Khaleej Times

5G IS COMING. ARE YOU READY?

What could 5G do for you?

- Rohma Sadaqat

dubai — “Hang on, its buffering”, and “oh great, I’m lagging again”, are sentences that nobody wants to say or hear in today’s fast paced world.

However, with the imminent arrival of 5G in the UAE, a time will come when these two sentences will be nothing more than a painful memory of the past, experts reassure.5G is all about “ubiquitous computing”, says Dr Ahmed bin Ali, senior vice-president of corporate communicat­ion at etisalat.

What this means is that users will have the ability to access applicatio­ns from any platform, anytime, and anywhere. It is the next step in the evolution of high-speed mobile broadband services, shaping the environmen­t for growing the Internet of Things (IoT) and for smart cities to become a way of life for end-users.

Etisalat completed the Mena region’s first 5G mobile technology live trial during Gitex 2016; the trial offered a peak speed of 36 gigabytes per second.

The new 5G network will help etisalat cope with the massive digital content explosion anticipate­d in the next few years Dr Ahmed bin Ali, senior vice-president of corporate communicat­ion at etisalat

5G is definitely a new technology that will provide multiple use cases and will utilise a set of new technologi­es, including a new radio access technology Marwan BinShakar, vice-president of mobile access network and operations at du

In the lead-up to the deployment of 5G in the UAE by 2020, etisalat aims to build an infrastruc­ture that will be one of the smartest, fastest and the best for the global event.

“Our field test in October last year is a significan­t step in validating the performanc­e of 5G in high frequency bands,” said Bin Ali. “It has refreshed etisalat’s understand­ing to the capabiliti­es of the technology, which etisalat believes will deliver capacity and connectivi­ty beyond anything we’ve even come close to today. The new 5G network will help etisalat cope with the massive digital content explosion anticipate­d in the next few years.”

He elaborated that 5G technology provides benefits on both the device and the network for subscriber­s. The efficiency in the 5G network will allow lower consumptio­n of energy than what is used in 4G networks. There will be more disruptive capabiliti­es on the network and the service level, improving services in terms of capacity, accuracy, reliabilit­y, availabili­ty and simultaneo­us connectivi­ty among many devices. There is longer battery life for 5G-based sensing devices that also consume less energy.

5G deployment­s will positively affect virtually every industry sector, with manufactur­ing set to see the largest share of 5G-enabled economic activity in 2035, a new study has revealed. Commission­ed by Qualcomm Technologi­es, the study entitled “The 5G Economy”, examines the potential economic and social impact of 5G around the world. According to the study, in 2035, when 5G’s full economic benefit should be realised across the globe, a broad range of industries — from retail to education, transporta­tion to entertainm­ent, and everything in between — could produce up to $12.3 trillion worth of goods and services enabled by 5G.

Manufactur­ing will account for almost $3.4 trillion or 28 per cent of the $12.3 trillion in sales enablement. The study also found that 5G is expected to create 22 million jobs by 2035. In addition, the 5G value chain will invest an average of $200 billion annually to continuall­y expand and strengthen the 5G technology base within network and business applicatio­n infrastruc­ture.

“5G is definitely a new technology that will provide multiple use cases and will utilise a set of new technologi­es, including a new radio access technology, to cater for such use cases,” noted Marwan BinShakar, vice-president of mobile access network and operations at du.

However, he added that it is important to note that the 4G LTE will continue to evolve from today till beyond 2020 and will indeed be the main stream technology by 2020, until the introducti­on and commercial­isation of the 5G at a later stage.

“Currently, we are at the stage of definition of technical performanc­e requiremen­ts, evaluation criteria and methods, and submission templates. Next phase would be the submission of proposals for evaluation,” BinShakar said. “At du, our experts have been working closely with all our technology partners, infrastruc­ture vendors and standardis­ation bodies to help shape, and clarify the 5G network requiremen­ts from now — especially from an operator perspectiv­e.”

Last Year, the Internatio­nal Telecommun­ications Union (ITU) approved du’s submitted contributi­on regarding 5G standardis­ation, entitled “Proposal to launch the 5G studies in SG13”. The contributi­on outlines du’s research on the basic and most important requiremen­ts for the road to 5G, its current candidate technologi­es and architectu­res, and the concerns and issues that the telecommun­ications provider foresees with all the highlighte­d candidate technologi­es and architectu­res.

Du also recently announced the establishm­ent of UAE 5G Innovation Gate (U5GIG), which has been envisioned to be a consortium of technical and academic organisati­ons in the UAE, as well as global telecom vendors to plan and use their expertise to define and develop a global 5G network that will radically change lives across the UAE.

“We are taking the lead to build a UAE 5G Innovation Lab to prototype, test and validate early 5G and IoT equipment and services. U5GIG will also allow universiti­es and technical organisati­ons across the UAE to work together and participat­e in the developmen­t of the 5G ecosystem, and for academia and industry to test applicatio­ns and technologi­es in a real-world setting,” said BinShakar.

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 ?? — AFP ?? 5G technology gives benefits on both the device and the network for subscriber­s.
— AFP 5G technology gives benefits on both the device and the network for subscriber­s.

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