How is 5G different from 4G?
The arrival of 5G coincides with the maturation of technologies that promote open, agile, and flexible capabilities across the network. Specifically, disaggregated and distributed software-defined network solutions, virtualization, and cloud-native functions are at least as impactful as the new 5G radios.
5G networks are designed to be open and virtualized, allowing individual services with different performance requirements to share the same infrastructure. The virtualization of functions effectively separates software from hardware implementations. This allows each function to be scaled independently and distributed optimally, with respect to available bandwidth capacity and latency requirements. Distributed architectural design, enabled through control/user plane separation, allows operators to position functions and services where they can best service the end user.
Why is 5G needed?
4G is starting to show its limits under current usage growth, precisely at a time when new technologies are about to place huge new demands on networks. In fact, the success of new technologies such as Internet of Things (IoT) devices, web-based artificial intelligence (AI) applications, and autonomous vehicles and machines rests on the availability of a robust, high-performing 5G network and its increased speeds, lower latency, and greater capacity.
The technologies that will provide the next generation of cloud services and connected experiences-such as augmented and virtual reality-will need 5G's performance and flexible architecture to reach their full potential.
When will 5G be available?
While mobile carriers are anxious to lead their markets in launching 5G, the journey to ubiquitous 5G availability should be viewed as a marathon, not a sprint. Availability requires new physical infrastructure, and time for developers and device makers to adjust to 5G's new architectures.
There is a danger in overmarketing the service prematurely before both speed and coverage are achieved. As of early 2021, early iterations of 5G have not lived up their hype in many consumers' eyes. The risk is that early adopters could be put off, which could have a detrimental effect on the speed of consumer adoption. That said, mobile operators have been able to show improved performance over 5G, even in the early stages of rollout.
The specific region, carrier, and device must be factored into 5G availability. Ubiquitous service, across carriers and markets, will likely not arrive until 2022 or 2023. 5G availability differs by country, and highly populated areas will likely see 5G service before less-populated areas.
Achieving 5G availability depends on a complex mix of factors, in addition to new infrastructure. For example, one method 5G uses for load balancing is carrier aggregation; one carrier's 5G phones might not benefit from performance improvements until other carriers finish their infrastructure upgrades. Enterprises are keen to implement 5G for their own digital transformation. Private 5G network services are viewed as the fastest and possibly best way for businesses to use the new technology to benefit their business and customer experiences.