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China races ahead as rest of world dithers over standalone 5G

Dell’Oro Group says operators’ fear of move to standalone 5G stunts growth of mobile core networks

Research from the Dell’Oro Group claims that operator reluctance to move from non-standalone 5G to standalone 5G is restricting growth in the mobile core network market. 

Mobile operators can’t bear to let go of the non-standalone 5G networks that rely on the LTE Evolved Packet Core, the report says. A move to a standalone (SA) 5G, which runs on a new cloud-native core network, would stimulate market growth. 

Only the Chinese operators are displaying the boldness needed, according to Dell’Oro Group, which reports that in the Asia Pacific region 70% of operator investment goes on 5G core equipment. 

Overall, the research firm found that growth in core network spending has slowed, from a double digit year-on-year rate rise to a 6% growth rate this year. 

Dell’Oro Group research director David Bolan attributed the slowdown to the sluggish uptake of 5G standalone networks. Bolan called on mobile operators to make up their minds.

No shortage of NFV Options

“CSPs [Comms service providers] need to decide which direction to take for 5G SA deployments. CSPs have several options to mull over, with new choices that were not available during the switch from 3G to 4G,” said Bolan.

It is a huge decision which could decide the fate of network function virtualisation infrastructure (NFVI) Bolan conceded. However the CSPs are blessed with a variety of options. “NFVI can be procured from a 5G core vendor, a third-party, the public cloud or another platform like the Rakuten Communications Platform,” said Bolan. 

Huawei, Ericsson, Nokia, ZTE and Mavenir are the top mobile core network equipment vendors, according to Dell’Oro Group. Its research also found that 4G core spend is in continual decline, but still makes up 70% of the mix between 4G and 5G.” 

Standalone 5G on trial across Europe

The upsurge in spending could be imminent as there is plenty of relevant trial activity and planned deployments, reports Dell’Oro Group. The ultimate goal is to create ‘zero touch’ operations and the delivery of cloud-native 5G’s flagship feature – network slicing.

Nokia recently signed a single-vendor deal with A1 Telekom Group to deploy standalone 5G in Serbia and Slovenia. Vodafone Spain has selected Ericsson for pre-commercial standalone 5G support, including cloud-native 5G core and future network applications. In France, Orange is evaluating standalone 5G in tandem with related tech, including artificial intelligence and Open RAN.

In a blog post on the website of German operator Deutsche Telekom CTO Walter Goldenits (see our recent interview with him here) said the launch of its 5G Standalone (SA) network depends on use cases and the availability of devices.

“If the first use cases are still available in 2021, then 5G Standalone will come in 2021. Otherwise we will jump in 2022 at the latest,” said Goldenits.

 

OneWeb, StarLink and AAC Space Africa launches spark satellite fever

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OneWeb launches 34 satellites, StarLink opens Czech service and AAC Space unveils African division 

August has seen major activity in the space wars as satellite launches ranged from new companies to services to infrastructure.

Satellite comms operator OneWeb has launched 34 news satellites into low orbit from the Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. In Europe Starlink, the SpaceX-owned satellite internet operator has obtained obtained regulatory approval to provide its comms services in the Czech Republic and pledged to launch a service ‘soon’. Meanwhile, a satellite company launch by AAC Clyde Space saw it unveil Space Africa, a service catering for the growing market demand for satellites and space services in Africa.

OneWeb’s Low Earth Orbit (LEO) service, jointly owned by India’s Bharti (telecoms) group and the UK government, now has a total in-orbit constellation of 288 satellites. These form part of OneWeb’s 648 LEO satellite fleet that promises high-speed, low-latency global connectivity. European mobile operators, such as BT, are increasingly  using satellite to bulk up their infrastructure.

“OneWeb is seeing huge demand for its services from global customers,” said CEO Neil Masterson. Clients include telcos, ISPs and governments wanting to bring high network speeds to those with low access.

OneWeb received a $300 million equity boost from South Korea’s Hanwha Systems for an 8.8 per cent stake, bringing total equity investment to $2.7 billion since November 2020, with no debt issuance. The fresh investment is expected to be completed in the first half of 2022, subject to regulatory approvals.

Inmarsat criticises LEO expectations

Bharti Group-backed OneWeb is readying to take on Elon Musk’s Starlink and Amazon’s Project Kuiper. Critics at UK-based satellite comms provider Inmarsat have dismissed the competitive service offered by LEO operators, such as Starlink and OneWeb, saying they “lack fundamental capabilities” of providing secure and comprehensive fast broadband coverage.

According to Czech server lupa.cz end services might be available to Czech users as early as September 1, 2021 but this date is more likely to mark the beginning of connection testing.

However, Starlink’s Irish branch has notified the Czech Telecommunications Authority of the commencement services. The beta version of the service is already available in 12 countries, including Germany and Austria, with some countries conducting private tests. Starlink has launched 1,701 satellites into orbit, and it estimates that 1,400 are fully functional. Founder Elon Musk said he wants to run tens of thousands of LEO satellites.

African space race

AAC Space Africa will design, build and deliver space missions to the continent from its Cape Town base in South Africa’s Western Cape Province. The new subsidiary will also be the group’s centre of competence for advanced radio communication. Its management team claims to have 40 years of small satellite experience, having pioneered the African CubeSat industry through several missions and launched the first CubeSat on the continent.

The African Space economy will be worth $10 billion by 2024, according to AAC Space Africa. Previously AAC Clyde Space had to track ocean currents with earth observation technologies run through its European companies’ hubs.

“We see great potential for small satellites to provide timely, accurate and targeted data for weather forecasting, ocean monitoring, agricultural planning and land management,” said AAC Clyde Space CEO Luis Gomes.

Beyond connectivity – SKT announces T Universe subscription brand

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Korea’s SK Telecom aims for 36 million subscribers by 2025 with partners including Google, Amazon, Starbucks and AIA Insurance so far.

SK Telecom held a press conference today to announce its plans to expand into the subscription market with a new subscription brand T Universe. 

SKT said it expects to reach 36 million T Universe subscribers and KRW 8 trillion (€5.834 billion) in annual gross merchandise value by 2025.

The idea, as the name suggests, is that it will be a ‘subscription Platform for All’. The operator is to work with partners – from SMEs and start-ups to global companies – with the aim of converting all its customers into T Universe subscribers.

More partners will be added over time. The service will launch on 31 August.

SK is working on:

  • online and offline shopping with Amazon, 11st, Emart and others
  • food & beverages with Starbucks, Paris Baguette, Baedal Minjok, and more
  • digital services with Google One, Wavve, Flo, V Coloring, Xbox Game Pass, Spoon Radio, and others
  • mobility services with T Map, Modoo Shuttle, among others
  • cosmetics with Toun 28
  • flower subscription with Kukka
  • pet products with About Pet,
  • insurance with AIA Insurance
  • nutritional supplements with Biopublic and
  • education with DoBrain). 

It is in talks with around 100 other companies to offer subscription services. 

Many variations on the theme

SK claims that its Universal Pass, which groups together various subscription products centred around Amazon Global Store on 11st will offer “exceptional value and benefits to customers”.  

The monthly subscription will cost KRW 9,900 (€7.20) a month, including free international delivery with no minimum spend for Amazon Global Store products on 11st 

It will also provide KRW 3,000 worth of 11st points, Google One Membership with 100GB of cloud storage and one additional subscription product worth from KRW 8,000 to KRW 10,000. 

More details of the offers and alternatives here

A new revenue universe?

“T Universe aims to create a new universe of subscription services that benefits both customers and business partners,” said Park Jung-ho, CEO of SKT. “By launching the subscription business that goes beyond the realm of telecommunications, we will suggest a brand new subscription lifestyle for our customers.” 

SK plans “to nurture over 1,000 consultants to provide specialized care and assistance for subscription customers”. SKT’s customer care centre already handles more than 100 million customer calls per year.

Customers will also be able to sign up for the subscription products via online channels of SKT (T World) and its subsidiaries (11st, etc.) that boast a combined total of 50 million monthly active users.

 

GSA: 5G growth booms but industries must be left to their own devices

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Report finds 461 operators in 137 countries are investing in 5G trials, licences, planning, network trials and soft launches.

The Global mobile Suppliers Association (GSA) has released its latest intelligence on the progress of 5G networking across the world.

According to its report 4G and 5G Devices, Networks, Technologies and Spectrum, 166 operators in 67 countries have launched 3GPP-compliant 5G mobile services, while 63 operators in 34 countries had launched 3GPP-compliant 5G fixed wireless access (FWA) or home broadband services. These figures don’t include five (unnamed) operators that are to run soft launches of their 5G networks to a select audience, GSA said. 

Commercial progress

Thirteen operators have launched commercial public 5G standalone (SA) networks, while 45 others are embarking on 5G SA for public networks. Meanwhile there are 23 operators in the pipeline that are involved in tests and trials. In August ABI Research suggested that mobile operators have missed their opportunity to exploit private 5G networks. 

The industry tracker also reports of 938 announced 5G devices in existence, up by over half (350) the amount reported six months ago, when there were 588 pieces of 5G kit. Of the reported 938 5G devices, 608 are commercially available, is a rise of around 66 per cent in six months. The GSA has identified 450 5G phones available, up from 351 in January 2021.

GSA has given a breakdown of the rise in private 5G networks, with 45 countries reporting that exclusive LTE or 5G broadcasts were enabled by an exclusive network spectrum licence. Now GSA says it is tracking 370 companies across the globe that have taken up the option to ring fence their next generation network.

Of those 370 would be 5G companies, many are still at the stage of exploring how to use their 5G suitable spectrum licences and currently at various stages of planning, testing, trials and pilot schemes. Only in a minority of cases is 5G alone being used and LTE still accounts for the majority of private mobile networks deployments.

The ratio of LTE to 5G is reversing

While LTE is used in 64 per cent of the identified private mobile networks, that is down from 81 per in October 2020. By contrast 5G which is now being deployed (or planned for deployment) in 44 per cent of private mobile networks. In the networks being built 8 per cent are both LTE and 5G.

The manufacturing sector has the most early adopters of local area private mobile networks. This sector, which is an enthusiastic pioneer of the Internet of Things to slash costs and raise productivity, has 79 companies that have either reserved spectrum, run pilot schemes or, in rare cases, actually use private networks now. Mining and shipping ports complete the top three private network pioneers.

 

LG demos 6G terahertz breakthrough in German research labs

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Proves that transmission and reception of data on wireless terahertz (THz) frequency is viable for potential 6G standard.

Korea’s LG Electronics and Germany’s research lab Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft have successfully proved one of the central concepts of 6G networks. Though 6G systems do not technically exist without a standard, their potential came one step closer to reality.

Terahertz frequencies, electromagnetic waves with frequencies between 100 GHz and 10 THz, or wavelengths between 3 mm and 30 μm, were used in a networking experiment and managed to transmit data over 100 meters in an outdoor setting.

It was the first time this has been done but hopefully not the last if a 6G standard is upheld.

The demonstration took place on 13 August with the test data traveling between the Fraunhofer Heinrich Hertz Institute (HHI) and the Berlin Institute of Technology. LG attributes the success of the demo to its collaboration with Germany research lab Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft.

Koreans investing heavily in 6G futures

One of the biggest challenges for wireless 6G will be the need for power amplification. Terahertz frequencies have short ranges and suffer from power loss during transmission and reception between antennas. This calls for the generation of a stable signal across ultra-wideband frequencies. The power amplifier was developed by Korean network equipment maker LG, with independent texting conducted by Fraunhofer HHI and Fraunhofer Institute for Applied Solid State Physics (IAF).

The power amplifier can generate a stable signal output of up to 15 dBm in the frequency range between 155 to 175 GHz. To this end LG claimed it also demonstrated adaptive beamforming technology successfully. The beamformer alters the signal’s direction in accordance with changes to the channel and receiver position. This employs a technique involving high-gain antenna switching, which combines output signals of multiple power amplifiers and transmits them to specific antennas.

“This test means we are ever closer to the successful application of terahertz radio communication spectrum in the upcoming 6G era,” said Dr. I.P. Park, president and CTO of LG Electronics.

In 2019, LG established the LG-KAIST 6G Research Center in partnership with the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST). This year, LG and KAIST partnered with US test and measurement firm Keysight Technologies to research future 6G technologies.

6G and the ambient internet of everything

All LG’s partners have agreed to develop technologies related to terahertz frequencies, the key frequency band for 6G communications which has not been standardised. The partners aim to complete 6G research by 2024. LG predicted that 6G’s faster data speed, lower latency and higher reliability will create the Ambient Internet of Everything (AIoE), which provides enhanced connected experience to users.

Last year, the government of South Korea said it aims to launch a pilot project for yet to be standardised 6G mobile services in 2026. The Korean government expects 6G services to be commercially available in Korea between 2028 and 2030. The Korean government will invest $179.2 million to secure basic 6G technology by 2026.

Djibouti Telecom doubles capacity of DARE1 submarine infra to 400GB

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The east African operator has deployed Ciena’s GeoMesh Extreme to upgrade its DARE1 network.

Djibouti Telecom is implementing Ciena’s GeoMesh Extreme to upgrade its Djibouti Africa Regional Express1 (DARE1) network to increase digitization in East Africa.

The region is currently underserved regarding international connectivity.

Hub for East Africa

Located on the northeast coast of the Horn of Africa, Djibouti is situated on the Bab el-Mandeb Strait—one of the world’s busiest shipping routes serving the Indian Ocean and Red Sea.

The nation is a connectivity hub for East Africa, made possible by state-owned network provider Djibouti Telecom.

As part of a consortium of telecoms operators, Djibouti Telecom operates eight submarine cable systems, including DARE1, which crosses Djibouti, Kenya, and Somalia.

The 5,000 km network, which connects the countries to data centres and content providers around the world, offers businesses and citizens access to internet, mobile, and global cloud services.

Faced with growing traffic driven by widespread remote work and learning, Djibouti Telecom set out with Ciena to upgrade DARE1.

Life line

“Submarine cable networks are our lifeline to the connected world, especially with more people relying on the internet than ever before,” said Mohamed Assoweh Bouh, General Manager of Djibouti Telecom.

“The DARE1 upgrade lets us bring much-needed connectivity and content closer to more users, faster – priming our area for economic growth today and for years to come.”

Djibouti Telecom is deploying Ciena’s GeoMesh Extreme submarine network solution, which uses the 6500 Packet-Optical Platform powered by the WaveLogic family, allowing a doubling of line rates to 400Gbps.

Spectrum Sharing capabilities enable the partitioning of submarine optical spectrum to different end users for more efficient use of undersea assets. The network is managed via Ciena’s Manage, Control and Plan (MCP) domain controller.

“Leveraging Ciena’s GeoMesh Extreme, Djibouti Telecom expands the capacity of DARE1 to make possible dynamic new 10G, 100G, and Spectrum Sharing services for an increasingly digital world,” said Ian Clarke, Vice President of Global Submarine Solutions, Ciena.

Vodafone to teach small firms survival skills for the age of digital disruption

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Cybersecurity and remote connectivity are top priorities in the pandemic and small businesses want to get up to speed 

Mobile operator Vodafone and training partner Udemy have created a new digital training programme for the UK small businesses in response to the disruption created by the pandemic. The move follows closely on an initiative by Telefonica which teamed up with Saudi Arabia’s ATCSC to offer cyber security.

The programme was launched in response to revelations in the SME Cybersecurity report, a Vodafone study of the effect of skill shortages. The study showed that companies have been rendered vulnerable to cyber attacks and panic buys in the desperate search for digital know how.  

Lessons and useful intelligence will be passed on via The Vodafone V-Hub in a mission to improve the speed, safety and efficiency of daily operations for Britain’s small businesses. Vodafone pledged there will be no sign-up fees or complicated downloads, with a simple log in providing access to 150,000 fee and ‘premium’ courses.

Vodafone claims it launched the programme after a joint study with Enterprise Nation revealed that a significant portion of British businesses don’t have the skills for the digital economy. The report on the business.connected study, released in June, claimed that a third of SMEs aren’t clear on which digital tools they need. Many are so desperate they lose all sense of proportion and two thirds of SMEs would hire a ‘digital native’ with no work experience over a ‘digital novice’ with maturity, experience and a wider perspective of business.

Cyber attacks will be fatal for SMEs 

Following this, Vodafone claims, it devised a scheme to address the skills shortage by training 100,000 SMEs in digital skills. 

Courses range from design and development, through Excel and audience management to software tutorials and strategy, says Vodafone. The courses range in scope from beginners to advanced. V-Hub users will get free access to advisers, by phone or webchat.

Cybersecurity is a priority, says Vodafone, since its own intelligence showed that a quarter of UK SMEs (around 1.3 million) would be put out of business if hit by a cyber-attack, even though the average cost is £3,230. According to Vodafone’s SME Cybersecurity report, only a third have a cybersecurity strategy and basic cybersecurity protections in place, claims Vodafone, though 40% have experienced a cyber attack in the pandemic.

“Staying connected and protected online are both consistently high on the agenda,” said Andrew Stevens, Vodafone UK’s director of small & medium business. “Many business owners don’t feel they have the experience to navigate today’s increasingly connected business environment.

“Across the 130,000 businesses who accessed V-Hub support over the past 12 months, cybersecurity skills and remote working connectivity ranked as the top two topics respectively. A big part of staying safe and staying connected is of course having the right tools in place.”

In other news, Vodafone Ukraine, the second-biggest mobile carrier in the Ukraine market, has announced plans to enter the fixed broadband market.

 

 

Ericsson’s kit builds 5G infrastructure for Taiwan and Faroe Islands 

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Swedish vendor’s Radio Access Networks help remote islands keep heads above water

Ericsson has released details of how its radio access networks (RAN) kit is helping remote island communities to compete globally. In The Faroe Islands Ericsson and partners are building the supporting infrastructure for Internet of Things (IoT) and artificial Intelligence (AI) to modernise the fishing industry that supports the archipelago’s entire economy. In Taiwan Ericsson’s 5G is helping build a new infrastructure for a nation that’s struggling to keep its independence and international profile. The communications hardware vendor has reportedly seen a significant rise in business since Chinese companies have become blacklisted. 

Meanwhile Austrian mobile operator A1 Telekom is to use Ericsson and Nokia as partners in a future 5G rollout for Bulgaria, Croatia, the Republic of Serbia and Slovenia.

Ericsson has secured an exclusive 5G Core and Radio Access Network (RAN) deal with the Faroe Islands’ incumbent comms service provider Faroese Telecom (Føroya Tele).

Faroese Telecom (FT) appointed Ericsson’s to modernise its network, which is spread over the 18 rocky, volcanic Faroe Islands between Iceland and Norway in the North Atlantic Ocean. The self-governing archipelago, part of the Kingdom of Denmark, is physically connected by bridges, tunnels, subsea tunnels and ferries with a population of 53,400 across 1,400 square kilometers.

