\"<p>Airtel
Airtel and Tech Mahindra have deployed India’s first private 5G network at Mahindra’s Chakan manufacturing plant. Airtel and Reliance Jio have earlier showcased 5G-connected ambulances in partnership with Apollo and Medulance respectively. Vodafone Idea has also showcased smart agriculture solutions. Airtel had also announced the successful trial of a 5G private network at the Bosch Automotive Electronics India (RBAI) facility in Bengaluru.<\/span><\/figcaption><\/figure>New Delhi: Imagine a situation where a patient is getting real-time monitoring and initial treatment while still being rushed in an ambulance to a super speciality hospital far off; farmers in hinterlands getting advice on their crops from experts who are monitoring their fields via drones and robots fitted with cameras.

The next generation technology 5G<\/a> promises to make these situations real and aims to enable enterprises to drive digital transformation in every aspect.

5G adoption in India will be far more diverse than that of 4G, given the wide range of consumer and enterprise use cases that 5G supports. Telcos have showcased many use cases ranging from 5G connected ambulances to use of drones to smart agriculture, but a full fledged adoption of any use case in an
industry<\/a> is still a few years away.

Touted as a game changer, the adoption of 5G by enterprises is expected to bring in enhanced productivity and efficiencies in enterprises but many say there is still unwillingness from enterprises’ side considering few use cases, lack of skilled manpower and less awareness about next generation technology.

For the telecom industry, the enterprise market is estimated to be at Rs 75,000-Rs 90,000 crore and has doubled in the last few years.

“5G offers many use cases for auto and other industry segments. Logistics, manufacturing, auto, agriculture can easily exploit the three important features of 5G namely, high data speeds, low latency and enhanced support for IoT,” Mahesh Uppal, a telecom expert said.

5G for enterprises<\/a>: A huge opportunity<\/strong>

5G will act as a catalyst for enterprise transformation and an initial impact of 5G will be in manufacturing, gaming and logistics sectors where 5G features could be easier to exploit.

Few telcos have started working with utility companies or mining companies or heavy industry in terms of implementing network solutions on the edge to automate things in a mine on an automobile shop floor.

Enterprises are expected to be the main cash generator for the telecom companies –
Reliance Jio<\/a>, Airtel and Vodafone Idea – estimated to generate around 40% of overall 5G revenues.

Private 5G networks<\/a> will be the biggest opportunity in the enterprise space, and have the capabilities to unleash the potential for operational transformation, automation and efficiencies for enterprises. Though the government has allowed private entities to acquire spectrum directly, the final guidelines are yet to be announced. Adani Group has acquired spectrum for private 5G networks<\/a> via an auction route. This, though, has become a bone of contention between telcos and enterprises who want to set up their own private 5G networks.

“5G will play a significant role in the digital transformation that every enterprise is undergoing. For the next 3-5 years, it can substantially enable them in rekindling their business models. With direct to consumer and other similar business models, the structures are getting leaner and 5G is a great enabler in this,” Faisal Kawoosa, Analyst at TechARC said.

Airtel and Tech Mahindra have deployed India’s first private
5G network<\/a> at Mahindra’s Chakan manufacturing plant. Airtel and Reliance Jio have earlier showcased 5G-connected ambulances in partnership with Apollo and Medulance respectively. Vodafone Idea has also showcased smart agriculture solutions. Airtel had also announced the successful trial of a 5G private network at the Bosch Automotive Electronics India (RBAI) facility in Bengaluru.

“There are two important things from telco perspective - enterprises may be aware of 5G but whether they are aware of those use cases and what kind of benefits these use cases bring to them is a big question mark. Telcos will need to run a significant 5G use case and its benefits awareness campaign among enterprises in order to convince them to open up their wallets. Secondly, enterprises are going in cost saving\/cost cutting mode in 2023 with job cuts\/freezes and limiting capex so whether enterprises are going to be willing to invest in 5G use cases is also a question,” Nishant Bansal, Senior Research Manager Telecom Insights, Asia Pacific at IDC said.

“What 3G and 4G did for consumers by putting the internet in their pockets, 5G will do for a range of industries including healthcare, by connecting not only billions of people, but billions of things,” said Pranav Bajaj, co-Founder, Medulance. “Hospitals can no longer do it alone or rely on public Wi-Fi networks. Private, dedicated cellular networks are the way to go.”

“We have noticed the growing role of Augmented Reality(AR)\/Virtual Reality(VR) in reshaping the retail experience with virtual trial rooms. The introduction of 5G will provide impetus to these technologies, although availability and cost of the hardware enabling them remain significant determinants of their adoption. There is plenty of headroom for growth as India is still nascent in the AR\/VR journey,” Sanjeev Barnwal, Founder & CTO, Meesho said.

