Nice find Bert!
We discussed all of this recently. The ability to use existing FIOS networks is
a major plus. The nothin that the cable industry may use 5G technology as well
is very interesting as is the notion that you can use 5G to link to a router in
the home, or directly to devices.
I would also note the extensive coverage in this article about Verizon getting
into the content distribution business...
Regards
Craig
On Mar 31, 2017, at 6:46 PM, Manfredi, Albert E
<albert.e.manfredi@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Several months old, but this article more clearly describes the motivations
for 5G fixed wireless broadband. Motivations which are identical to those for
Google Fiber 2.0. In short, the infrastructure to neighborhoods which is used
for FiOS would also be used for this new service, except that the most
expensive parts of it, i.e. the connection up to, and inside homes, can be
avoided.
Sounds like 5G fixed broadband may be available even where FiOS is already
available. The Verizon support person on the chat session I was on yesterday
said that Verizon will announce when the service is ready for subscribers.
Bert
---------------------------------------
http://rethinkresearch.biz/articles/verizon-will-first-use-5g-create-fixed-wireless-broadband-networks/
Published 4th August 2016
Verizon will first use 5G to create fixed wireless broadband networks
Cellcos don't need 5G for people to make phone calls - their existing 4G
networks have more than enough bandwidth for that. Cellcos also don't need 5G
for IoT applications, except for uses such as smart cars and smart cities
because most IoT devices use very little bandwidth - although some need the
low-latency that 5G provides. What cellcos need is to make 5G economically
feasible for them. For that cellcos need people to watch lots and lots of
videos that take lots of bandwidth, especially 4K videos, live streaming, VR
and AR. The thought of live streaming has cellcos drooling. Notice what
Verizon said about one reason it paid almost $5 billion to acquire Yahoo -
live streaming of sports.
Verizon CEO Lowell McAdam recently confirmed that Verizon is on target for
beginning its launch of a commercially available service in 2017 by saying,
during a recap of the company's financial returns, "we see the stars aligning
very quickly when it comes to the 5G future." He also said the FCC has
finished its radio specifications, which makes it feasible to begin testing
of technical components. McAdam said Verizon's work with 5G and the
millimeter wave spectrum it will use is "preparing us for a fixed commercial
wireless fiber launch in 2017." McAdam added that the FCC's approval of
Verizon's spectrum lease deal with XO Communications provides a "clear
spectrum path for 5G deployment."
Verizon clearly has its 5G eye on wireless broadband to homes. McAdam said,
"I think of 5G, initially as, in effect, wireless fiber. With wireless fiber,
the so-called last mile can be a virtual connection dramatically changing our
cost structure." He said the most expensive part of deploying its FiOS fiber
network is just outside and inside the home, an expense that would not exist
with the use of 5G. He said that FiOS and 5G routers cost the same, but that
5G doesn't use an optical network terminal (ONT) that is typically mounted on
an outside wall. McAdam said Verizon expects there will be a significant cost
reduction when 5G becomes available.
Verizon, together with Ericsson and Nokia, has been testing 5G in Dallas, New
Jersey and Virginia. The speeds it's getting are truly fantastic for a
wireless cellular network. McAdams said that in its tests, it has been
getting speeds above 1 Gbps at over 500 yards, which is more than enough for
up to six 4K TV signals, six virtual reality units and multiple smartphones
and tablets.
McAdam said Verizon's now in the process of moving that work into the field,
where it can start to cover 200-home developments. It will also look at some
rural environments.
Unlike 3G, 4G and WiFi, 5G is said to have the latency and steadfastness
that, until now, only wireline networks could offer.
