06
May
Huawei Analyst Summit 2024: Commercializing the next phase of 5G (aka 5.5G or 5G Advanced)
After a few years of a lull because of COVID-19, the Huawei Analyst Summit was in-person this year. As usual, it was in Shenzhen from April 17th to April 19th, attended by many prominent analysts worldwide, but only a select few from the USA. The event’s highlight was 5.5G, Huawei’s name/brand for the next phase of 5G. The company went over the board to show that 5.5G is not just a vision but the real deal.
Apart from the keynotes and sessions, the event’s highlight was the tour of China Unicom’s Innovation Center in the industrial province of Guangzhou. During the tour, Unicom executives illustrated their groundbreaking work with Huawei in developing and deploying many realistic use cases of 5.5G.
Regarding the next phase of 5G, it doesn’t take too much to understand how far ahead Huawei and Chinese operators are compared to their cohorts in the US, Europe, and other regions. At the same time, questions remain on how all the restrictions put on Huawei regarding access to semiconductor technologies will affect their lead. However, those restrictions didn’t affect Huawei’s share in 2023 global infrastructure revenues.
What is “5.5G?”
Naming the phases of cellular standards has always been a fun but confusing exercise. 3GPP, the standards body, comes up with the official “marketing name” for specific sets of releases. But, vendors and operators take liberty in spinning their own names and definitions. This practice gets particularly abusive in the in-between phases. For example, LTE Advanced, a 3GPP name, had many alternatives, such as 4.5G, 4G Advanced, Pre-5G, and Evolved 5G. And it seems the story will be repeated for the next phase of 5G. 3GPP calls the Releases 18 and beyond 5G Advanced. However, Huawei and some of its friendly operators are calling it 5.5G. Even more confusing is that the features included in 5G Advanced and 5.5G are similar but not the same. If so, then what exactly is 5.5G?
5.5G is the vision to take the performance and usability of 5G to the next level without being beholden to any specific 3GPP releases. As defined by Huawei, 5.5G is a heterogeneous mix of standard and product features. It includes things like Red-Cap (Rel.17), passive IoT (Rel.18), utilizing all bands (from 900 MHz to mmWave), improvements such as Giga MIMO, beamforming, and Extremely Large Antenna Arrays (ELAA), as well as using AI for better O&M and optimization, etc. it can provide up to 10 Gbps downlink and up to 1 Gbps uplink speeds, higher capacity, lower latency, and power consumption while supporting next-gen applications, services, and use cases.
MWC 2024 was Huawei’s coming out party for 5.5G. At the analyst summit, the objective was to show progress on the ground and explain what’s on the horizon.
Highlights of the event
The event was spread into three days. The first day was full of keynotes and a couple of AI sessions. The second day had several overlapping breakout sessions for networking, cloud, data center, etc. I focused mainly on the network track and couldn’t attend others. The third day was all about tours and live demos. I chose Huawei 5.5G Park and China Unicom Guangzhou Innovation Center tours.
Keynotes
The keynotes were delivered by Zhou Hong, Huawei Strategy Research Institute’s President, and Eric Xu, Deputy Chairman and Rotating Chairman of Huawei. As one would expect, the keynotes were all about the grand vision of how AI will change the world and the role Huawei will play in it. Eric talked about 5.5G, Harmony OS strategy, Self-driving opportunities, energy generation, and more.
For Harmony OS, Huawei’s initial focus is on building a solid ecosystem in China with more than 5,000 local developers and later expanding to international markets.
Huawei is developing its own pre-trained Chinese NLP model, Pangu, and plans to use it across industries along with its Ascend cloud services and Kunpeng (Arm-based) silicon platform.
Specifically, regarding AI in telecom, the current focus is on simplifying network management and optimization. Huawei’s vision is to fully automate managing telecom networks through four levels, akin to autonomous driving levels. You can get a glimpse of the keynote here.
AI for RAN session
In the AI for RAN session, Eric Zhou, VP and CMO of Huawei Wireless Solutions, introduced three critical elements of their AI strategy:
1) Telecom Foundational AI model for network policy analysis and decision-making
– Huawei will offer the models to operators and even allow them to tune it to their needs
2) RAN Intelligent Agents – For O&M, Network Optimization and Provisioning
– O&M Agent minimizes human intervention, allows faster troubleshooting, and automates tasks to improve productivity and efficiency of operations
– Network Optimization Agent optimizes the network across many dimensions, such as user experience, performance, energy efficiency, and many others, which is magnitudes better than today’s single-dimensional optimization.
– Provisioning Agent enables high precision SLA visualization, zero-touch, agile provisioning, and fast time to market for new features, etc.
3) RAN Digital Twin System
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As the name suggests, this is building a complete high-accuracy digital twin of the network so that all the changes, updates, and new features can be thoroughly tested and optimized before deployment in the actual network. This will allow quick deployment and minimize post-upgrade issues.
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