Ask HN: Why is communication among physically nearby devices still impractical?
Why is peer to peer ad hoc communication among physically nearby commercially available end user devices still impractical in the 21st century? Why 5+ smart devices sitting on my desk and 20+ smart devices around my house can't communicate, sync or exchange information without going through servers thousands of miles away? What stops companies implementing simple both way fm radio, or ad hoc wlan communication, or mesh of all the smart devices? Even, IoT which once came with the promise to remove this digital divide is now forming on infrastructure centered model. Smart devices now a days mean always-connected-to-the-infrastructure devices. What is the reason behind the huge gap between physically nearby and digitally nearby for today's smart devices?
Possible reasons that come to my mind are-
. Technically not feasible.
. Significantly less value from business perspective.
. Government(s) discourage companies to improve significantly in peer to peer ad hoc technology for security reasons.
Any idea? What's going on?
11 comments
[ 6.3 ms ] story [ 32.1 ms ] threadI am going to say that the cloud killed this. If companies can get you to interact with your friends and family in your own house through their cloud service than they get a lock in strategy which is a bit of an incentive to kill their local stuff. It also doesn't help that the major device that you would like to have talking is your cell phone which has a major company behind it pushing their cloud for all it is worth.
Technically, it's certainly feasible and you do have specialized deployments where devices use mesh networking.
Governments don't really limit peer to peer tech.
There's simply better return for R&D dollars developing other features.
Maybe there are a few other use cases, like large outdoor music festivals with overloaded connections, but there just isn't a real use case for most of these services.
Come up with a compelling use case for peer-to-peer/mesh technology, and I think you'll see widespread adoption.
DLNA orchestrates media between disparate (non-Apple) devices as another example. My desktop downloads a video, my NAS shares it, I press play on my Android phone, and the video is output on the TV.
So my various devices can talk to each other, but it took Sony and Intel an untold amount of resources to achieve. For something as simple as copy and paste of text, there's no such body dedicated to making that work.
¹https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=9575291