Read also<\/h4>
<\/a><\/figure>
Nokia, Kyndryl extend partnership for private 5G factory networks<\/a><\/h5><\/div>
<\/a><\/figure>
Nokia to open lab in Bangalore to drive Industry 4.0<\/a><\/h5><\/div>
<\/a><\/figure>
India’s total spend on private wireless network to reach $240 mn by 2027: Nokia<\/a><\/h5><\/div>
<\/a><\/figure>
India’s next wave of subscriber adds to be driven by 5G, upgradation of 2G users: Nokia<\/a><\/h5><\/div><\/div><\/div>
Challenges<\/strong>

About 43% of enterprises lack an understanding of 5G’s relationship with other technologies. They also stated their limited awareness of the 5G supplier ecosystem, followed by limited relevance of 5G to overall business or technology strategy, and a lack of involvement in 5G trials and test beds, among other challenges, as per the EY report.

Nokia<\/a> India chief marketing officer Amit Marwah says \"We have seen initial traction in industries including manufacturing, ports, utility like power companies, even airports to some extent. These have good potential where lots of work is happening in India as well in terms of expanding infrastructure.”

There is not unwillingness but rather lack of awareness in enterprises about 5G impact and benefits. “Initially, there will be few adopters which will embrace 5G and prove the benefits. As enterprises will get more aware, the adoption will increase. The first use case is expected to be deployed in India anytime in the next 1-2 years,” Marwah said.

Firms say the industry is currently facing numerous challenges, ranging from a lack of expertise and skills to understand the nuances of 5G technology, to the deployment of the technology in their own setup and weighing the impact of its adoption and return on investment (RoI).

“The players in the industry are still in the early stages of testing and implementing 5G to address specific challenges in their businesses,” Manish Vyas, President, Communications, Media and Entertainment Business, and CEO, Network Services at Tech Mahindra said.

Many also say network security and interoperability-related challenges could impede the adoption of 5G by enterprises. 5G requires deep collaboration with telcos and technology companies to fully realize the benefits of the 5G technology while working out new use cases.

“There are several issues that need to be resolved before 5G is adopted in the clinical setting. Some of these challenges include a lack of infrastructure and coverage, protection of patients’ data, acceptance by patients and training healthcare professionals about these technologies,” said Girish Raghavan, VP – Engineering, GE HealthCare. “To truly realize the potential of 5G, we must address these challenges.”

Kawoosa adds that telcos are looking at 5G as just a powerful enabler. “For enterprises, 5G is important but not the only way to achieve their goals. Telcos will have to take startups along and build turnkey 5G solutions for enterprises that will sweeten the deal and minimise their learning curve. Telcos along with startups can offer 5G as a service to the enterprises which will see quick adoption.”

In the initial years, 5G will not have any major impact on the enterprise revenues as use cases are yet to be operationalised. Once there are enough use cases for adoption, the impact will be seen but it is still 2-3 years away, an analyst at a top consulting firm said.
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深入:除了手机和速度:5 g的连接经济和互联网的一切向你招手

私人5 g网络将是最大的机会在企业空间,并有能力释放潜在的操作转换、自动化和企业效率。尽管政府允许私人实体直接获取频谱,最后准则尚未公布。

Ashutosh库马尔 曼西希夫
  • 更新2023年2月21日08:21点坚持
阅读: 100年行业专业人士
读者的形象读到100年行业专业人士
< p > Airtel和Tech Mahindra部署印度首个私人5 g网络Mahindra Chakan制造厂。Airtel和信实Jio早些时候展示5 g-connected救护车分别与阿波罗和Medulance。沃达丰的想法也展示了智能农业解决方案。旅馆还宣布了5 g的成功试验在博世汽车电子印度私有网络(RBAI)设施在班加罗尔。< / p >
Airtel和Tech Mahindra部署印度首个私人5 g网络Mahindra Chakan制造厂。Airtel和信实Jio早些时候展示5 g-connected救护车分别与阿波罗和Medulance。沃达丰的想法也展示了智能农业解决方案。Airtel还宣布了5 g的成功试验专用网络在博世汽车电子在班加罗尔印度(RBAI)设施。
新德里:想象一个病人情况实时监控和最初的治疗,同时仍然冲在救护车去医院一个超级专业遥远;内陆地区的农民的庄稼专家建议那些监控领域通过无人机和机器人配备了照相机。

