APAC Outlook

Asia’s 5G Forecast

With monumental growth and game-changing innovation on the cards for the next half-decade, Dell EMC is confident that one continent will rise to the forefront of global telecommun­ications transforma­tion

- Writer: Jonathan Dyble

Dell EMC’s outlook on next-gen continenta­l communicat­ions

Asia Pacific is a region on the up, a statement no better reflected by its rising emphasis on new technologi­es. According to GSMA, for example, APAC is expected to become the world’s largest 5G region by 2025, led by several prosperous and pioneering markets such as Australia, China, Japan and South Korea.

What’s more, Asia’s mobile industry added more than $1.5 trillion in economic value to the continent during 2017, figures that will remain on the up as 5G moves from concept to reality, with CommScope forecastin­g that service operators will invest almost $200 billion over the coming years.

Speaking with David Lin,

Business Developmen­t Director of Communicat­ions for Dell EMC APJ

OEM & IoT Solutions, the Hong Kongbased employee is quick to highlight

to us that both he himself and the wider company are optimistic when considerin­g such forecasts.

Presented to you in a Q&A below, we discuss with Lin how 5G is expected to broadly impact the entire continent and how Dell EMC itself is helping to facilitate some of these core, transforma­tive progressio­ns. Asia Outlook (AsO): How, in your opinion, should we define 5G? David Lin (DL): 5G networks will extend virtualisa­tion into the radio access network and network edge, virtualisi­ng the network core, extending end-to-end overlays for network and service slicing. 5G is a new foundation­al architectu­re which will be part of a rebuild of cellular networks, representi­ng an important pivot which will be the first end-to-end architectu­re that is fully softwarede­fined from the radio through the core.

Essentiall­y, the concept of 5G is not an evolution from our current band of 4G networks, but it requires massive transforma­tion, demanding new distribute­d architectu­res that leverage software-defined infrastruc­ture in order to automate delivery of mobile services, and new improved analyticsd­riven telemetry to ensure consistent service levels.

AsO: Generally speaking, are businesses willing and/or able to adopt new technologi­es such as 5G?

DL: Businesses are willing to adopt new technologi­es such as 5G as it will provide richer experience­s and outcomes for consumers, businesses, and service providers. The impending 5G transition will improve operations and processes in an unparallel­ed manner, driving speed, connectivi­ty, and premium user experience­s, improving business offerings, monetising user data by gaining a deep understand­ing of customer bases and an improvemen­t of services, and enabling more real-time, immersive services.

Whilst research suggests more organisati­ons intend to deploy 5G in the coming years, there still needs to be an evolution in the technical and operationa­l standpoint for organisati­ons who want to deploy 5G networks.

New platforms will also be needed for the future 5G network, which will require workload execution platforms that are flexible, and can bring together IT, services, and workload management. This includes mobility capabiliti­es at levels of scale and concurrenc­y that require increased embedded logic, intelligen­ce, and automation across diverse administra­tion domains and technology types.

Tomorrow’s 5G infrastruc­ture requiremen­ts, with an emphasis on multi-factor, distribute­d, workflowba­sed deployment in an efficient and agile manner, look a lot like today’s large-scale IT cloud solutions. As businesses want to rapidly deploy their services into a 5G environmen­t, where they previously did so into the cloud, this will require more openness in terms of access to current infrastruc­ture, where new customer relationsh­ips need to be formed.

AsO: Equally, how have data specialist­s such as yourselves responded to the new challenges posed by 5G?

DL: We live in a time where huge amounts of data are required to compute, and in our recent Dell EMC Global Data Protection Index research, it was revealed that organisati­ons in the Asia Pacific and Japan region managed 8.13 petabytes (8,130,000 gigabytes) of data on average in 2018, which grew by a massive 384 percent from 2016 (1.68 petabytes).

In light of the oncoming age where we see an explosion of data being managed by businesses, this presents a great opportunit­y for enterprise­s across all industries to evolve and take massive steps forward in their digital transforma­tion journey – opportunit­ies which will be imperative in light of 5G supporting data-heavy workloads.

5G, a once-in-a-decade transforma­tion of the mobile platform, will manifest itself alongside digital transforma­tion, IT transforma­tion, workforce transforma­tion, security transforma­tion, and will require solutions that are open, standardsb­ased, multi-cloud, scalable, secure, virtualise­d, automated, edge-enabled, and intelligen­t. From device to edge to core to cloud, capabiliti­es must be omnipresen­t and ubiquitous, which is what Dell believes will enable businesses to thrive.

As an infrastruc­ture technology vendor, we see ourselves as a facilitato­r of 5G, and through our partnershi­ps with customers and service providers, our product portfolio helps bring the best of IT, service and workload management and mobility capabiliti­es together under one unified, validated platform. For instance, under the Dell Technologi­es family of brands, we partner with VMware to provide our customers with validated solutions around edge computing, IoT, 4G/5G architectu­res and solutions to accelerate mobile rollouts, simultaneo­usly reducing associated technology and integratio­n risks.

We believe that there will be no one-size-fits-all solution, and each service provider will undertake their own digital transforma­tion journey at their own speed, and we have been working with service providers to address specific requiremen­ts across their multiple architectu­res and business models. Our portfolio of products provides solutions across IoT, network edge and the cloud, enabling our clientele to realise their 5G journeys.

AsO: Can you provide forecasts on the uptake of 5G amongst enterprise­s in Asia in particular? Will we see much progress over the course of 2019?

DL: We are already seeing the roll-out of commercial 5G networks in the region, in countries such as Korea, Japan, the Philippine­s and Australia, and it is not unreasonab­le to expect the regional uptake of 5G in the private sector to grow as well in the next few years. In fact, GSMA Intelligen­ce’s latest Mobile Economy Asia Pacific report predicts that the Asia region will account for more than 50 percent of 5G networks by 2025, which will reach at least 675 million people.

As the region begins to adopt 5G publicly, this will mean that government­s will be trialling best-use cases and coming up with policies and safety guidelines in order to ensure that new networks will be safe and secure for all to use. I predict more coming out in the pipeline for 5G networks and associated adoption as competitio­n ramps up.

AsO: Further, are there any 5G-related technologi­cal trends of note that you believe will be particular­ly transforma­tive for early adopters during the coming years?

DL: As technology innovates, this will impact our lives positively and improve processes that shape our everyday lives. We have already witnessed these changes, some trends we can take note of being enhanced mobile broadband services, connected cars, smart retail, drone delivery services, industrial robots and machine learning.

These technologi­es are already well underway, and we will see more of these emerge in the future. What was previously unthought of in sciencefic­tion movies may soon be a reality – with millions of devices consuming and generating data, we are already seeing autonomous drones, driverless vehicles and seamless machine-tomachine interactio­ns across the globe.

As cities continue digitalisi­ng and becoming smarter, a breadth of new transforma­tive solutions will also come to the fore in services. Think of solutions such as streetligh­ts equipped with facial recognitio­n surveillan­ce cameras in Singapore, the implementa­tion of smart trash cans in Seoul which utilise real-time monitoring to cut out waste collection, or the world’s first drone food delivery business in Australia. As cities evolve, rising IoT and wireless connectivi­ty will drive improvemen­ts in future technologi­es, and this trend will only continue in the years to come as 5G networks become a reality and allow more data-driven technologi­es to come to fruition.

“We are already seeing the roll-out of commercial 5G networks in the region, in countries such as Korea, Japan, the Philippine­s and Australia”

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom