AWS brings 1984 to the edge

2025-04-08 17:03 63

The adjective ‘Orwellian’ is overused, not least by this publication, but what do you expect when you launch industrial IoT services with names like ‘Monitron’?

That’s just one of many announcements coming from the latest AWS re:Invent three week jamboree, during which Amazon Web Services gets to reveal its latest progress in automating the world. Many of these involve bringing cloud cleverness to the edge of the network and the most eye-catching was a suite of services concerning ‘industrial machine learning’.

Most of them, as the collective name implies, concern industrial IoT and seem genuinely useful. They focus on AI-boosted monitoring of equipment to see if it’s working properly and diagnose the symptoms if it’s not. The thinking is that this significantly cuts the number of technicians you need to employ and the level of training even those few remaining ones need, because the AI does most of the heavy lifting. Then you just need to send some minimum-wage drone to perform simple, repetitive tasks as required.

That’s all fine, but then the geniuses at AWS decided Monitron was a great name for something that keeps an eye on everything. The same brainstorming session, presumably, also yielded something benignly-named AWS Panorama, which uses computer vision to improve industrial operations and workplace safety.

Everyone wants a safer workplace, right? But at what cost to privacy and liberty? This ‘computer vision’ (i.e. networked CCTV cameras) will spy on workers to make sure they’re complying with best practice such as driving forklifts properly and social distancing coz of coronavirus. If they don’t, we imagine a Punishertron 4000 drone can be automatically dispatched to deal with the errant unit.

On a lighter note, Vodafone announced it will be the first European operator to offer MEC (Mobile Edge Computing) solutions based on AWS Wavelength, a service suite designed to facilitate MEC applications such as autonomous vehicles and lagless live video.

When we were at the peak of the 5G hype cycle, it was all about more bandwidth, massive IoT, low latency and combinations therein. It was obvious at the time that the only really novel part of the 5G triangle was low-latency since we already had IoT and bandwidth is a constantly evolving commodity. Basic physics means the less distance a signal has to travel, the less latency it will suffer, which is why MEC is a big deal.

So Vodafone seems wise to be focusing on this sort of thing as a way to get some return on its 5G investments. The AWS Wavelength initiative seems to be all about offering 10 millisecond latency to businesses and developers to do things like robotic surgery with. It’s also building a commercial MEC centre in London, all of which will start to become reality early next year.

“Every millisecond matters in digitalising manufacturing, safeguarding citizens and workers, transporting medical supplies by drone or eliminating motion sickness when wearing a VR headset,” said Vodafone CTO Johan Wibergh. “Putting these services much closer to the customer with Vodafone’s Edge Computing service will significantly reduce any delay in transmitting critical services. By opening up new innovation hubs within our 5G network, which currently spans 127 cities and nine markets in Europe, we can help turn new business ideas into commercial successes.”

“Working with AWS on edge computing means we are making it simpler for both independent software vendors and our customers to experiment with this emerging technology,” said Vinod Kumar CEO of Vodafone Business. “We’re doing this by offering an incubation space to create and test applications that we can then industrialise and scale. And we’re already seeing some innovative applications that provide positive business outcomes from Dedrone, Digital Barriers, HERE Technologies, Groopview, and Unleash live, with so much more to come once our MEC innovation programme is running.”

Not everything AWS does is dystopian, of course, but as it moves further into IoT and automation it seems an increasing proportion of it is. Much of the stuff coming out of AWS re:Invent seems designed to render human beings obsolete and to de-skill those lucky few that are still required. We’re no luddites here at Telecoms.com and acknowledge that technological progress is both desirable and inevitable, but we think Amazon could do a much better job of sugaring the pill than by launching products called the Monitron.