Running
short of dramatically new phone designs, leaders of the world’s
wireless industry agree their next big idea is 5G, shorthand for the
fifth generation of networks they expect to have up and running by 2020.
But first they’ll have to decide what 5G needs to do that the current, fourth generation of wireless networks will never offer.
“It
is unclear what the opportunity or weakness that 5G should address is,”
researchers at GSMA, the global trade group of mobile network
operators, said in a report issued in December that punctured some of
the more visionary claims for 5G.
There
is simply no need for the industry to spend heavily on new network gear
or force consumers to upgrade phones unless the new generation of
wireless radio standards actually delivers radical improvement in speed
or functions, mobile operators say.
With discussions on setting 5G technical standards yet to begin, a final standard is expected in 2019, experts say.
That
will not stop network equipment makers such as China’s Huawei and
France’s Alcatel-Lucent and dozens of newer players from touting
projects as ready for 5G. Most industry experts expect the first
commercial deployments of 5G in the run-up to the Tokyo Olympics in
2020.
“What
happens before that is a lot of marketing,” Lauri Oksanen, vice
president of research and technology at Nokia’s Networks business.
In
that vein, Sweden’s Ericsson and Finland’s Nokia, will join a parade of
equipment makers expected to unveil their latest 5G demonstration
projects with telecom operators at Mobile World Congress, the largest
annual trade show for the global wireless industry.
5G BIG IDEA IS TO GET SMALL
Of
course, 5G promises to do a lot more of everything users are just
coming to expect from 4G in terms of watching video, faster download
times and denser network coverage. Major vendors predict a 100 to 1,000
fold increase in network capacity.
But
the technology will also have to grapple with a new challenge: the fact
that much of the world’s spectrum in lower frequency bands is used up.
What remains is higher frequency spectrum that can only carry traffic
over shorter distances.
The
biggest thing that works in this spectrum is small things, lots and
lots of connected things operating in close proximity. This spectrum
will fuel the so-called “Internet of Things”, the biggest big idea
justifying the upgrade to 5G.
Think
networked cars with collision detection, real-time navigation and
automatic breaking systems. Think factory machinery that can be
monitored remotely to learn when it is running low on crucial supplies
or is out of service. Think the growing proliferation of connected
objects inside many homes.
“In
the future we see a world where everything that can be connected, will
be connected. And that is virtually everything,” says Sara Mazur,
Ericsson’s head of research.
Ericsson, the world’s leading maker of mobile network equipment, has forecast 50 billion connected objects by 2020.
NOT THE ONLY GAME IN TOWN
That’s
the vision, but then the mobile industry has a history of
over-promising what it actually delivers with each G. In a nutshell, 1G
gave the world phone calling on the go. 2G added text messaging and
digital voice, and the first tentative steps into email and Web
connections. 3G promised a mobile Internet of pictures and video that
did not happen until 4G.
The
GSMA estimates operators will spend $1.7 trillion on equipment upgrades
between now and 2020. Most of that is simply to add 4G network capacity
and improve coverage in densely trafficked areas.
“Vendors
quite like to have a Big Bang approach because they sell more
equipment,” said Ian Miller, an executive with Spanish operator
Telefonica. “With 5G, we see more of a gradual evolution occurring … 4G
has a lot of life left in it.”
It’s
fair to say that 5G promises features that pull in opposite directions –
both ultrafast speeds, higher data capacity, fewer delays, and
geographic coverage both broader and more dense. It’s a grab bag of
requirements that only make sense in specific circumstances, but none of
them are needed in any one device.
Further
complicating the picture for 5G is the variety of proven communications
technologies that already handle short distances, but over which the
mobile industry doesn’t exercise control: Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and NFC, or
Near-Field Communication, all of which have backing from major
semiconductor and gadget makers instead.
Apple’s
latest iPhones offer built-in Wi-Fi calling, which shifts traffic off
of cellular networks, wherever available, for example.
“Vendors
and operators talking of 5G believe that anything wireless should be
connected over their networks,” said Bengt Nordstrom, a veteran industry
executive in Europe and Asia who now heads Northstream, a strategy
consulting firm.
“There is an ambition there, but you are not talking about the classic cellular operator business any longer.”
Posted by : Gizmeon
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