A Digital Magazine from IT Department

Why Mobile Cloud computing? – By Vishal Tiwari



Mobile cloud computing architecture 

Recently mobile devices, such as Smartphone’s and tablets have made many pervasive computing dreams which come true. Still, such mobile applications do not perform well due to the shortage of resources for computation data storage, network bandwidth, and battery backup. Along with the rapid growth of various
cloud services and network technologies and increasing number of mobile devices use cloud storage services to enlarge their capacity and share data in our daily lives. We generally use cloud service clientside software in a serial fashion. However, when much devices and users participate in various services, the difficulty of managing these services efficiently and conveniently increases.
With worldwide shipments of Smartphone’s 487.7 million, exceeding PCs 414.6 million including tablets in
2011, and in the US alone, more users predicted to access the Internet from mobile devices than from PCs clearly there is a desire to be able to use mobile devices and networks like we use PCs and wire line networks today. However, in spite of advantages in the capabilities of mobile devices a gap will continue to exist there, and may even widen, with the requirements of vast multimedia applications.
Mobile cloud computing can help bridge this gap, providing mobile applications the capabilities of cloud servers and storage together with the benefits of mobile devices and mobile connectivity which possibly enabling a new generation of truly huge multimedia applications on mobile devices. In this way we look at what the early trend & what changes we are making it. In the current situation if we play Internet Gaming
on Mobile so at this an approach that enables multiplayer Internet games on mobile devices which compute
proper tasks like graphic rendering are executed on cloud servers in response to gaming commands on a mobile device, and the resulting videos has been streamed back to the mobile device in near real time.

Prof. V. Tiwari, Assistant Professor, IT Dept