McAdam didn't say it specifically, but 5G, if it performs as promised, will
substantially reduce the costs of building wireline broadband networks
because telcos do not have to install any wiring within the last 100-500 or
so yards (meters) of the home. Telcos and cablecos will still need to install
fiber to within 100-500 yards of the home. At that point it will install a 5G
cell, probably on a utility pole or building, and then a 5G-capable router in
the home - no digging up streets and yards or installing wires on utility
poles. Telcos could install fiber to an MDU, of which the world has millions,
and then install a 5G cell in or just outside the MDU to offer high-speed
broadband to the MDU's residences.
5G could serve broadband services providers as a wireless form of G.fast or
VDSL broadband technologies - with no wires required. Cablecos, who already
install fiber close to the residence, could also use 5G instead of installing
coax to and inside the residence. It is still not clear whether service
providers will use 5G to connect each device to the internet or whether the
5G cell will connect to a router in the home, which will then connect to each
device via WiFi or a wireline home network.
Verizon boasts about having built the US' "best" 4G network. It was the first
major telco in the world to build an all-fiber network - albeit in only 70%
of its copper wire footprint. The cost of installing fiber over the last mile
to the home may have prevented it from going all-fiber throughout its entire
wireline footprint. 5G could solve that problem. It could also allow Verizon
to offer high-speed broadband outside its wireline footprint - wherever its
recently acquired XO Communications fiber rings exist. That would for the
first time put Verizon in direct competition with AT&T, who could also do the
same by building more fiber networks to near residences. Verizon could become
a nationwide broadband powerhouse, something that's sure to have Comcast and
AT&T thinking about doing the same.
Verizon is simultaneously building a media company with the AOL and Yahoo
assets it acquired, a media company that it is positioning for streaming
content to millions of consumers.
McAdam said Verizon can add 5G to its existing cellular network for very
little additional cost because it will densify its existing 4G networks with
small cells.
Verizon CFO and SVP Fran Shammo said 2017 will be a development year for 5G,
but added that the FCC's approval this week of its spectrum leases with XO
could move up its deployments "to get to a commercial launch and actually
start to generate revenue." He said, "I think that will come in either very
late 2017 or early 2018."
Verizon said it will later on test use cases for mobile 5G that supports the
"massive" scale and low-latency that IoT services require.
Other cellcos such as AT&T and Korea Telecom (KT) are working to begin
deploying 5G sooner than its 2020 forecast date. AT&T is pressured by Verizon
and AT&T's own massive and costly effort to upgrade its aging wireline
broadband network to all-fiber and to G.fast over existing copper phone wires
to MDUs.
KT is pressured by the upcoming 2018 Winter Olympics that South Korea is
hosting. Japanese cellco NTT DoCoMo is testing 5G for the real-time
transmission of 8K video. It completed tests with Nokia on May 19. The tests
used beam-tracking techniques to transmit millimeter wavelength signals at
the extremely high frequency of 70 GHz. The trial showed that 8K video of 48
Gbps, which is four times larger than 4K video and 32 times than 1080p HD,
was transmitted without any delays. Japan hosts the 2020 summer Olympics and
wants to show off wireless streaming of it in 8K.
Streaming videos, especially live streaming, is very important to Verizon's
wireless strategy. It said its $4.83 billion acquisition of Yahoo's operating
businesses will help it become a bigger player in mobile media. McAdam said
Verizon sees "tremendous opportunity in the digital video marketplace" and
"content creators and advertisers are hungry for alternatives as the market
expands for both in-home and mobile consumption. Verizon intends to be a
significant player in this space."
Verizon especially likes sports videos because it can stream games over its
Go90 network, cellular network, FiOS, AOL and Yahoo. McAdam said, "we view
this as a waterfall of content moving down through our different properties."
McAdam said Verizon is moving ahead with cities such as Boston, San Francisco
and others on a one-fiber strategy for both cellular and FiOS. He said, "no
longer are discussions solely about local franchise rights, but how to make
forward-looking cities more productive and effective" and that its deal to
acquire XO's 40 metro fiber rings in major cities is the key to this strategy.
This first ran in Rider Research's Online Reporter.
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