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Jio Partners With Qualcomm For 5G Development, Achieves 1 Gbps Speed During Trials

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Jio Partners With Qualcomm For 5G Development, Achieves 1 Gbps Speed During Trials


swarajya%2F2020-07%2Feaf7b028-91b3-4198-a1a6-cee4dd92a0f7%2FAmbani_JIO1.png
Mukesh Ambani

In a positive development, India's largest telecom company Jio Platforms and United States (US) based technology giant Qualcomm Technologies have together developed a 5G radio access network (RAN) product which successfully achieved over 1 Gbps speed during the trial, reports Livemint.

The speed of 1 Gbps was achieved with Jio's 5GNR product leveraging Qualcomm's 5G RAN platforms, marking the entry of India into the Gigabit 5G NR product portfolio. With this, the two companies have determined to fast track the development and roll-out of indigenous 5G network infrastructure and services in India.

It should be noted that earlier this year during the 43rd annual general meeting (AGM), Reliance Industries Limited (RIL)'s chairman Mukesh Ambani had said, "Jio has developed a complete 5G solution from scratch. This will enable us to launch a world-class 5G service in India using a 100 per cent homegrown technology and solution."
Also, Qualcomm Ventures had earlier this year acquired a minority stake of 0.15 per cent in Ambani's Jio Platforms for Rs 730 crore. Referring to the same, RIL had earlier said that Qualcomm's investment would support its journey to rollout advanced 5G infrastructure and services for Indian customers.


 
Jio Partners With Qualcomm For 5G Development, Achieves 1 Gbps Speed During Trials


swarajya%2F2020-07%2Feaf7b028-91b3-4198-a1a6-cee4dd92a0f7%2FAmbani_JIO1.png
Mukesh Ambani

In a positive development, India's largest telecom company Jio Platforms and United States (US) based technology giant Qualcomm Technologies have together developed a 5G radio access network (RAN) product which successfully achieved over 1 Gbps speed during the trial, reports Livemint.

The speed of 1 Gbps was achieved with Jio's 5GNR product leveraging Qualcomm's 5G RAN platforms, marking the entry of India into the Gigabit 5G NR product portfolio. With this, the two companies have determined to fast track the development and roll-out of indigenous 5G network infrastructure and services in India.

It should be noted that earlier this year during the 43rd annual general meeting (AGM), Reliance Industries Limited (RIL)'s chairman Mukesh Ambani had said, "Jio has developed a complete 5G solution from scratch. This will enable us to launch a world-class 5G service in India using a 100 per cent homegrown technology and solution."
Also, Qualcomm Ventures had earlier this year acquired a minority stake of 0.15 per cent in Ambani's Jio Platforms for Rs 730 crore. Referring to the same, RIL had earlier said that Qualcomm's investment would support its journey to rollout advanced 5G infrastructure and services for Indian customers.


Jio is going to overshadow other telecom providers, not good as Jio will have its monopoly over the telecom market.

Airtel should be doing something as we can’t expect anything from !dea and Vodafone.
 
Meanwhile in the rest of the world,

Sweden bans Chinese firms Huawei and ZTE from 5G networks

By Euronews with AFP • last updated: 20/10/2020 - 14:07
Huawei and ZTE equipment already installed will also have to be removed by 2025.

Huawei and ZTE equipment already installed will also have to be removed by 2025. - Copyright AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein

Sweden is banning equipment from Chinese telecommunication firms Huawei and ZTE from its new 5G network.

The ban is to "ensure that the use of frequencies does not endanger the security of Sweden," said the Swedish Telecom Authority (PTS).


The authority added that Huawei and ZTE equipment already installed will have to be removed by 1 January 2025.

The announcement comes after Sweden's armed forces and security services made an assessment of telecommunications network tenders.

Sweden's decision follows the lead of the UK, who decided to ban Huawei from involvement in its 5G network in July.

Several other European countries are gradually closing the door on Huawei or are considering doing so after pressure from the United States, who consider the company as being part of China's surveillance state.

