DevOps in the Cloud

5 Ways Wireless Technology Will Evolve in 2019

2019 will be a transformative year for the wireless world, with landmark developments in 5G, cloud computing and hardware. From stadiums and retail buildings to airports and even street corners, there’s no place that won’t be affected by the rapid evolution of wireless technology. And if you’re not up on the edge, you’re sleeping on the biggest story of the year.

As CEO of Packet, I’ve experienced firsthand the latest advances in edge computing, 5G and hardware, all of which will integrate technology into our lives more than ever before.

Below are my five predictions detailing how wireless technology will evolve in 2019—and how these breakthroughs will impact our everyday lives:

Software Will Eat the Wireless World

It’s understood that in our internet-enabled world, technology equals software, even though the reality is more nuanced. And even the cloud, the grand enabler of the latest software wave is itself being eaten alive by the software movement it spawned; cloud-native ecosystems such as Docker and Kubernetes are devouring the value of verticalized cloud providers and offering a portable software experience across any infrastructure substrate, spanning architectures, providers and form factors. This multi-billion dollar industry hasn’t been disrupted, and it is growing increasingly important by the day. In short, it’s a good time to be in software!

Hardware Technology Isn’t a Commodity

The influence of hardware is growing steadily, and it will really hit its stride in 2019. We believe that powerful, customizable hardware in collaboration with state-of-the-art software is the next big thing in cloud computing. This trend will help drive investment in everything from accelerators to offloads to alternative processor architectures, especially as the worth of custom-built hardware grows.

Real Estate is Becoming Digitized

The leading enterprises of the world are looking to deploy their technology opinion quickly and at global scale. From 5G to mobility to mobile gaming, this ambition requires a go-anywhere model that enables cloud-style infrastructure in hundreds or thousands of locations. In 2019, large real estate owners will move beyond traditional data centers to digitize assets such as co-working, stadiums and retail buildings with cloud and infrastructure.

5G Technology Is Really All About Private Networks

Two-thirds of organizations plan to deploy 5G by 2020, according to Gartner. However, as security and control are becoming increasingly important in the wireless world, large industrial companies are being led to explore the implementation of private 5G wireless networks. By deploying private LTE networks using technologies such as Citizens Broadband Radio Service (CBRS), enterprises will be able to efficiently deliver connected experiences from the sports stadium and airports to the urban street corner.

Edge Computing: The Buzzword of 2019

In case you haven’t heard of the already buzzy tech phrase, edge computing is computing that takes place at or near the source of the data, rather than relying on faraway cloud data centers to do the work. Edge computing is a flexible model that can be dropped in literally anywhere, allowing developers to think–and develop–on a much larger scale than they already are. In 2019, the edge will become the most exciting frontier in the cloud.

Zachary Smith

Zachary Smith

Zachary Smith, CEO and co-founder of Packet. Zachary (Zac) has spent nearly 20 years building, running, and fixing public cloud infrastructure platforms. A native of Southern California, Zac moved to New York at age 17 to study classical double bass at Juilliard. While commuting on the A train from Inwood to Columbus Circle, he taught himself Linux and the basics of servers, web hosting, and website/application development. After graduation, and while working the night shift at Credit Suisse as a document prep expert, he became a co-owner of Voxel, one of the earliest Linux hosting startups. Together with Raj Dutt the duo grew Voxel to more than 75 employees. When it was sold to Internap in 2011, it offered one of the most advanced bare metal and virtualized cloud offerings on the market as well as software product (Ubersmith) used by hundreds of datacenter and cloud businesses to automate their physical data center management and billing. Early employees of Voxel leveraged their formative experience in those early days of cloud to lead infrastructure teams at companies along the lines of MediaMath, Facebook, and Etsy or to start new ventures including NS1 and Grafana Labs. After spending a year running the cloud Business Unit at Internap, Zac left to pursue new adventures. While looking to leverage his experience in cloud, the guiding mantra for his next startup was “anything but infrastructure”. Alas, Zac’s passion led him back to cloud—and he co-founded Packet In 2014 with a vision to automate fundamental infrastructure for a world quickly being transformed by, well, the cloud. Zac is responsible for the company's strategic roadmap and is most passionate about helping customers and partners innovate on infrastructure and about democratizing cloud-scale access to hardware innovation for enterprises and developers. On any given day, you are likely to find Zac meeting an enterprise CIO about his/her 10-year tech plan; test-driving the latest addition to a Packet Terraform provider; outlining architecture on a new network design; and working with industry bigwigs to align supply chain for a new hardware delivery model. It’s one simple mission: He’s reinventing hardware for the millenial IT buyer. Zac lives in Lower Manhattan with his wife and two young children. He is on the operating board of Pursuit, a nationally-known org helping low-income young adults ‘5X’ their incomes in one year by joining the tech workforce. He also proudly leads the Lower Manhattan Boy Scout Troop, which he founded in 2017.

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