广告
下一代技术5克有望使这些情况真实,旨在使企业数字变换在各个方面。

5 g采用在印度将远远比4 g的多样化,给消费者和企业的广泛的用例5 g的支持。电信公司已经展示了很多用例从5 g连接救护车使用无人机智能农业,而是一个完整的采用任何用例行业仍然是一个几年了。

吹捧为改变游戏规则,采用5 g的企业预计将带来企业提高生产力和效率,但很多人说仍有不从企业方面考虑几个用例,缺乏熟练的人力资源和对下一代技术。

电信行业,企业市场估计在Rs 75000 - 90000卢比,在过去几年中翻了一番。

“5 g提供了许多用例对汽车和其他工业领域。物流、制造业、汽车、农业可以很容易地利用5 g的三个重要特征即数据传输速度高、低延迟和增强对物联网的支持,“马赫什•Uppal电信专家说。

企业5克:一个巨大的机会

5 g将作为企业转化的催化剂和最初的5 g的影响将在制造业、游戏和物流领域5 g特性可以更容易利用。

广告
一些电信公司已经开始使用公用事业公司、矿业公司或重工业的边缘实现网络解决方案自动化的东西我在一个汽车车间。

企业预计将主要的电信公司——现金发生器依赖JioAirtel和沃达丰的想法——据估计,生成5 g总收入的40%左右。

私人5 g网络将企业空间,最大的机会和有能力释放潜在的操作转换、自动化和企业效率。尽管政府允许私人实体直接获取频谱,最后准则尚未公布。阿达尼集团获得了频谱为私人5 g网络通过拍卖的路线。不过,这已经成为一个争论的焦点电信公司和企业之间要建立自己的私人5 g网络。

“5克将发挥重要作用在数字转换,每一个企业都是经历。未来3 - 5年,它可以大大让他们重燃他们的商业模式。直接向消费者和其他类似的商业模式,结构精简,5 g是一个伟大的推动者,”TechARC费萨尔Kawoosa,分析师说。

Airtel和Tech Mahindra部署印度首个私人5 g网络马辛德拉Chakan制造厂。Airtel和信实Jio早些时候展示5 g-connected救护车分别与阿波罗和Medulance。沃达丰的想法也展示了智能农业解决方案。Airtel还宣布了5 g的成功试验专用网络在博世汽车电子在班加罗尔印度(RBAI)设施。

”有两个重要的事情从电信的角度来看,企业可能意识到5克但他们是否意识到这些用例,这些用例带来什么样的好处还是一个大问号。5 g电信公司将需要运行一个重要用例及其收益意识活动中企业为了说服他们打开他们的钱包。其次,企业会在2023年节省费用/成本削减模式与裁员/冻结和限制资本支出所以企业是否愿意投资于5克用例也是一个问题,“高级研究经理电信见解,作者Nishant邦萨尔IDC亚太区说。

“3 g和4 g的消费者通过互联网口袋里,5克将会做一系列的行业包括医疗、通过连接不仅数十亿人,但数十亿的事情,“Pranav巴贾吉说,联合创始人,Medulance。“医院可以不再单独或依赖于公共wi - fi网络。私人的,专用的蜂窝网络的路要走。”

“我们已经注意到发挥日益重要作用的增强现实(AR) /虚拟现实(VR)与虚拟试验房间重塑零售经验。5 g的引入将为这些技术提供动力,虽然硬件的可用性和成本使他们保持他们收养的重要决定因素。像印度有足够的增长空间仍然是新兴的基于“增大化现实”技术/ VR旅程,”(Sanjeev Barnwal,创始人和首席技术官,Meesho说。

读也


挑战

大约43%的企业缺乏5 g的理解与其他技术的关系。他们也说他们有限的意识5 g供应商生态系统,其次是有限的相关性5 g整体业务或技术战略,以及缺乏参与5 g试验和测试床,其他挑战,按照按照报告。

诺基亚印度首席营销官Amit Marwah说:“我们已看到初步牵引行业包括制造业、港口、公用事业和电力公司一样,在某种程度上甚至机场。这些具有良好的潜力,很多工作正在发生在印度扩大基础设施。”

没有不愿意,而是缺乏认识企业大约5 g的影响和好处。“最初,会有一些用户将拥抱5 g和证明的好处。随着企业越来越意识到,采用将会增加。第一个用例将部署在印度在未来1 - 2年,”Marwah说。