The rollout of 5G and the full modernization of Faroese Telecom’s current 4G network will use Ericsson’s 5G RAN and Core products and solutions, including the Ericsson Radio System portfolio that covers Massive MIMO and Ericsson Antenna System. The work will start immediately and should complete in 2023.

The new 5G needs to ‘transform’ the autonomous territory’s main industry, fishing, according to FT. Better coverage, lower latency and higher speeds are an immediate priority for all participants in the fisheries economy. In the long term the 5G network must support the Internet of Things (IoT) and artificial intelligence (AI) to create new services while improving safety, autonomous navigation and route monitoring for fuel volume control and gas emissions.

“The Faroe Islands is one of the best-connected countries in the world with 97.2 percent geographical coverage of 4G reaching even 100 kilometers out to sea,” said Faroese Telecom CEO Jan Ziskasen. “Its newest subsea tunnel, Eysturoyartunnilin, is 11 kilometers long and 187 meters deep and has a roundabout. After the modernisation, this will be the first undersea tunnel where you can roam on 5G whilst driving through a roundabout under the surface of the North Atlantic Ocean.”

Taiwan telco toggles between 4G and 5G

Meanwhile, Taiwan’s first MOCN-supported non-standalone (NSA) 5G network is ready for service, Ericsson has announced. 

Work began in September 2020 and Asia-Pacific Telecom (APT) announced a pact with Far EasTone (FET) to run 5G services on FET’s 3.5 GHz spectrum. In Jan 2021 it appointed Ericsson to upgrade its network by consolidating them into multi-operator core network (MOCN) sharing the same RAN and bandwidth in order to save on purchasing, running costs and energy consumption. Ericson’s kit has rejuvenated the network infrastructure by allowing it to achieve sub-millisecond toggling between 4G and 5G networks.

Taiwan has a predicted 5G penetration of 30 per cent of subscribers by the end of this year, according to the island’s largest operator Chunghwa Telecom, which has one million 5G subscribers. It claims it will double these numbers by the end of 2021. Rivals FET and Taiwan Mobile have around 800,000 5G subscribers, according to Digitimes Asia. Both operators expect their 5G subscriptions to make up 30% of their overall total of customers by the end of the year.

Automation underpins ongoing, world-beating ambitions at Telenor

Ingeborg Øfsthus, CTO of Telenor Norway, talked to Annie Turner about building and operating world-beating networks in extremely hostile terrain.

As CTO, Ingeborg Øfsthus is responsible for infrastructure and a multi-billion Norwegian Krone budget. She holds a master’s degree in electronic communications and has spent her entire career in telecoms.

During her time with the Telenor group, she has worked in countries as diverse as Germany and Thailand, and most latterly in Montenegro before returning ‘home’ to her current role in 2018.

Make no mistake: Telenor Norway is ambitious. Øfsthus states, “We were proud to be the world’s fastest network on 4G and now the ambition, of course, is to take that crown for 5G, and that requires really, really diligent follow up on the performance side, to get the maximum out of every single base session.”

Clearly, automation has a critical role to play in the operator achieving its goals.

This article first appeared on FutureNet World and is reproduced with kind permission.

Øfsthus says that our idea of network automation has evolved, but that the first time she really became aware of it was back in the early 2000s.

Regardless of their location, Norwegians expect and get the same coverage and quality nationally, although Norway is a long country – 2,518 km north to south, excluding the islands – about half of which is within the Arctic Circle.

It includes the most northerly mainland point in Europe, and outside towns and cities, the population is sparse, the terrain hostile and weather a force to be reckoned with.

Lofoten Islands, Svolvær, Norway, John O’Nolan, Unsplash

Back then a common remedy for network outages was a simple reset. Automating resets typically got customers back online in minutes instead of hours, as well as saving the operator a lot of time, cost and resources.

