Cell phone inventor riffs on today's "topsy-turvey" wireless industry
Martin Cooper reflects on what the cellular industry, truly a revolutionary success story, needs to do to get even better.
By Bill Schweber, Planet Analog
Embedded.com
(10/28/08, 03:29:00 PM EDT)
Boston, Mass.--Leading off the keynote speakers at the Embedded Systems Conference, cell phone inventor Dr. Martin Cooper (now Chairman of ArrayComm LLC, San Jose, CA) talked about the five problems of the wireless industry, along with his suggested solutions.

Dr. Cooper began by noting that the cell phone and wireless connectivity have not only made us mobile, they have changed our way of thinking: with wired communications, you called a phone, hoping to get the right person, but with wireless, you call the person directly. He sees these issues:

Dr. Cooper derided the fact that service providers have used their spectrum monopolies to control users and increase apparent capacity, while not actually delivering promised bandwidth or quality of service, although he conceded the later is improving.

His closing admonition was to remind designers that "good technology is transparent; the best technology is invisible." He cited the oft-derided automotive industry as an example of the latter: you can get into a car anywhere in the world and drive it, and the complexity of the processors managing the automatic transmission--itself a complex system of mechanical, hydraulic, and electronic functions, closely linked--is reduced to a simple shift control for the user: forward or reverse.

Bill Schweber is the site editor of Planet Analog. You may contact Bill at bschweber@techinsights.com.