公司称该行业目前面临着众多挑战,从缺乏专业知识和技能,了解5 g技术的微妙之处,技术的部署在自己的设置和权衡的影响采用和投资回报率(RoI)。

“球员们在业界仍在测试的早期阶段和实施5 g企业应对特定的挑战,“Vyas以及资源,通信、媒体和娱乐业务,兼首席执行官、网络服务技术马辛德拉说。

很多人还说网络安全,interoperability-related挑战可能阻碍企业采用5克。5 g需要深度与电信公司和科技公司充分意识到合作的好处5 g技术工作时新的用例。

”前,有几个问题需要解决采用5 g在临床设置。这些挑战包括缺乏基础设施和覆盖,保护患者的数据,由患者验收和培训卫生保健专业人士对这些技术,”副总裁Girish Raghavan说——工程,通用电气医疗集团。“要真正意识到5 g的潜力,我们必须应对这些挑战。”

Kawoosa补充说,电信公司正在考虑5 g是一个强有力的推动者。“企业5 g是重要的,但不是唯一的方法来实现自己的目标。电信公司必须采取创业,构建5 g交钥匙解决方案为企业做这笔交易,减少他们的学习曲线。电信公司和创业公司可以提供5 g作为服务企业将迅速采用。”

在最初的几年,5克不会有任何重大影响在企业收入尚未operationalised用例。一旦有足够的用例采用,这种影响将体现但它仍然是2 - 3年时间,顶级咨询公司的分析师说。
  • 发布于2023年2月21日08:21点坚持
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\"&lt;p&gt;Airtel
Airtel and Tech Mahindra have deployed India’s first private 5G network at Mahindra’s Chakan manufacturing plant. Airtel and Reliance Jio have earlier showcased 5G-connected ambulances in partnership with Apollo and Medulance respectively. Vodafone Idea has also showcased smart agriculture solutions. Airtel had also announced the successful trial of a 5G private network at the Bosch Automotive Electronics India (RBAI) facility in Bengaluru.<\/span><\/figcaption><\/figure>New Delhi: Imagine a situation where a patient is getting real-time monitoring and initial treatment while still being rushed in an ambulance to a super speciality hospital far off; farmers in hinterlands getting advice on their crops from experts who are monitoring their fields via drones and robots fitted with cameras.

The next generation technology 5G<\/a> promises to make these situations real and aims to enable enterprises to drive digital transformation in every aspect.

5G adoption in India will be far more diverse than that of 4G, given the wide range of consumer and enterprise use cases that 5G supports. Telcos have showcased many use cases ranging from 5G connected ambulances to use of drones to smart agriculture, but a full fledged adoption of any use case in an
industry<\/a> is still a few years away.

Touted as a game changer, the adoption of 5G by enterprises is expected to bring in enhanced productivity and efficiencies in enterprises but many say there is still unwillingness from enterprises’ side considering few use cases, lack of skilled manpower and less awareness about next generation technology.

For the telecom industry, the enterprise market is estimated to be at Rs 75,000-Rs 90,000 crore and has doubled in the last few years.

“5G offers many use cases for auto and other industry segments. Logistics, manufacturing, auto, agriculture can easily exploit the three important features of 5G namely, high data speeds, low latency and enhanced support for IoT,” Mahesh Uppal, a telecom expert said.

5G for enterprises<\/a>: A huge opportunity<\/strong>

5G will act as a catalyst for enterprise transformation and an initial impact of 5G will be in manufacturing, gaming and logistics sectors where 5G features could be easier to exploit.

Few telcos have started working with utility companies or mining companies or heavy industry in terms of implementing network solutions on the edge to automate things in a mine on an automobile shop floor.

Enterprises are expected to be the main cash generator for the telecom companies –
Reliance Jio<\/a>, Airtel and Vodafone Idea – estimated to generate around 40% of overall 5G revenues.

Private 5G networks<\/a> will be the biggest opportunity in the enterprise space, and have the capabilities to unleash the potential for operational transformation, automation and efficiencies for enterprises. Though the government has allowed private entities to acquire spectrum directly, the final guidelines are yet to be announced. Adani Group has acquired spectrum for private 5G networks<\/a> via an auction route. This, though, has become a bone of contention between telcos and enterprises who want to set up their own private 5G networks.

“5G will play a significant role in the digital transformation that every enterprise is undergoing. For the next 3-5 years, it can substantially enable them in rekindling their business models. With direct to consumer and other similar business models, the structures are getting leaner and 5G is a great enabler in this,” Faisal Kawoosa, Analyst at TechARC said.

