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Telefónica building partner ecosystem for 4G, 5G Open RAN solutions

Altiostar, Intel, Xilinx among Telefónica Open RAN providers

Ahead of planned Open RAN trials later this year in Brazil, Germany, Spain and the U.K., telecoms giant Telefónica is collaborating with several ecosystem vendors to develop disaggregated radio access network solutions. The group is working off a set of specifications developed by the O-RAN Alliance. The overarching goal is to open up radio interfaces to allow operators to take their pick of best-in-breed solutions, thereby shifting network economics and fostering collaborative innovation.

Given its massive volume of radio equipment purchases, Telefónica’s embrace of Open RAN could serve to Telefónica operates in 14 countries and has been crystal clear on its intentions around network transformation. Speaking in October 2019 at Huawei’s Global Mobile Broadband Forum in Zurich, Global CTIO Enrique Blanco said, “We are designing and building cloud-based networks,” he said during a keynote session, calling the shift in network design “extraordinarily ambitious.” Blanco said 5G networks have to be programmable; “This is a must because we need to monitor huge growth in the data capabilities for our customers. This network needs to be open and we need to get all these capabilities.”

In the latest, Telefónica detailed ongoing work with :

  • Altiostar specializes in open, virtual RAN software that can integrate operation of equipment from multiple vendors;
  • Intel’s Xeon processors will power serves supporting baseband radio functions;
  • Supermicro provides a range of telco solutions, including those geared toward edge computing and O-RAN distributed units;
  • Xilinx is providing its Zyng UltraScale+ RF system-on-chip for 4G and 5G radios.

In addition to its Open RAN work with Telefónica, Altiostar is a key vendor to Japan’s Rakuten Mobile, a new market entrant known for a greenfield build of a fully cloud-native, virtualized LTE (5G-ready) network. Altiostar has also drawn investment from Telefónica, Cisco, Rakuten, Tech Mahindra and Qualcomm. 

Speaking of its most recent work with Telefónica , Altiostar  VP of Field Operations Pierre Kahhale said in a statement, “”Telefónica is known for its leading-edge network and has been championing open vRAN implementations to bring greater network service agility and flexibility. By bringing together the best-of-breed innovation, Telefonica is looking to achieve this vision into their network.”

Xilinx is a member of the O-RAN Alliance and, according to a company blog, sees an open, interoperable RAN as marking “a major paradigm shift in network technology. With O-RAN, baseband hardware utilizes standard servers, the interfaces between the network equipment are open and standardized, and the baseband software runs in the cloud.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

ABOUT AUTHOR

Sean Kinney, Editor in Chief
Sean Kinney, Editor in Chief
Sean focuses on multiple subject areas including 5G, Open RAN, hybrid cloud, edge computing, and Industry 4.0. He also hosts Arden Media's podcast Will 5G Change the World? Prior to his work at RCR, Sean studied journalism and literature at the University of Mississippi then spent six years based in Key West, Florida, working as a reporter for the Miami Herald Media Company. He currently lives in Fayetteville, Arkansas.