Posted by : Ft Jitendra
Friday, 21 August 2015
InterDigital's EdgeHaul antenna uses beam
forming to aim the signal, and is a precursor to the antennas that will
help speed up 5G networks.An initiative backed by the likes of AT&T, Intel and Qualcomm is hoping to accelerate the rollout of cellular networks customized for machine-to-machine communications
Backed by the likes of AT&T, Intel, and Qualcomm,
industry organization GSMA has launched an initiative to accelerate the
roll out of cellular networks customized for machine-to-machine
communications.
The growing interest in
machine-to-machine communications has resulted in a need for so-called
LPWA (Low Power Wide Area) networks that are customized for applications
that have low data rates, long battery lives, and operate unattended
for long periods of time.
Today a lot of different technologies and their backers are
vying to dominate this burgeoning area. With the forming of the Mobile
IoT Initiative, the cellular industry is aiming to pool its resources
and accelerate the commercial availability of services.
It
hopes to do this this with demonstrations, proofs of concept and trials
of a selection of LPWA technologies. The members of the initiative will
also provide analysis and feedback to help standards organization 3GPP
standardize the technologies. The GSMA is also working on improving IoT
security, an area that needs work as recent revelations of hacked cars
have shown.
No single network technology is capable of addressing all use cases, so the initiative will focus on developing LTE and GSM.
"We
already have cellular networks out there, and need to make better use
of those networks," said Shane Rooney, executive director at the GSMA.
A third alternative is just known as Clean Slate, which proposes to combine a new radio with GSM frequencies
Initial
specifications for cellular LPWA networks are expected to be completed
by the end of 2015, with a first implementation in early 2016 and
commercial rollouts following later in the year, according to the GSMA.
The
initiative is backed by mobile operators, network equipment vendors and
chip makers, including AT&T, Alcatel-Lucent, China Mobile, Deutsche
Telekom, Ericsson, Huawei Technologies, Gemalto, Intel, KDDI, Nokia,
NTT DoCoMo, Orange, Sierra Wireless, Telefonica, Telstra, and Vodafone.
The Mobile
IoT Initiative and its backers are far from alone in wanting to develop
the networks that will carry machine-to-machine traffic. For example,
the LoRa Alliance, whose members include IBM and Cisco Systems, is
promoting the LoRaWAN protocol as the foundation for wide-area networks.
Other
candidates in use or under development are Weightless, RPMA (Random
Phase Multiple Access) from On-Ramp Wireless, and a technology from
French company Sigfox.
It's still early days, and the
industry is now in a land-grab phase where everyone is trying to get
ahead to establish their presence, according to Gartner analyst Nick
Jones. The IoT networking sector will remain very confused for several
years, and at least ten different technologies will gain traction, he
said earlier this year.
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