Airtel and Tech Mahindra have deployed India’s first private
5G network<\/a> at Mahindra’s Chakan manufacturing plant. Airtel and Reliance Jio have earlier showcased 5G-connected ambulances in partnership with Apollo and Medulance respectively. Vodafone Idea has also showcased smart agriculture solutions. Airtel had also announced the successful trial of a 5G private network at the Bosch Automotive Electronics India (RBAI) facility in Bengaluru.

“There are two important things from telco perspective - enterprises may be aware of 5G but whether they are aware of those use cases and what kind of benefits these use cases bring to them is a big question mark. Telcos will need to run a significant 5G use case and its benefits awareness campaign among enterprises in order to convince them to open up their wallets. Secondly, enterprises are going in cost saving\/cost cutting mode in 2023 with job cuts\/freezes and limiting capex so whether enterprises are going to be willing to invest in 5G use cases is also a question,” Nishant Bansal, Senior Research Manager Telecom Insights, Asia Pacific at IDC said.

“What 3G and 4G did for consumers by putting the internet in their pockets, 5G will do for a range of industries including healthcare, by connecting not only billions of people, but billions of things,” said Pranav Bajaj, co-Founder, Medulance. “Hospitals can no longer do it alone or rely on public Wi-Fi networks. Private, dedicated cellular networks are the way to go.”

“We have noticed the growing role of Augmented Reality(AR)\/Virtual Reality(VR) in reshaping the retail experience with virtual trial rooms. The introduction of 5G will provide impetus to these technologies, although availability and cost of the hardware enabling them remain significant determinants of their adoption. There is plenty of headroom for growth as India is still nascent in the AR\/VR journey,” Sanjeev Barnwal, Founder & CTO, Meesho said.

Read also<\/h4>
<\/a><\/figure>
Nokia, Kyndryl extend partnership for private 5G factory networks<\/a><\/h5><\/div>
<\/a><\/figure>
Nokia to open lab in Bangalore to drive Industry 4.0<\/a><\/h5><\/div>
<\/a><\/figure>
India’s total spend on private wireless network to reach $240 mn by 2027: Nokia<\/a><\/h5><\/div>
<\/a><\/figure>
India’s next wave of subscriber adds to be driven by 5G, upgradation of 2G users: Nokia<\/a><\/h5><\/div><\/div><\/div>
Challenges<\/strong>

About 43% of enterprises lack an understanding of 5G’s relationship with other technologies. They also stated their limited awareness of the 5G supplier ecosystem, followed by limited relevance of 5G to overall business or technology strategy, and a lack of involvement in 5G trials and test beds, among other challenges, as per the EY report.

Nokia<\/a> India chief marketing officer Amit Marwah says \"We have seen initial traction in industries including manufacturing, ports, utility like power companies, even airports to some extent. These have good potential where lots of work is happening in India as well in terms of expanding infrastructure.”

There is not unwillingness but rather lack of awareness in enterprises about 5G impact and benefits. “Initially, there will be few adopters which will embrace 5G and prove the benefits. As enterprises will get more aware, the adoption will increase. The first use case is expected to be deployed in India anytime in the next 1-2 years,” Marwah said.

Firms say the industry is currently facing numerous challenges, ranging from a lack of expertise and skills to understand the nuances of 5G technology, to the deployment of the technology in their own setup and weighing the impact of its adoption and return on investment (RoI).

“The players in the industry are still in the early stages of testing and implementing 5G to address specific challenges in their businesses,” Manish Vyas, President, Communications, Media and Entertainment Business, and CEO, Network Services at Tech Mahindra said.

Many also say network security and interoperability-related challenges could impede the adoption of 5G by enterprises. 5G requires deep collaboration with telcos and technology companies to fully realize the benefits of the 5G technology while working out new use cases.

“There are several issues that need to be resolved before 5G is adopted in the clinical setting. Some of these challenges include a lack of infrastructure and coverage, protection of patients’ data, acceptance by patients and training healthcare professionals about these technologies,” said Girish Raghavan, VP – Engineering, GE HealthCare. “To truly realize the potential of 5G, we must address these challenges.”

Kawoosa adds that telcos are looking at 5G as just a powerful enabler. “For enterprises, 5G is important but not the only way to achieve their goals. Telcos will have to take startups along and build turnkey 5G solutions for enterprises that will sweeten the deal and minimise their learning curve. Telcos along with startups can offer 5G as a service to the enterprises which will see quick adoption.”

In the initial years, 5G will not have any major impact on the enterprise revenues as use cases are yet to be operationalised. Once there are enough use cases for adoption, the impact will be seen but it is still 2-3 years away, an analyst at a top consulting firm said.
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