Linux Foundation Exec Believes Edge Computing Will Be More Important Than Cloud Computing (zdnet.com) 67
An anonymous reader shares a report: Once upon a time, back when we all had mainframes and then servers in our offices, we had edge computing. Our compute power was literally down the hall. Then, along came the cloud, and all that changed. Computers were hundreds of miles but milliseconds away. Now, with the rise of IoT, 5G, and our never-satisfied need for speed, edge computing is coming back with a vengeance. Indeed, at his keynote at Open Networking Summit in Belgium, Arpit Joshipura, The Linux Foundation's general manager of networking, said "edge computing will overtake cloud computing" by 2025.
When Joshipura is talking about edge computing, he means compute and storage resources that are five to 20 milliseconds away. He also means edge computing should be an open, interoperable framework. This framework should be independent of hardware, silicon, cloud, or operating system. Open-edge computing should also work with any edge-computing use case: Internet of Things (IoT) edge, a telecom edge, cloud edge, or enterprise edge, whatever, "Our goal here is to unify all of these." This is being done via LF Edge. This Linux Foundation organization seeks to bring all edge computing players under one umbrella with one technology. Its purpose is to create a software stack that unifies a fragmented edge market around a common, open vision for the future of the industry. To make this happen, Joshipura announced two more projects were being incorporated into LF Edge: Baetyl and Fledge.
When Joshipura is talking about edge computing, he means compute and storage resources that are five to 20 milliseconds away. He also means edge computing should be an open, interoperable framework. This framework should be independent of hardware, silicon, cloud, or operating system. Open-edge computing should also work with any edge-computing use case: Internet of Things (IoT) edge, a telecom edge, cloud edge, or enterprise edge, whatever, "Our goal here is to unify all of these." This is being done via LF Edge. This Linux Foundation organization seeks to bring all edge computing players under one umbrella with one technology. Its purpose is to create a software stack that unifies a fragmented edge market around a common, open vision for the future of the industry. To make this happen, Joshipura announced two more projects were being incorporated into LF Edge: Baetyl and Fledge.
Re:Edge computing is perfect for those selling it (Score:4, Funny)
Not necessarily open (Score:5, Interesting)
Numerous Linux commentators have discussed the take-over of the Linux Foundation by large non-open corporations. It's good to keep in mind when you read pronouncements by the LF that Microsoft and others are involved. Open source means nothing if it does not refer to the General Public License (GPL) or similar GPL compatible license.
Re:Not necessarily open (Score:5, Informative)
Open source means nothing if it does not refer to the General Public License (GPL) or similar GPL compatible license.
Then you're referring to Free Software, not necessarily Open Source.
Re: (Score:3)
Open Source is referring to the license. All that it means is that you can make changes to the software, and even resell it, but that you have to extend the same ability to anyone that purchases your software. "Open Source" means that the source code is readable by anyone.
Re: Not necessarily open (Score:3)
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You hold a common misconception.
Ahh, yes I did. Thanks for clearing that up.
Re: (Score:3)
Quick, call him an asshole and threaten to burn his house down so this place can get back normal.
Re: Not necessarily open (Score:2)
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Give people correct information, and they're thankful. This is the Nature of us all, even though some pretend otherwise.
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Re: Not necessarily open (Score:2)
Re: Not necessarily open (Score:2)
St Richard has been purged. Free Software is dead.
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There was no takeover, Linux Foundation always was a club for giant evil corporations that critically depend on Linux and need it to prosper. That doesn't mean they have a clue in any way shape or form. Jim Zemlim is the poster child for arrogant fool. Loves to boast about writing Linus's paycheck. As if Linus needs the money, or cares what the fuck Jim Zemlin boasts about.
Linux Foundation is just a bunch of self serving corporate droid wankers who pay the bills for Linux conferences and paychecks to some k
Re:Not necessarily open - THIS (Score:2)
From Wikipedia:
Marketing (Score:5, Insightful)
Edge computing... Just a new marketing term to use with know nothing purchasing managers.
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It's true. We're dealing with some of this and the concept of bypassing your heavy duty hardware and doing computing on extremely slow devices instead is baffling. Maybe I'm biased but my assumptions for the nodes I'm working on is to be smaller and use less power, while edge computing is the opposite. But... "Edge Computing" makes the marketing people ecstatic and it does seem to sell devices.
Re: (Score:2)
My style is to put some 8 channel Threadrippers on the edge. Step 2: enjoy.
Joke's on them (Score:5, Funny)
Edge doesn't even run on Linux.
Re:Joke's on them (Score:5, Informative)
https://developer.microsoft.co... [microsoft.com]
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Maybe, but it kind of lost its edge since they're switching to a Chrome core.
Wheels keep turning (Score:5, Insightful)
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I think some people are finally figuring out that "cloud computing" is just going to result in AWS and Microsoft owning 80% and the remaining 20% split between on premise, other cloud platforms and whatever.
Inventing a new "near premise" computing creates some new opportunity for middle ground that can't be owned by AWS or Microsoft (yet..), but also allows for $$$ opportunities from people who still own hardware.
Sometimes it seems like there's a way to achieve Pareto optimal computing that balances price,
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Exactly. Young people not knowing about the dumb terminal era thinking they invented something new.
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that dumb Xterminal was actually rather smart.
Tho back in the day, curses ruled; today that
client could just as easily be enriched. VNC, remote X....
Attach some local storage that syncs frequently and the sky's the limit:)
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It is normally the race between cost and performance of Networking Technology vs Computer performance.
Early Computers had no networking as they are programmed by feeding in cards. So access to the physical computer was necessary.