Øfsthus says this was the start of the network automation journey and that better customer experience has been a major driver of automation ever since.

Now automation is becoming increasingly necessary, because “with a technology portfolio of fixed, TV, mobile and even broadcasting, there is immense complexity in our infrastructure and if we want the same people to run it in our network operating centres…we can’t do it unless we have a high level of automation,” she says.

Three-year rebuild programme

In addition to the ever more complex day-to-day operations, Telenor Norway is on a “historic”, three-year journey to rebuild its mobile and transport networks with 10 times more capacity to support future services including 5G. Naturally, this must all happen without negatively impacting customers.

To these ends, her team spent last year building “what we call a scalable factory”, to smooth the national roll-out, she explains. “We need to automate everything; we need to do as much as possible while we are at each site because we cannot afford to go back and forth to fix it”.

The operator has automated the planning process, roll-out process, verification and operations, “And that’s to be able to scale up so that we are able to do the necessary number of modernisations per week, in order to meet a very, very demanding time target to complete this within,” she says.

She says the modernisation approach is about “supporting use of the TDD spectrum [time division duplex – used in 4G] to ensure correct synchronisation – as well as increasing capacity to each site, changing the routers and rebuilding every [base station] site”.

These days, network optimisation is a case of “super-fine tuning [that] is supposed to work in an excellent way without the customers noticing that we changed everything. That’s the expectation.”

Experimenting with AI

To gain this predictive capability, Telenor is looking “to put the intelligence on top” of data Øfsthus says and there is a lot of experimentation with AI in this area.
Another priority is being able to shift capacity around the network to where it is needed as demand and conditions change.

She gives the example of a traffic accident which means you suddenly have a big density of people in a certain part of the road network.

A third area is saving energy in the RAN: few users mean the power can be turned down accordingly without affecting performance, for example.

Yet another use case for AI is picking up anomalies in the RAN’s performance that could indicate underlying problems and trying to figure out, remotely where possible, what that cause is, from needing a simple restart or software patch, or a more consistent power supply.

Øfsthus stresses, “We really want maximum performance out the network and maximum customer experience…We see that we have thousands and thousands of parameters that are going to play together, and maybe I am just doing a sample to see how the antennas are tilted – a very physical thing – and we can adjust centrally.”

A different setting may be needed in summer than in winter when ice is replaced by water, for instance.

Fixed mobile access

This focus on customer service right down to each base station is really important because not only is the operator rebuilding its core and transport network, but the mobile network is taking on huge traffic loads from the old copper network which Telenor is decommissioning at the same time.

When Øfsthus became CTO in 2018, Telenor Norway decided to reduce the planned eight-year decommissioning schedule down to four years. This is possibly the world’s most ambitious copper shutdown programme, and although not as automated as she would like it to be, automation still plays a part.

A key element of this is when shifting customers from copper to fibre or to fixed mobile access (FWA), where getting fibre to them is not viable, Øfsthus explains, “We wanted people to be able to keep their own devices like the set-top boxes and routers when we swapped the network”.

A field engineer is still involved in installing the outdoor equipment for the FWA, but within the house the configuration is fully automated – the customer does not have to do anything – and this has proved very popular.

This efficient and fast migration to new access infrastructure was made possible by automating customer journeys and capacity checks to ensure fixed wireless access is not sold in areas where there is insufficient capacity. This is made possible by linking together many data sources, such as the radio and fixed planning systems, to establish the best solution for each household or enterprise.

If customers are taken offline by lightning, for instance, and Telenor plans to switch that area to fixed wireless, say, in the next six months, the customer is offered a future-proof replacement product immediately instead of making the repair then returning six months later for the upgrade. Customers get the upgrade faster, which pleases most, and Telenor saves resources and time.

Customers are typically moved onto 4G for fixed wireless access, but ultimately this will be replaced by 5G, providing speeds comparable to fibre.