In France, Huawei will not be subject to a total ban on the 5G market, but operators already using the firm's equipment will have operating authorisations limited to eight years.

European Commission officials have stated that rivals to Huawei, such as Sweden's Ericsson or Finland's Nokia can provide the EU with the necessary 5G infrastructure.

"The new installations in the central functions for the radio use of the frequency bands must be carried out without Huawei or ZTE suppliers", the Swedish authority said in a press release.

If these central functions of the network are "dependent on staff or functions located abroad, these dependencies must be eliminated and if necessary replaced by staff or functions in Sweden", the PTS also stated.

In just a few years, Huawei has become the world leader in telecom network equipment with a notable lead over 5G, and now outstrips its rivals in market share.

ZTE is also one of the world's leading suppliers of equipment, such as antennas.

But in Sweden, four operators have been selected for the upcoming auction round on 10 November for 2.3 and 3.5 GHz frequencies for the future 5G network.

These include the former incumbent Telia, as well as Hi3G Access - better known under its "3" trademark - Net4Mobility, and the audiovisual distributor Teracom, says PTS.

The authority did not confirm if Huawei equipment would remain in use for 4G, 3G, and wired internet.
 
I guess a lot of Indians do NOT understand the difference between Qualcomm and Huawei 5G.

Huwei provide end to end solution, which is telecom solution(5G network solution) + consumer end 5G device(smart phone).
While Qualcomm is 5G chip, mostly cell phone.

Ericsson and Nokia provide telecom solution as well.

Huawei = Ericssion/Nokia + Qualcomm.

Jio work with Qualcomm for 5G network is an advertisement, to most Indians who have no clue.

Jio has to work with Ecricsson or Nokia if Huawei/ZTE is out.

Jio is a telecom company, they don't have 4/5 technology. Jio is just an operator, like hundreds of other operators around the world. It's like the relationship between car drivers and car manufacturers. Jio is the car drivers, have little to none mechanical knowledge. While Huawei/ZTE/Ericssion/Nokia is car manufacturers.

India as an artificial state, a Supa Powa, has no 4g/5g technology. Just a consumer. There is no India company at all in 5G race.

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I guess a lot of Indians do NOT understand the difference between Qualcomm and Huawei 5G.

Huwei provide end to end solution, which is telecom solution(5G network solution) + consumer end 5G device(smart phone).
While Qualcomm is 5G chip, mostly cell phone.

Ericsson and Nokia provide telecom solution as well.

Huawei = Ericssion/Nokia + Qualcomm.

Jio work with Qualcomm for 5G network is an advertisement, to most Indians who have no clue.

Jio has to work with Ecricsson or Nokia if Huawei/ZTE is out.

Jio is a telecom company, they don't have 4/5 technology, they are just operator, like hundreds of other operators around the world. It's like the relationship between car drivers and car manufacturers. Jio is the car drivers, have little to none mechanical knowledge. While Huawei/ZTE/Ericssion/Nokia is car manufacturers.

India as a whole, has no 4g/5g technology. Just a consumer. There is no India company in 5G race.

View attachment 681305

And your post sound like that of a car sales man who is not able to sell a car and see cars being sold left right and center in the car show room opposite to him.
 
I guess a lot of Indians do NOT understand the difference between Qualcomm and Huawei 5G.

Huwei provide end to end solution, which is telecom solution(5G network solution) + consumer end 5G device(smart phone).
While Qualcomm is 5G chip, mostly cell phone.

Ericsson and Nokia provide telecom solution as well.

Huawei = Ericssion/Nokia + Qualcomm.

Jio work with Qualcomm for 5G network is an advertisement, to most Indians who have no clue.

Jio has to work with Ecricsson or Nokia if Huawei/ZTE is out.

Jio is a telecom company, they don't have 4/5 technology, they are just operator, like hundreds of other operators around the world. It's like the relationship between car drivers and car manufacturers. Jio is the car drivers, have little to none mechanical knowledge. While Huawei/ZTE/Ericssion/Nokia is car manufacturers.

