Europe looking to 5G to solve latency demands, claims Ericsson

Ericssonโ€™s annual Innovation Day stretched the definition of 5G to its limits, as the vendor claimed Europe was leading on latency-focused use cases.

The event, which was held at its ICT Development Centre in Aachen, Germany, featured the now familiar wealth of 5G demonstrations from remote driving cars to Coco, a sensor equipped cuddly toy designed to accompany a child travelling alone on a journey. The toy can be tracked via cellular networks and Wi-Fi and can answer questions through the Siri interface on the iPhone it is carrying.

However, Ericsson appeared to be playing fast and loose with the definition of 5G. At one point, it discussed an invoicing system for health companies, which offers billing and discounting according to consumer behaviour. 

Granted, this amounted to technology offering solutions on a grand scale, but is a billing system strictly 5G?

[Read more: Ericsson gives positive diagnosis to 5Gโ€™s role in healthcare but medics remain cautious]

Ericsson argued it was, claiming the opportunities of 5G lay within transformation and efficiencies or โ€œusing technology in a smarter wayโ€, as Arun Bansal, Head of Ericssonโ€™s Europe and Latin America business, described it.

Mikael Bรคck, Head of Strategy and Partnerships, said in addition to Ericsson learning new ways of doing things, partners also needed to be aware of how technology was changing. He said work needed to begin early for operators and vendors to ensure that customers could ultimately trust the different types of services that will be offered under the 5G umbrella.

This is why the vendor is holding global trials of potential 5G technologies to try and build up this familiarity. There are 33 in total, 17 of which are in Europe. Bansal said Europeโ€™s dominance in these trials goes some ways to counter the argument that the continent is lagging behind the United States and Asia in the development of 5G. 

He added: โ€œThe use cases are different in different markets. In North America, itโ€™s fixed wireless, which isnโ€™t latency dependent. For [North American] consumers, the latency use cases will not be so paramount. Itโ€™s speeds and throughputs rather than latencies.โ€

He said Europeโ€™s demand for the sub-1ms latencies will mean deployments will begin in earnest from 2019 onwards, when the technology has been fully developed.

Ericsson has already conducted trials with Telia and built a โ€œ5G motorwayโ€ in partnership with Deutsche Telekom, Telefรณnica and Vodafone as it seeks to crack the latency issue.

Bรคck said Ericsson believed transport and automotive, as well as manufacturing to be the key areas for 5G. He said manufacturing was particularly interesting as there was plenty of scope for companies to use connectivity to find efficiencies.

Bansal picked up that baton at a later point in the day, suggesting efficiencies were a vital part of 5G. He said expected economic growth from 5G could not come from sales alone โ€“ companies would also gain substantial financial benefits from streamlining their processes.

Aside from a brief mention that security risks were the โ€œdark sideโ€ of 5G and a problem that needed to be solved, the tone of the Innovation Day was positive about the opportunities ahead.

Bรคck was particularly effusive, suggesting 5G offered a โ€œcompletely game-changingโ€ experience and an opportunity to do something that has not been done before. However, he added this opportunity was โ€œa journey that will take some timeโ€.

Given Ericssonโ€™s well publicised problems, he could be talking about the companyโ€™s turnaround plans as much as about 5G.