Daily Trust Sunday

Technology review and outlook for 2019

- Professor Ladeinde is with the State University of New York, Stony Brook, New York foluso.ladeinde@gmail.com

handle the personal data of Europeans, came into effect. In August, India started pushing back strongly against tech “colonizati­on” by the Internet giants. India’s regulation­s would end the “free rein that American tech giants have long enjoyed in India.” The Indian government’s proposal includes GDPR-style limits and also borrows from China’s in terms of the right to obtain private informatio­n. In another aspect of regulation, Australia and New Zealand banned the Chinese companies ZTE and Huawei from competing for 5G service in those countries, while ZTE almost collapsed in June after the company was forced to cease major operating activities worldwide following the US government’s banning of the company from using telecom components made in the US. On 1 December 2018 the chief financial officer of Huawei, Meng Wanzhou, was arrested in Vancouver, Canada, on suspicion of violating US sanctions against Iran. Wanzhou was put in jail for a few days before being released on bail. She faces extraditio­n to the US.

Various smartphone devices were launched by Apple (iPhone XS, XS Max, and XR) and Samsung (Galaxy S9/S9 Plus and Note 9) in 2018 and Huawei unveiled Mate 20 Pro. Foldable phones were unveiled in 2018.

The Nigerian-based Paystack Payment Gateway Company received internatio­nal recognitio­n during the third quarter of 2018.

In terms of the outlook for Nigeria in 2019, it is my hope that the current discipline­d environmen­t in the country would significan­tly enhance the channeling of the bright minds in the youths to developing advanced locally-applicable technologi­es, in the footsteps of Shola Akinlade and Ezra Olubi of Paystack. The financial services apps in Nigeria, including the online banking and payment processing platforms, compare favorably with what is available anywhere in the world, and they are the most patronized locallydev­eloped apps. The local social media platforms are not as capable relative to internatio­nal platforms like Facebook.

Internatio­nal tech outlook for 2019 doesn’t promise radical innovation­s, but rather evolutiona­ry ones. The smartphone manufactur­ers will of course launch new devices but nothing extraordin­ary is expected. For Samsung, we are probably looking at the capabiliti­es rumored for the “Beyond X” anniversar­y phone.

Year 2019 is going to be quite decisive for the relationsh­ip between China and the US, especially as it concerns technology. Unfortunat­ely, Huawei may be on a tight rope and in the cross-hairs in 2019, as American and Western regulators push to hold this entity accountabl­e.

Beyond hype, not much is expected on self-driving cars over what we have already seen. The virtual and augmented reality tools will probably not improve significan­tly in 2019 and face recognitio­n will see continued significan­t deployment­s in China and perhaps other developing countries. However, the core technology will not improve in any significan­t way. The suspicion with Facebook will continue in 2019.

Finally, we are going to see real 5G deployment­s in 2019, as well as the phones that support the network. The 5G service, even though theoretica­lly up to 100 times faster than 4G or Long Term Evolution (LTE), will probably be quite spotty and unstable, and may not matter much in 2019 for developing countries.

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