud enam-vähem tähtsuse järjekorras.

Kes on tootja. Tuumarelvi omavate riikide kaubamärke ma ei eelista ega soovita. Selliste riikide hulka kuuluvad näiteks USA, Hiina, India, Prantsusmaa, Venemaa. Ainsaks erandiks oleks Lenovo. kuid valik on mobiili-turul piisavalt kirev. Tuleb siiski tõdeda, et lõviosa tarbe-elektroonikast toodetakse Hiinas.

• Kui kaua kestab aku.

• Kas telefonil on FM-raadio. See on tähtis.

Mälukaardi tugi. Juhuks kui telefoni sisemine mälu täis saab, sest on palju fotosid ja videosid; samuti kaardirakenduste andmed.

Füüsilised omadused


Mõõdud

  • Kompaktsus — et kas telefon mahub püksitaskusse. Väiksemad seadmed mängivad siin rolli. Sest kui telefon ei ole vee- ja tolmukindel, peab ta halva ilmaga olema kuskil taskus, ning kasutada saaks kõnekomplekti.
  • Ekraan. Diagonaali kui mõõteväärtust ma niiväga määravaks ei pea; vt. ülemine punkt. Küll võib tooni anda ekraani resolutsioon, kus suurem resolutsioon (pikselite arv) on teatud veebilehtede kuvamisel määrav siis, kui neid pole mobiiliekraanide jaoks sobivaks küljendatud.

Vastupidavus.

  • Tugevdatud ekraaniklaas. Peaks olema vähemalt Gorilla Glass. Et kui seade kukub, jääks ekraan terveks. Mida suurem Gorilla Glass number, seda parem.
  • Veekindlus on sobiv Põhja-Euroopa kliimas, sest siis saab telefoni kasutada vihmas või udus; näiteks fotode tegemiseks. Väiksem võimalus rikkiminekuks niiskuskahjustuse tagajärjel.
  • Tolmukindlus loeb siis, kui tegutsetakse väga tolmustes oludes või minnakse puhkama lõunamaadesse, kus juhtub olema liivatorme. Arvestada tuleb selliste märksõnadega nagu ehitus, remont, puidutööstus (saepuru), liiv jmt.

Kaamera

    Peavad olema:
  • Autofookus — selleks, et pilt oleks selge. Isegi kui megapikseleid pole palju, on autofookus sama tähtis kui võimendi muusikariistale.
  • Välk. Pimedas pildistamiseks ja ka sellisteks juhtudeks nagu Laulupidu või teised suured kontserdid.
    Parematel ja kallimatel aparaatidel:
  • Pildistabilisaator ehk OIS (i.k. Optical Image Stabilisation) — samuti selleks, et pilt ei tuleks foto tegemisel ise liikudes või telefoni liigutades udune/virvendav. Seadmetel, kus pildistabilisaatorit pole, aga on vaja suhteliselt selgemat pilti kui ise vajutades, saab kasutada kaamera viitsütikut.
  • Tehnoloogiad pimedas või hämaras pildistamiseks. Võrdeline ka toas pildistamisega, kus nähtavast valgustusest tihtipeale ei piisa. Nokia Lumia 920, 925 ja paremad sobivad siia hästi.
    Esikaamera
  • Selfie-de tegemiseks. Isegi kui selfie-sid ei tehta, siis järgmine huvitav punkt oleks
  • Videokõned. Skype vms suhtlusäpis.

    Siin jätaks ma valiku on vabaks, vastavalt eelistustele ja maitsele + järgmine punkt. —
Kaamera megapikselid
Nii põhi- kui esikaamera puhul sõltub megapikselite arv eelarvest.

Kui pildi detailsus pole väga tähtis, siis megapikselite arv ei oma samuti suurt tähtsust.

Eesti mobiili-operaatorite pakutavate odavamate nutitelefonide kaamerad on praegugi peamiselt 5-megapikselised, mis tähendab seda, et suurel osal seadmetest on autofookus juba vaikimisi olemas, ning paljud (aga mitte kõik) on ka välklambiga varustatud. Seega piltide kvaliteedi ja detailsuse alampiir on juba aastal 2015 piisavalt hea.

Määravaks muutub megapikselite arv siis, kui pildistada saab ainult kaugelt, aga tarvis on saada võimalikult detailseid kujutisi, näiteks spordisündmustel. Siin sobiks kindlasti 8-megapikseline või suurem kaamerasensor.

Selliste telefonide hinnad on viimasel ajal alanenud, ning odavama otsa brändide valikus on juba uusi 8-megapikselisi telefone, mille hind jääb alla 100€. Heades poodides on tuntud tootjate 8-megapikselise kaameraga kasutatud telefonid ka umbes 100€ või õige pisut vähema ringis.
Opsüsteemi valik ei ole vähemtähtis: huvitavamate äppide jaoks on parem Android või Sailfish (toetab Androidi äppe), ning nendel saab käitada äppe, mis toetavad kasutaja privaatsust ja turvalisust.

Näiteks konkreetselt Gecko-põhise mootoriga Firefox töötab ainult Androidil (ja Sailfishil). Lisaks on Firefoxile saadaval NoScript, Adblock Plus ja palju muid turvalisust ja privaatsust parandavaid laiendusi.

Kui oma Android pole enam uuendatav ning hiljem ka sellel käiv Chrome lehitseja, siis eraldiseisvat Firefoxi saab pikka aega veel edasi uuendada. Firefox töötab siiani ka Android 2.3 peal. Selle Androidi versiooniga telefonid on tänapäevaga võrreldes suhteliselt nõrgad, kuid näiteks "Postimehe" kodulehe kuvamiseks vaikimisi Android 2.3 lehitseja ei kõlba enam ammu.

Teiste opsüsteemide puhul niisuguseid asju lihtsalt ei ole. Kui tavakasutajale privaatsus väga suureks mureks pole, siis sobib Nokia Lumia ilusti, sest Nokiate Carl Zeiss-i optikaga kaamerad on üle prahi.