Turn on 5G: Ericsson Completes 5G Platform for Operators
Introduces 5G commercial software for radio and core networks to enable operators to launch 5G from Q4 2018
Evolves its Distributed Cloud offering to optimize
applications across multiple sites, improving latency, security, and
resilience of 5G-enabled use cases
Expands radio portfolio, supporting smooth evolution from 4G to 5G
Ericsson (NASDAQ: ERIC) finalizes 5G-readiness for operators by enhancing its 5G Platform with new solutions for the radio and core network.
Ericsson launches 5G Radio Access Network (RAN)
commercial software, based on the recently approved first 3GPP 5G New
Radio (NR) standard. It also introduces a new category of radio products
called Street Macro – a new site type that addresses the need of
operators to grow in cities with limited available radio locations.
To capture growth opportunities presented by new 5G use cases,
Ericsson expands its 5G Core System offering with new capabilities to
support 5G NR and also enhances its Distributed Cloud solution.
Ericsson introduced its 5G Platform in February 2017 with additions made in September the same year. It comprises the 5G core, radio, and transport portfolios together with OSS/BSS, network services and security.
Fredrik Jejdling, Executive Vice President and Head of Business
Area Networks at Ericsson, says: “Operators who want to be early with
5G now have the essential pieces for launching 5G networks already this
year. With our expanded platform, they will get more efficient networks
as well as opportunities to create new revenues from emerging consumer
and industrial use cases.”
Giovanni Ferigo, CTO, TIM, says: “Ericsson is an important
enabler of our 5G in-field innovation activities that span several
cities in Italy. Together, last December – marking an Italian record -
we activated a 5G NR cell in the mmW frequencies in the city of Torino,
reaching speeds above 20Gbps. We are looking forward to testing
Ericsson’s new solutions that will contribute to address the wide
variety of use cases we are working on.”
Tongxu Zhang, Head of China Mobile Research Institute,
says: “China Mobile designs its future network, so called “NovoNet”, to
be constructed with multi-layer Telecom Integrated Cloud (TIC). The
Ericsson Distributed Cloud is aligned with the edge TIC solution with
the vision to create a unified cloud solution for fast application
innovations, leveraging full scale orchestration, automation, and
multi-cloud enablement.”
5G software – enabling first-movers to launch 5G
Available in the fourth quarter of 2018, Ericsson’s 5G radio network software
provides multi-band support for global deployment. It will allow
operators to use new frequency spectrum as it becomes available.
The 5G radio network software announced complements
Ericsson’s already launched baseband and 5G radios. Operators can simply
activate their 5G networks and take the first steps with commercial 5G
capabilities and new applications leveraging advanced mobile broadband
services.
This will cater efficiently for growing data traffic and enable
access to multimedia content, such as 4K/8K video streaming and virtual
reality/augmented reality. According to Ericsson’s new economic study of enhanced mobile broadband, evolution to 5G will enable 10 times lower cost per gigabyte than current 4G.
The radio offering is complemented with 5G Core commercial
software optimized for 5G throughput, network capacity and scalability.
Ericsson's Packet Core and Unified Data Management solutions will
deliver enhancements throughout 2018 to efficiently support 5G services.
These solutions can be further upgraded with new functionalities as the
3GPP 5G standard evolves.
Ericsson Distributed Cloud – accelerating 5G and IoT growth
Ericsson also evolves its Distributed Cloud
offering for cloud application deployment across multiple sites -
central, distributed, and edge. Managed, orchestrated, and perceived as
one solution, it improves latency, security, and resilience, and fulfils
regulatory requirements for 5G-enabled use cases. Ericsson Distributed
Cloud combines the best of telecom and cloud to enable networks as open
cloud platforms for all workloads, including telecom, consumer, and enterprise applications.
As part of the Ericsson Distributed Cloud, Ericsson will
support deployments of hardware options in a multi-vendor framework.
With fast deployable telecom-grade open software for remote upgrade and
operation, Ericsson brings Software Defined Infrastructure (SDI) to the
edge. To support efficient deployment of cloud native applications,
Ericsson also expands the offering with support for containers in a
distributed cloud infrastructure.
Radio portfolio expanded – supporting smooth evolution from 4G to 5G
Ericsson adds a new category of radio products for cities,
which it calls Street Macro – a new layer between macro and micro. These
radios will be on building facades with a smaller footprint but the
necessary strength to secure network efficiency and coverage.
Furthermore, the company unveils new radio products supporting
Massive MIMO technology. These products enable a smooth evolution from
4G to 5G and address the need for increased capacity, while simplifying
use for wider adoption.
All installed base radios from the Ericsson Radio System
delivered since 2015 will be 5G NR-capable by a remote software
installation.
Ed Gubbins, Senior Analyst, Global Telecom Technology &
Software, at GlobalData, says: “The combination of Ericsson’s new
products and 5G support for radios already deployed in the field will
give operators access to a very broad and flexible 5G portfolio. They
will be able to move quickly into enhanced mobile broadband and address
the new opportunities with industrial applications.”
Roberto Kompany, Senior Analyst at Analysys Mason says:
“Reduced latency, improved throughput, better security, reliability and
regulatory compliance are all critical capabilities that operators must
deliver for 5G use cases such as augmented reality, assisted factory and
autonomous driving vehicles. A distributed cloud capability that
enables cloud computing, storage and networking to be placed flexibly in
central, regional and edge locations and which can be managed
seamlessly, end-to-end, is an important component of a 5G platform.”