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The forces of 5G - The next generation of wireless technology is ready for

2018-02-15 10:46:32

rlp

Whizzy 5G tech has everything going for it barring a strong business case

NORTH KOREAN athletes will not be the only unusual participants at the winter

Olympics in Pyeongchang in South Korea, which begin on February 9th. Anyone can

take part, at least virtually. Many contestants will be watched by 360-degree

video cameras, able to stream footage via a wireless network. At certain venues

around the country sports fans will be able to don virtual-reality,

head-mounted displays to get right into the action. Flying alongside a ski

jumper, for instance, will offer an adrenalin rush without any risk of a hard

landing.

These virtual experiences will be offered by KT, South Korea s largest telecoms

firm. They are meant to showcase the latest generation of wireless technology,

known as 5G . But just as ski jumpers never know exactly how far they will

leap after leaving the ramp, it is unclear where 5G will land.

On paper, the new technology should go far. The International Telecommunication

Union (ITU), a UN body which helps develop technical standards, has agreed on

an ambitious set of requirements for the technology. It should offer download

speeds of at least 20 gigabits per second, response times or latency of less

than 1 millisecond and the ability to connect at least 1m devices in one square

kilometre. So 5G networks are supposed to be able to transfer a full-length,

high-resolution film in two seconds, respond to requests in less than a

hundredth of the time it takes to blink an eye and effortlessly serve cities

that are densely packed with connected humans and devices.

When 5G is properly rolled out, wireless bandwidth may seem infinite, says Alex

Choi, until recently the chief technology officer of SK Telecom, South Korea s

second biggest carrier, who is now at Deutsche Telekom, a German operator. That

will enable all kinds of data-ravenous services, which SK is testing at its 5G

Playground near Seoul. One such is a virtual-reality offering that allows

people to beam themselves into shared digital spaces such as a virtual sports

stadium.

Another piece of 5G ingenuity is on view at Ericsson, a maker of network

equipment. In what was once a factory building next to its headquarters near

Stockholm, it is demonstrating network slicing , a technique to create bespoke

networks. The antennae on display are able to create separate wireless

networks, to serve anything from smartphones and wireless sensors to industrial

robots and self-driving cars. Each set of devices will get exactly the

connectivity they need, says Nishant Batra, who runs wireless-network products

at the Swedish firm.

This versatility, along with the ITU requirements, could make 5G the connective

tissue for the internet of things (IoT), as connected devices are collectively

called, says Pierre Ferragu of Bernstein Research. Networks based on it could

connect and control robots, medical devices, industrial equipment and

agricultural machinery. They could also enable edge computing , the idea that

more and more number-crunching will not happen in centralised data centres but

at the fringe of networks.

The telecoms industry has a lot riding on 5G. Mature network-equipment makers

such as Ericsson and Nokia want it to revive demand for their wares, which has

declined markedly since investment in 4G peaked a couple of years ago. Makers

of radio chips, such as Qualcomm, are keen too. Countries are also boosters of

5G. Having lagged in the previous wireless generation, Asian countries want to

lead the way on the next one. Using the Olympic Games to showcase and launch 5G

is not unique to South Korea. Japan will do so in 2020, when Tokyo hosts the

summer Olympics and NTT DoCoMo, the country s largest operator, wants to start

offering 5G services commercially. In China the government, operators and local

equipment makers such as Huawei and ZTE are about to launch big 5G trials.

In America, where competition between AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile and Verizon has

already speeded 5G development, industrial policy may further accelerate its

roll-out: a leaked memo written for the White House by an official of the

National Security Council went so far as to call for a nationalised 5G network.

Such a project, it argued, would allow America to leap ahead of global

competitors and provide the American people with a secure and reliable

infrastructure . The memo was dismissed, but the idea could crop up again.

In spite of all this backing for 5G, hurdles exist. One of these is radio

spectrum, which is increasingly saturated in the lower frequency bands usually

used by mobile networks. Free spectrum abounds in the higher bands in

particular where the length of radio waves is counted in millimetres. But the

higher the frequency, the more difficult things get, explains St phane T ral of

IHS Markit, a research firm. Millimetre waves provide a lot of bandwidth, but

even foliage can block them. They either need direct line-of-sight to work or

must be bounced around obstacles, which requires lots of computing power.

Hardware is another headwind. Some equipment vendors have been touting their

wares as 5G-ready , needing only software upgrades to work with the new

standards. In fact, even if equipment is easily upgradeable, most operators

will have to rejig their networks. High-frequency radio waves do not travel

far, so firms have to erect more base stations (computers that power a network

s antennae). As for mobile devices, big changes must be made for these to be

able to use millimetre waves; with current technology, the computing power to

process the signals would drain batteries in a twinkling.

But the biggest brake on 5G will be economic. When the GSMA, an industry group,

last year asked 750 telecoms bosses about the main risk to delivering 5G, over

half cited the lack of a clear business case . Some of this pessimism is

tactical: if operators were more enthusiastic, equipment vendors would raise

their prices. But as things stand, 5G is unlikely to be a big moneymaker, says

Chetan Sharma, a telecoms consultant.

That is because, although people want more bandwidth, they are often not

willing to pay for it an attitude even the fanciest virtual-reality offerings

may not shift. Revenue per gigabyte of data has already plunged by over 50%

between 2012 and 2015, estimates Mr Sharma. Costs per gigabyte have not gone

down nearly as much and building 5G will not be cheap. Because of the higher

frequencies, 5G will require more antennae, base stations and fibre-optic

cables to connect them. And before firms can take full advantage of network

slicing , for instance, they have to upgrade the computers at the core of their

networks. We will have to work harder to give 5G a push, admits Lauri

Oksanen, who oversees network research at Nokia, a Finnish equipment maker.

Operators are unlikely to ramp up their 5G investments quickly, predicts Bengt

Nordstrom of Northstream, a telecoms consultancy. Instead, he says, they will

roll it out gradually where the numbers add up. Some will first use the

technology to provide superfast fixed wireless links (ie, between two

stationary antennae), which is less tricky to do. Both AT&T and Verizon have

said they will start offering such a service in America this year. Other

carriers may use 5G to get more out of the spectrum they own. Others will weave

5G networks to serve densely populated cities, most probably in Asia. And some

will launch private systems, for instance to provide connectivity in mines and

ports.

In other words, 5G s trajectory is likely to differ from that of a ski jumper:

it may fly low for years before it takes off. If this is the case, it would

develop much like 3G, a mobile technology introduced in the early 2000s. It

disappointed until it found a killer application with the smartphone late in

the decade. And it was only with 4G that mobile networks lived up to the

promises made of 3G, such as being able to watch video streams (see chart).

The odd-numbered generations do not seem to do too well, quips Dean Bubley, a

telecoms expert. We may have to wait for 6G to get what 5G promises.

This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the

headline "The forces of 5G"