https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL2106/S00065/ericsson-mobile-report-the-rise-of-fixed-wireless.htm
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Ericsson Mobile Report: The rise of fixed wireless |
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In its June 2021 Ericsson Mobile Report, the company says users are taking up 5G technology at a faster rate than 4G.
By year end Ericsson expects more than 500 million 5G users worldwide. By 2026 this will rise to 3.5 billion.
It says fixed wireless broadband user numbers will hit 180 million by 2026.
This compares with Ericsson’s estimate of 1.2
billion fixed-line broadband connections today. By 2026 that
will rise to 1.5 billion.
In New Zealand, all three mobile operators sell fixed wireless.
Ericsson prefers the term fixed wireless
access or FWA. It defines FWA as:
"A connection that provides primary broadband access through wireless wide area mobile network enabled customer premises equipment (CPE)."This includes various form factors of CPEs, such as indoor (desktop and window) and outdoor (rooftop and wall mounted). It does not include portable battery-based Wi-Fi routers or dongles."
Yet Ericsson says:
The high adoption rate of FWA is also prevalent in countries with a high fibre penetration.
By 2026 around four fixed wireless
connections in ten will be on 5G.
It calls the older technologies Massive IoT. The term includes NB-IoT and Cat-M1 IoT.
Ericsson says:
Massive IoT primarily consists of wide-area use cases, connecting large numbers of low-complexity, low-cost devices with long battery life and relatively low throughput.
Broadband IT uses higher throughput,
lower latency and larger data
volumes.
"Typical use cases include cloud-based AR/VR, remote control of machines and vehicles, cloud robotics, advanced cloud gaming and real-time coordination and control of machines and processes."Deployment of the first commercial devices supporting time-critical communications is expected during 2022."
Ericsson Mobile Report: The rise of fixed wireless was first posted at billbennett.co.nz.
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