India as a whole, has no 4g/5g technology. Just a consumer. There is no India company in 5G race.

View attachment 681305


LOL. "high iq" chinese trol unable to deal with reality :lol:


Is Reliance Jio really making its own 5G technology? Maybe!


In late February, during US president Donald Trump’s trip to India, he reportedly asked Reliance Industries chairman Mukesh Ambani if his mobile operator Reliance Jio had plans for 5G. Ambani told him that not only is Jio planning to launch 5G, it will be the only 5G network on Earth “that doesn’t have a single Chinese component.”

When Ambani said that, the assumption was that he meant Jio would not buy 5G gear from Huawei or ZTE, but would instead stick with Samsung, which also makes 5G equipment and is Jio’s current 4G supplier. Jio listed Samsung as a 5G partner when it submitted its 5G proposal to the India’s Department of Telecommunications (DoT).

So imagine everyone’s surprise when, earlier this month, the Economic Times reported that Jio would forego vendors altogether and use its own in-house 5G technology instead.

To which analysts and telecoms industry observers around the world said: What?

From the ET report:

“We have now developed everything end-to-end around 5G technology. We are more scalable than these vendors and are fully automated since we have our own cloud-native platform. In 5G, we will totally be self-sufficient,” the person told ET.

It should be stated at this point that ET got this from an anonymous source, and that Jio hasn’t confirmed anything. But the implication is that Jio has literally developed every component it needs to build and launch a complete 5G network, from the base stations and antennas to the core network.

Which would be something.

Is it true? No one knows except Jio. Is it plausible? More than you’d think.

Cloud-native

First of all, Jio began life as an all-IP 4G network, which means it has no legacy circuit-switched 2G/3G gear to deal with or maintain. Because it’s designed for IP (or “cloud-native”, as ET’s source puts it), most everything is done in software. And, as it happens, Jio has a lot of mobile software expertise at its disposal. One of Reliance’s subsidiaries is 4G software firm Rancore Technologies, which bought acquired US-based software company Radisys in 2018.

This is perhaps the key to the puzzle, because the telecoms sector in general is moving towards an era where telecoms operations are done in software that’s decoupled from the hardware. This is after all the whole point of SDN and NFV. Moreover, as operators undergo digital transformation, more and more of them are moving some or all of their B/OSS systems to public-cloud providers like AWS, Azure and Google Cloud.

As for 5G, according to a new paper from Rethink Research [PDF], the evolution roadmap for 5G eventually culminates in a cloud-native 5G core network whose functions are disaggregated and deployed in containers as microservices, and then a cloud-native radio access network (RAN), at which point operators will ditch pricey proprietary vendor hardware in favor of specialized open-source 5G software running on commodity hardware.

There are several industry groups working on this ‘Open RAN’ concept, including Facebook’s Telecom Infra Project and the operator-led O-Ran Alliance (both of whom just signed a deal last month to coordinate their activities). The basic idea is to turn base stations into white boxes running custom software. This wouldn’t cut existing 5G vendors out of the picture – it would simply force them to shift their business model from hardware to software, thus enabling open multi-vendor RAN environments.

While Open RAN is believed to still be at least a year or two away from commercial reality, Japan’s Rakuten Mobile – which, like Jio, is a greenfield cloud-native mobile network –claims to have already done it.
Earlier this month, Rakuten Mobile announced it had successfully deployed a fully virtualized, cloud native, open RAN (albeit six months behind schedule), and will use it to launch 4G services in April, and will upgrade it to 5G in June.

The patent problem


So it’s possible this is what Jio more or less has in mind – in which case it arguably has the software skills to skip the 5G vendors and take the DIY route. (As for the hardware, the ET report claims Jio has designed the necessary hardware that can be manufactured by third parties.)

On the other hand, Rakuten Mobile didn’t skip vendors in favour of in-house tech – it contracted a range of vendors for equipment, software, and services. For example, Altiostar (which Rakuten owns) and Nokia are reportedly supplying the 4G antennas, while NEC will build the massive multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) antenna components needed for 5G. Airspan, Cisco, Intel, Mavenir and Qualcomm are also listed as vendors.