Then over time computers were powerful enough with enough RAM to handle more then users at once, and with Serial communication we can spread a single computer to many users. Then we had the PC Generation where cheap fully functional computers became common, where we decided to run
Re: (Score:2)
my home Laptop is roughly 1000x more powerful then my Desktop (32gigs RAM vs 32Meg of RAM, 8gig vs 4meg of video
You desktop sucks. Your laptop is roughly specced like my 3 year old mid range desktop, except we both know the laptop sucks in many ways too, including insufficient ports, thermal throttling and severely limited expansion, if any. Oh, crappy keyboard, did we mention crappy keyboard? My next year's desktop will be about 10 times more powerful than your laptop on paper, more in practice, and that will be far from top of the line.
Get with the program.
Re: Wheels keep turning (Score:2)
"Your desktop from 20 years ago sucks by today's standards"
FTFY
Reading comprehension...
Re: (Score:2)
Reading comprehension youself. OP wrote "my home Laptop is roughly 1000x more powerful then my Desktop".
Suck it.
Re: Wheels keep turning (Score:2)
Still missed it, broham:
"my Desktop (32gigs RAM vs 32Meg of RAM, 8gig vs 4meg of video. CPU are difficult to benchmark) I had 20 years ago"
See that bit at the end?
Re: (Score:2)
So he's an idiot who didn't upgrade his desktop, that's on him. Doesn't change a thing I wrote. On the other hand, your obnoxiousness and condescension has no explanation, that's just you I guess.
Re: Wheels keep turning (Score:2)
The referenced quote does not suggest that he still uses that desktop; merely that he had it 20 years ago.
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Do you ever find yourself suffering so badly from constipation that your eyeballs bulge out? Not suggesting anything, not in so many words.
Re: Wheels keep turning (Score:2)
Have you tried Preparation H? I hear it's good stuff!
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Yep, everything old is new again.
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It's called Waldo Computing: "Where the hell is my server today?"
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https://getyarn.io/yarn-clip/c... [getyarn.io]
Like all edges... (Score:1)
... they cut both ways.
So... what's 'edge' and what's 'cloud'? 20ms? That 3km (round-trip). I put a datacenter in St. Louis, MO, USA - I've covered almost all of the United States!
Sounds like some sort of crap that a pointy-haired marketroid came up with to sell you the 'next thing'.
"Cloud" makes sense - it's just a bigger, more modern, version of time sharing. Edge just sounds like 2-tier, 3-tier, n-tier all over again.
I'll pass.
But with the magic of 5G (Score:2)
But then once we get Mars populated than all of Earth's cloud servers will be edges for Mars...
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Distance (Score:4, Informative)
"five to 20 milliseconds away" I'm currently sitting at lower latency than this to AWS, Azure, and Google... so, eh!? What's the diff?
Re:Distance (Score:5, Insightful)
Marketing.
Re: (Score:2)
40ms is ~standard human reaction time (f.ex how fast professional photographer can press the shutter when situation hits).
If you do 180 in 1 sec with 3.6deg granularity (50fps), you see every snapshot for 20ms. I can attest that with 144Hz screen doing 180'ies looks much smoother than on 60Hz.
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Who owns the box! Granted with SLAs, you can mitigate risk, but there's something to be said about owning your own infrastructure.
Echoing Bell's Research (Score:5, Informative)
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it makes more sense to build resources in places like COs, and regional datacenters that are closer to customers to minimize that latency.
Hell, remember the initiative where businesses were going to be able to lease out smallish bits of their workcenters to have a small cloud datacenter put in, where the heat from the servers could help offset keeping their building heated?
Now, from what I remember cooling is actually a much bigger concern in most workcenters not in the far north, but there you go.
And while bandwidth is cheap, I'd keep in mind that it still costs a relatively large amount to provision something like a 100 gbit connection that
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Are these marketing electrons ? The ones I learned about in physics have mass, and travel at less than the speed of light.
Re:Echoing Bell's Research (Score:5, Informative)
How about 0 information leak to cloud? (Score:1)
What's the incentive? (Score:2)
As long as the data driven business model remains dominant, there is relatively little incentive to move services completely to the edge.
The full shift won't come until..
- Alternative business models become easier to operate. For example, if micro payments enter the web browser, and people start paying for things like journalism again.
- The value of privacy is even better understood by the wider public. For example by disconnecting the smart home from the cloud as much as possible.
Although there is a growi
"Edge Computing"? (Score:2)
Might as well just call it "Compu-Global-Hyper-Mega-Net Computing" and be done with it, once and for all.
Really what everyone actually needs: (Score:2)
cheap to administer computing.
IoT edge device (Score:3)
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I hope you didn't try cloud computing over populated areas.
Are there definitions of these terms? (Score:2)
So how many ms away is "cloud computing"? A guy near the bottom says he already has lower latency than 5-20ms from multiple cloud providers. For all I know, he happens to live near a hydroelectric dam, with multiple data centres down the block, of course. One imagines that those who live close (in wiring & router terms) to a cloud datacentre have "edge computing" for sure, and it's more than it isn't *guaranteed* if you live in Glasgow, MT. (It's 5 hours from any city and lacking in hydro.)
It all
I just checked (Score:3)
my main storage is 0.284ms away.
limiting factor is probably the ethernet port, which while advertised as 1gb on the laptop, won't do more than 100mb...
put it in the cloud, no, put it near the user (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:1)
pretty sure is has less to do w/locality or distance and more to do with being unable to
care for the data you own. The cost of reliable
data-security and backups when good talent is
hard to find
The speed of light (Score:2)
AI Data Models (Score:2)
I think one factor for using Edge over the Cloud, at least for AI and ML, is that once you train the Network, then you just need to run it to get the output, i.e. like facial recognition. You need less compute and storage than the training machine, so you don't need to run it in a Cloud, just a closer computer for your million users using your App.
I like "right here in this building" computing (Score:2)