Cloudifying the core

Øfsthus says, “From the 5G point of view, we are at the top of our journey on Non-standalone, and now we are moving into the IT world, cloudifying our core. We want a common platform to put all our applications on which is vendor-agnostic. That means you can change the pace of offering solutions.

“This is totally different than what we used to do in the old core world, and we are obviously very much dependent on automating things, like how we test things, how we configure then distribute them into the different data centres. It’s just too much work to do manually.”

However, Øfsthus notes, “When we take the telco part into the cloud world, there is some lack of maturity and for us to fully utilise the potential, we need automation to deploy changes as fast as we want.”

She accepts that despite being aggressive regarding modernisation and getting rid of legacy, Telenor will have to live with some legacy systems for a while yet, such as for fault tracking and change management.

She asks, “How much effort do you put into automation in systems that have a limited lifetime…when we have the ambition [to have] touch-free operations by 2023?”

Network automation

Asked about full network automation, Øfsthus comments, “The complexity in ecosystems and delivering what customers will want in the future – particularly large enterprises – [mean] there will be more than enough for us to utilise our human brain and hands.

“We should have the ambition that everything should be automated and then see where the exceptions are.”

She is mindful of the effort needed to get “from the slogans to implementation” regarding network automation. She says the question remains how to get into “that seamless, integrated way of thinking forever.

“You need to put in effort to really understand the processes and understand what you want to achieve, but that takes time and resources. You need the right balance: we are very ambitious but we can’t stop redoing absolutely everything else to focus only on automation.”

Other factors to consider include new partnerships that are being formed and hyperscalers moving into telecoms while traditional telecoms vendors are regrouping to meet the changing market demands.

Like many other forward-thinking operators, Telenor Norway’s roadmap governing cloud migration has an open architecture at its heart that is vendor-agnostic. She says, “That is a strong ambition and a strong strategy… I don’t think it’s what all vendors want, but when the market is unified in pushing for something, it has an impact.”

Vilicom and Virgin Media O2 build neutral host in-building (NHIB) site

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Extends 4G mobile coverage, speeds data, improves voice quality, eliminates indoor blackspots

Specialist Open RAN systems integrator Vilicom has solved one of the great challenges in 5G network construction for its client Virgin Media O2 (VMO2) – in-building mobile connectivity. In a recent study commissioned by VMO2, it claimed that good network access puts at least £10,000 on the value of a domestic building. 

Vilicom claims it has successfully rolled its first commercial sites with VMO2, built with Open RAN software to specifications laid out by the Joint Operators Technical Specifications for Neutral Host In-Building (JOTS NHIB) systems. The JOTS NHIB initiative is one the schemes proposed by The Small Cell Forum to boost interconnectivity and promote inclusiveness fo service providers. 

After several months of function, compatibility and security tests, Vilicom unveiled a cloud-based complement to patch up VMO2’s existing indoor coverage. The new Vilicom-supplied infrastructure was developed with US telco software specialist Mavenir using its Cloud RAN technology which, Vilicom says has created a fully digital business model in place of a legacy network.

Mavenir developed Cloud RAN

The new Connectivity-as-a Service (CaaS) incarnation now has a full stack of network management and operations and integrated security features. It takes up less space and running costs than inbuilding 4G and paves the way for 5G, public and private mobile connectivity.

The nation needs reliable 4G connectivity indoors and the integration of Vilicom’s virtualised O-RAN platform with all its mobile operators will meet this demand, claimed Sean Keating, CEO of Vilicom.

Offloading traffic from macro cells to the inbuilding networks will save the capacity of macro cells and avoid the cost of expansion.

“This service will translate to significant cost savings and help reduce carbon footprint across the built environment as much of the power intensive infrastructure is hosted off premise in our Data Centre,” said Keating.

Vilicom’s crafting of neutral host in building techniques was the key to improving indoor cellular coverage, said Omar Calvo, Director of Radio Engineering at Virgin Media O2.

 

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