The other thing about 5G equipment – especially when it comes to antennas and radios – is that it’s highly specialized and sophisticated technology. More to the point, it’s highly patented.

When Vietnamese operator Viettel announced last year – and again this past January – that it was going to not only deploy its own 5G hardware and software but also sell it to other operators, a number of analysts expressed doubt. Their main objection, according to the BBC, was that 5G isn’t the sort of technology you can slap together in your basement in a few months, and even if it was, you’d have to license the necessary technology from the very vendors you don’t want to buy equipment from, which would not be cheap.

In any case, we’ll find out sooner or later once Jio launches its 5G network. And it will probably be later. The DoT had hoped to auction off 5G spectrum next month, but last week it decided to delay the auction to August for an all-too-familiar reason: its spectrum prices are so high that India’s operators – who are all running on razor-thin margins in a hypercompetitive market – can’t afford it. The general expectation is that India may not see 5G services until at least the middle of next year, or even until 2022.

Plenty of time for Jio to gets its gear ready, perhaps.


 
And your post sound like that of a car sales man who is not able to sell a car and see cars being sold left right and center in the car show room opposite to him.
Now tell me which India company hold 5G patent?
None.
 
LOL. Super duper Patent that nobody wants to use. "high iq" chinese moral victory :lol:
Huawei can still charge Jio and other India telecom for using Huawei patents even if you refuse to use Huawei device and end to end solution.
Keep your slave mindset. Just keep it as it is.
 
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With Jio at the center of his ambitions, Asia's richest man has set about transforming his energy conglomerate Reliance Industries Ltd. into a technology titan.

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Ambani has expressed interest in selling technology to other carriers if it is rolled out successfully.


Indian billionaire Mukesh Ambani's Jio Platforms Ltd. is working with Qualcomm Inc. to develop 5G solutions and accelerate efforts to bring the high-speed network to the world's No. 2 mobile market by users.

Jio, which includes the tycoon's wireless operator, and its wholly owned U.S.-based unit Radisys Corp. are partnering with Qualcomm Technologies to "fast track the development and roll out of indigenous 5G network infrastructure and services in India," according to a joint statement late Tuesday.

While India has yet to auction airwaves for 5G, Ambani has been preparing Jio for the fifth-generation wireless service with what he calls a technology developed in-house. That means his carrier won't need to spend much to switch to the new system, unlike some of its rivals, according to him. That also leaves Jio immune to political disputes linked to Chinese equipment vendors that global operators are embroiled in.

Ambani has also expressed interest in selling the technology to other carriers if it is rolled out successfully in his home market. Jio debuted in India four years ago, offering free calls and cheap data. Now, it is the nation's biggest carrier with about 400 million users. The company is planning to introduce an inexpensive 5G smartphone that would eventually cost less than $40, Press Trust of India reported on Oct. 18, citing an official.

With Jio at the center of his ambitions, Asia's richest man has set about transforming his energy conglomerate Reliance Industries Ltd. into a technology titan. He's set his sights on e-commerce, seeking to take on Amazon.com Inc. and Walmart Inc.'s local unit in India, and raised more than $20 billion this year by selling stakes in Jio to investors including Facebook Inc. and Google.

 
Interesting that the graph above shows both Samsung and lg individually have more 5G patents granted than huewei .
No wonder the Chinese guy last week called Chinese 5G useless as compared to the Korean.
 
Huawei can still charge Jio and other India telecom even if you refuse to use Huawei.
Keep your slave mindset. Just keep it as it is.

LOL.

Good luck trying to " charge " Jio for implementing 5G :lol:

Last I checked China was still trying to collect 2.1 BILLION $ from his younger Brother Anil Ambani with NO LUCK :lol:
 
Huawei can still charge Jio and other India telecom even if you refuse to use Huawei.
Keep your slave mindset. Just keep it as it is.

Final consumers hardly know we have paid for the patent, because the charge is very little for each equipment.
 

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