Verizon and AWS announce 5G Edge computing partnership

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Just as Qualcomm was starting to highlight its 5G plans for the coming years, Verizon CEO Hans Vestberg hit the stage at AWS re:Invent to
discuss the carrier team up with the cloud computing giant. As part of Verizon (TechCrunch parent company, disclosure, disclosure,
disclosure) upcoming focus on 5G edge computing, the carrier will be the first to use the newly announced AWS Wavelength
The platform is designed to let developers build super-low-latency apps for 5G devices. Currently, it being piloted in Chicago with a
handful of high-profile partners, including the NFL and Bethesda, the game developer behind Fallout and Elder Scrolls
No details yet on those specific applications (though remote gaming and live streaming seem like the obvious ones), but potential future
uses include things like smart cars, IoT devices, AR/VR — you know, the sorts of things people cite when discussing 5G life beyond the
smartphone. Qualcomm unveils Snapdragon 865 and 765 platforms &AWS Wavelength provides the same AWS environment — APIs, management
console and tools — that they&re using today at the edge of the 5G network,& AWS CEO Andy Jassy said onstage
Starting with Verizon 5G network locations in the U.S., customers will be able to deploy the latency-sensitive portions of an application at
the edge to provide single-digit millisecond latency to mobile and connected devices.& As Verizon CEO joined Vestberg onstage, CNO Nicki
Palmer joined Qualcomm in Hawaii to discuss the carrier mmwave approach to the next-gen wireless
The technology has raised some questions around its coverage area
Verizon has addressed this to some degree with partnerships with third-parties like Boingo. The company plans to have coverage in 30 U.S
cities by end of year
That number is currently at 18.