Apple’s iPhone 5 will enable ambitious remote computing program, says source

“We’ve received a tip about an unexpected application for the NFC chip Apple is expected to build into the iPhone 5,” Leander Kahney reports for The Cult of Mac.

“Near Field Communication (NFC) is a short-range wireless connection technology that would turn the iPhone into an electronic wallet or security passkey,” Kahney reports. “NFC is already in use in Asia and is expected to explode here in the next three to five years, especially if Apple adopts the technology. NFC has been rumored for the iPhone 5, and Apple appears to be gearing up for a NFC revolution. It has made a lot of NFC hires, including a a leading NFC expert and has patented a lot of NFC technology.”

Kahney reports, “If the iPhone 5 does have NFC, applications like an eWallet are a no-brainer. But we’ve been told that Apple is also researching NFC for remote computing. For example, a NFC iPhone will allow users to carry a lot of their desktop data and settings with them — and load that data onto a compatible Mac. If users wave a NFC-equipped iPhone at a NFC Mac (they need to be in close proximity to interact), the Mac will load all their applications, settings and data. It will be as though they are sitting at their own machine at home or work. When the user leaves, and the NFC-equipped iPhone is out of range, the host machine returns to its previous state.”

Read more in the full article here.

MacDailyNews Take: Hence the, or a major, need for billion-dollar data centers?

58 Comments

  1. @iappletennis

    I will take all my stock buying advice from you from now on. Forget Morgan Stanley! Tell me what else your magic ball sees in the stock market. Oh and don’t forget the smiley face!

  2. @iappletennis

    I will take all my stock buying advice from you from now on. Forget Morgan Stanley! Tell me what else your magic ball sees in the stock market. Oh and don’t forget the smiley face!

  3. “MDN, what does NFC have to do with a data center?”

    Loki: The idea is that small files would be located on the iPhone and could be transferred by NFC and Wifi or Bluetooth, but big files and apps would be downloaded over the Internet—hence the need for data centers.

  4. “MDN, what does NFC have to do with a data center?”

    Loki: The idea is that small files would be located on the iPhone and could be transferred by NFC and Wifi or Bluetooth, but big files and apps would be downloaded over the Internet—hence the need for data centers.

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