5G Is Coming Next Year. Here’s What You Need to Know
The transition to new fifth-generation cellular networks, known as 5G, will affect how you use smartphones and many other devices. Let’s talk about the essentials.
In 2019, a big
technology shift will finally begin. It’s a once-in-a-decade upgrade to
our wireless systems that will start reaching mobile phone users in a
matter of months.
But this is not just about faster smartphones. The transition to new fifth-generation cellular networks
— known as 5G for short — will also affect many other kinds of devices,
including industrial robots, security cameras, drones and cars that
send traffic data to one another. This new era will leap ahead of current wireless technology,
known as 4G, by offering mobile internet speeds that will let people
download entire movies within seconds and most likely bring big changes
to video games, sports and shopping.
Officials
in the United States and China see 5G networks as a competitive edge.
The faster networks could help spread the use of artificial intelligence
and other cutting-edge technologies.
Expect to hear more about 5G soon at events like the big consumer electronics trade show CES
in January in Las Vegas and MWC Barcelona (formerly the Mobile World
Congress) in February in Spain. Wireless service providers including
AT&T and Verizon are already talking up 5G. And device makers are previewing gadgets that will work with the technology.
Samsung recently demonstrated prototypes
of 5G smartphones that are expected to operate on both Verizon and
AT&T networks. Many other manufacturers are racing to follow suit,
though Apple is not expected in the initial 5G wave. Analysts predict
that iPhones with the new technology won’t arrive until 2020. An Apple
spokeswoman declined to comment.
Here’s what you need to know.
What exactly is 5G?
Strictly
speaking, 5G is a set of technical ground rules that define the
workings of a cellular network, including the radio frequencies used and
how various components like computer chips and antennas handle radio
signals and exchange data.
Since the first cellphones were
demonstrated in the 1970s, engineers from multiple companies have
convened to agree on new sets of specifications for cellular networks,
which are designated a new technology generation every decade or so. To
get the benefits of 5G, users will have to buy new phones, while
carriers will need to install new transmission equipment to offer the
faster service.
How fast will 5G be?
The answer depends on where you live, which wireless services you use and when you decide to take the 5G plunge.
Qualcomm, the wireless chip maker,
said it had demonstrated peak 5G download speeds of 4.5 gigabits a
second, but predicts initial median speeds of about 1.4 gigabits. That
translates to roughly 20 times faster than the current 4G experience.
The 5G speeds will be particularly noticeable in higher-quality streaming video. And downloading a typical movie at the median speeds cited by Qualcomm would take 17 seconds with 5G, compared with six minutes for 4G.
Rather
than remembering to download a season of a favorite TV show before
heading to the airport, for example, you could do it while in line to
board a plane, said Justin Denison, a Samsung senior vice president.
Is that the only speed that matters?
No. There’s another kind of speed, a lag known as latency, that may become even more important with 5G.
Issue
a command now on a smartphone — like starting a web search — and the
response isn’t exactly immediate. A lag of 50 to several hundred
milliseconds is common, partly because signals often must pass between
different carrier switching centers; 5G, which uses newer networking
technology, was designed to reduce latency down to a few milliseconds.
It was also designed to deliver signals more reliably than earlier
cellular networks, which today frequently drop bits of data that aren’t
essential for tasks like watching movies on a phone.
That
improvement could bring many benefits, notably in fields such as
virtual reality. The highest-quality VR applications now typically
require bulky headsets that are connected by wire to nearby personal
computers that generate 3-D images. With 5G, that would be off-loaded
wirelessly to other machines, freeing users to move and making it easier
to develop goggles the size of eyeglasses, said Cristiano Amon,
president of Qualcomm’s semiconductor business.
In
the related field of augmented reality, people could point a smartphone
camera at a football game and see both live video on the display and
superimposed player statistics or other data, said Patrick Moorhead, an
analyst at Moor Insights & Strategy.
And 5G’s impact extends to medicine and other fields that increasingly rely on high-speed connections.
“If you talk
about remote surgery or connected cars, you don’t want latency times to
be too long,” said Fredrik Jejdling, an executive vice president at
Ericsson, a maker of cellular equipment.
When will 5G be here?
The answer for smartphone users in the United States appears to be by the second quarter of 2019; precise timing is uncertain.
AT&T has actually switched on its mobile 5G service
in 12 cities, with seven more targeted in its initial rollout plan. But
smartphones aren’t ready yet for a direct connection to 5G networks. So
AT&T will initially market a 5G hot-spot device, made by Netgear,
that can funnel wireless broadband connections to nearby phones and
computers using Wi-Fi.
Andre Fuetsch,
president of AT&T Labs and the carrier’s chief technology officer,
said the first Samsung smartphones for AT&T’s 5G network will be
available in the first half of 2019.
Verizon
is already selling a 5G-branded service — based on its own variant of
the technology — to provide wireless internet connections to homes in
limited parts of Houston, Indianapolis, Los Angeles and Sacramento. The
carrier predicts that it will begin serving smartphone users in the
first half of 2019, without identifying cities or specific timing.
Sprint
said it might also switch on a 5G service first for smartphones next
year, initially targeting nine American cities. Its prospective merger
partner, T-Mobile, has stressed a nationwide 5G launch in 2020, but said
it was installing gear in 30 cities that would be ready when 5G
smartphones appeared in 2019.
Countries
expected to follow the United States with 2019 rollouts of 5G include
Britain, Germany, Switzerland, China, South Korea and Australia,
according to a timetable compiled by Qualcomm.
Will consumers see the full benefits of 5G?
Verizon and AT&T will introduce their 5G offerings with the first use of high frequencies that are known by the phrase “millimeter wave.”
Using this, the wireless providers can pump data at high speeds, but
the signals don’t travel as far. So the two carriers are expected to
first target densely populated areas — “parts or pockets” of cities, as
AT&T’s Mr. Fuetsch put it.
Sprint
and T-Mobile plan to start with lower frequencies. The result may be
somewhat slower initial speeds but broader range, said Michael
Thelander, president of Signals Research, a wireless consultancy.
Still,
5G’s full benefits aren’t expected until American carriers upgrade key
central switching equipment, which may not happen until late 2019 or
sometime in 2020.
So should I buy a smartphone that works with 5G right away?
A
consumer study sponsored by Intel in August found that 58 percent of
Americans were not knowledgeable about 5G or had not heard of it, though
another survey in December by the chip maker indicated solid demand
once the benefits were explained.
Confusion actually could increase over the short term because of some technical details.
You
have a lot to consider. For example, while Verizon and AT&T plan to
later add 5G services based on lower frequencies that offer wider
coverage, the first 5G handsets may not work with those portions of
their networks. So the reach of 5G signals for those phones may remain
limited.
“I wouldn’t buy a 5G phone
until it supports 5G in one of the lower-frequency bands,” Mr. Thelander
said. “For all operators but Sprint, this means at least late 2019, and
more likely 2020.”
Comments
Post a Comment