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The face of the phone is going to change, according to Bob Iannucci,
head of the Nokia Research Center (NRC), in Helsinki, Finland. The NRC
is hard at work, along with other branches of Nokia, on software and
hardware for future cell phones.
While your current
model might seem like the digital version of a Swiss Army knife,
Iannucci sees lots of room for improvement. Novel displays and myriad
coordinated radios could make your cell phone a lot more entertaining
and useful.
Last week, Nokia announced a new research lab and collaboration with Stanford University. Technology Review caught up with Iannucci in Palo Alto, CA, to ask him how Nokia's research is pushing mobile devices forward.
Technology Review:
Your job, as the head of Nokia's research center, is to imagine the
mobile devices of the future and to use existing and future technology
to make it happen. From this standpoint, what new technology do you
predict could be in phones five years from now?
Bob Iannucci:
One of the things that we're intrigued with is the potential for what
nanoscience and nanotechnology can bring to phones. Here's an example:
right now, we're very close to having 8 radios and 11 antennas in a
cell phone. In a couple of years that'll be commonplace. Now the
question is, as a manufacturer of phones, how do we simplify 8 radios
and 11 antennas? Well, the holy grail of simplifying radios is
software-defined radio, where a radio, controlled by software, uses a
broadband antenna to access a wide range of frequencies, instead of a
single band. We're looking at material-science solutions on the antenna
side to make software-defined radio happen.
TR: Like what?
BI:
At Chalmers University, in Sweden, researchers have demonstrated, using
carbon-nanotube technology, a tunable radio-frequency cavity that, in
just the first version, can tune in between two and three gigahertz,
picking up multiple bands. So now the idea of taking the antenna and
running it through a tunable carbon-nanotube filter into an
analog/digital converter might be a key enabler to actually making
software-defined radio work. That's breakthrough thinking. That could
be an enabler to making that 8 radio, 11 antenna thing a whole lot
simpler.
TR: How would this affect the average mobile-phone user?
BI:
It boils down to simplicity in cost. If we can drive down the cost by
simplifying the guts inside the phone without compromising the
functionality, then that's big. And software-defined radio could also
enable cognitive-radio capabilities, where two devices dynamically
create the best wireless channel for transferring data. This would make
it possible to transfer a movie from your PC to your phone in two
seconds. The idea is that the radios in my PC and phone realize when
they're close to each other because the signal strength is high. So we
can use very weak signals because we're only covering a short distance.
We can reduce power, increase the bandwidth, but not create a
tremendous amount of interference because we're only transmitting at
low power. And the radio's smart enough to figure all that out.
By Kate Greene
Read article at techreview.com