Business Day

4.5G demo a first for continent

- PHOEBE HUANG

CHINA’s telecommun­ication giant Huawei and MTC, the largest operator in Namibia, announced the commercial use of LTE-Advanced network in Windhoek, Namibia and launched the first 4.5G trial in Africa last month.

A speed test showed the peak download speed of LTE-A network reached 300Mbps, and the 4.5G network reached 1Gbps at the launch.

“I am happy that this new technology will complement the Harambee Plan, and I am looking forward to the introducti­on of the new technology,” said Namibian President Hage Geingob following the launch.

Miguel Gereldes, CEO of MTC, said during his presentati­on: “The cooperatio­n between MTC and Huawei in the innovative LTE-A and 4.5G technologi­es marks the beginning of a Gigabit society where consumers could enjoy a faster and better mobile broadband experience, and the mobile broadband network with high speed, low latency and big capacity that enables the developmen­t of virtual reality, like 4K high resolution video, the Internet of Things, and many others new business opportunit­ies. The digital economy will be boosted by all these new businesses.”

As introduced by Wallace Yin, Managing Director of Huawei Namibia, 4.5G is the natural evolution of 4G and the necessary transition to 5G. Huawei came up with the comprehens­ive concept of 4.5G in 2014, and has already become a major player in 4.5G research and developmen­t with 20 commercial and trial 4.5G networks deployed around the world

“As an ICT advisor to many government­s around the world, we also look forward to sharing our global expertise and solutions with the government of Namibia, in order to promote ICT developmen­t and boost digital economy here,” said Yin.

Huawei also emphasised that 4.5G has much better performanc­e in terms of bandwidth, network capacity and network latency, compared with 4G.

The technology will allow for speeds of up to 1Gbps over mobile and latency of less than 10 millisecon­ds.

4.5G will also better aid the developmen­t of the Internet of Things, supporting up to 100,000 connection­s per cell.

 ?? HUAWEI/WU SHANG Picture: ?? Namibian President Hage Geingob experience­s a Virtual Reality gadget at the launch ceremony of the first 4.5G trial in Africa in Windhoek, Namibia earlier this month.
HUAWEI/WU SHANG Picture: Namibian President Hage Geingob experience­s a Virtual Reality gadget at the launch ceremony of the first 4.5G trial in Africa in Windhoek, Namibia earlier this month.

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