Intelligent CIO Middle East Issue 19 | Page 43

FEATURE: 5G T he telecommunications industry has seen a new mobile standard being launched every 10 years. The first generation of analog based mobile networks or 1G was released in 1982. The second generation of mobile networks or 2G was launched in 1991, and introduced digital protocols leading to GPRS and EDGE extensions. Subsequently much faster and efficient mobile networks, 3G and 4G were released and standardised in 2001 and 2012. It is expected that 5G mobile networking technology may start appearing after 2020, based on the same ten-year development cycle, rule of thumb. Some of the expected characteristics of 5G mobile networks will be significantly faster download speeds of the theoretical order of 10,000 Mbps, ability to support more complex mobile applications, higher density of broadband users, support for massive machine communications, support for device communications, support for Internet of Things, as well as lower battery consumption and lower latency. “5G is not just another G. It is much more than that. Our society has been through a series of industrial revolutions, each making fundamental changes to the way we live. The 5G era will be based on cloud and digitalisation, bringing augmented and virtual reality into mainstream use, enabling billions of sensors not just connected but feeding and fed by artificial intelligence, and enabling smarter factories and processes,” says Aji Ed, Head of Technology, Middle East and Africa at Nokia. Other than performance characteristics, critics argue that the standards of benchmarking 5G networks against 4G advanced networks, should move to other www.intelligentcio.com www.intelligentcio.com areas including use cases. All players within the industry are preparing for the new standard of 5G networks including carriers, processor manufacturers, OEMs, application and solution providers. Another important reality check is while the industry shares a common vision and standard, there is still no official standard for 5G networks. Says Andrey Koynov, Chief Technology Officer at InfiNet Wireless, “There are no products that support 5G at this time, because there is no approved standard to define the fifth generation of mobile wireless systems. It is now in the definition, research and proof-of- concept stage, so the actual 5G deployments and the actual mass products and 5G-based service are a few years down the road.” The US Federal Communications Commission has approved the spectrum for 5G, which includes 28 Ghz, 37 GHz and 39 GHz bands. These frequency bands are also referred to as millimetre wave bands, in relation to their wavelengths and in comparison, to the longer wavelengths used in 1G, 2G, 3G technology networks. Higher the frequency and smaller the wave length of radio transmissions used, the better is its capability to carry data and support much larger number of multiple users per channel. A recent report indicates that Middle East mobile operators are investing $50 billion in 5G networking infrastructure over the next few years. “VMware is working closely with Middle East service providers on public-private partnerships to deliver 5G network infrastructure,” says Ahmed Auda, Managing Director, Middle East and North Africa at VMware. While many service providers are eager to deploy 5G solutions, there are INTELLIGENTCIO 43 43