YOU ARE AT:5GTech leaders discuss the race to 5G at CES

Tech leaders discuss the race to 5G at CES

CES panel talks about the role of 5G in A.I., automated cars and more

Las Vegas, Nev. — A panelist of tech leaders gathered on stage at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) Wednesday for a discussion moderated by Editor-in-Chief of SDxCentral Sue Marek about what 5G exactly is and how it will shape the future. Among the tech leaders to occupy the CES spotlight included COO of Baidu Qi Lu, CTO of Verizon Hans Vestberg and President of Qualcomm Cristiano Amon, discussing how 5G will impact everything from self-driving cars to artificial intelligence (A.I.).

The non-standalone 5G New Radio variant was finalized by 3GPP last month, and the standalone spec is tracking for completion later this year. 5G supports three primary use cases: enhanced mobile broadband, massive support for the internet of things and mission critical communications that depend on ultra low latency and multi-gigabit-per-second speeds.

Commenting on the race to 5G, Vestberg said Verizon plans to be the first with 5G in the states. The company intends to deploy 5G fixed wireless residential broadband services in three to five U.S. markets this year. “Remember now, from the 5G, you can do different slices. We are now focusing on one slice, which is basically a residential broadband with millimeter wave spectrum,” Vestberg said.

Qualcomm’s Amon said he thought the industry will ease into millimeter wave technology and frequencies in the sub-6 GHz spectrum as well. “5G is not about a millimeter wave choice or a (low-frequency) choice,” he said. “It’s about all of it. It’s a gigabit LTE foundation, overlaid with a more dense millimeter wave, units of gigabit, tens ofgGigabit, all these systems working as one.” Amon indicated “flagship smartphones” may be available early next year, which could also help consumers ease into 5G technology.

Lu noted during the panel discussion that he expects 5G video to have a major impact by “replacing a lot of written language communications.” He also anticipates that 5G will have a major role in improving A.I., self-driving vehicles as well as the public-private infrastructure designs of cities in the foreseeable future. Lu added Baidu is collaborating with the Chinese government to create infrastructure and policies that aid the enablement of 5G deployments.

ABOUT AUTHOR

Nathan Cranford
Nathan Cranford
Nathan Cranford joined RCR Wireless News as a Technology Writer in 2017. Prior to his current position, he served as a content producer for GateHouse Media, and as a freelance science and tech reporter. His work has been published by a myriad of news outlets, including COEUS Magazine, dailyRx News, The Oklahoma Daily, Texas Writers Journal and VETTA Magazine. Nathan earned a bachelor’s from the University of Oklahoma in 2013. He lives in Austin, Texas.