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<\/span><\/figcaption><\/figure>NEW DELHI: Finnish telecoms gear maker Nokia Monday said it is partnering with Japanese firms Docomo<\/a> and NTT<\/a> to jointly define and develop key technologies towards the sixth-generation or 6G<\/a> technologies.

“The collaboration will focus on two proof-of-concepts for emerging 6G technologies: an AI native air interface and sub-THz radio access,” Nokia said in a statement.

These aim to demonstrate a performance gain with an AI-based 6G air interface compared to a conventional air interface, and to show that high-data rate beamformed access can be achieved in a high frequency band at 140 GHz, the statement added.

Nokia said it envisions six technologies to be the vital components of future
6G networks<\/a>, which includes new spectrum technologies, AI native air interface, network as a sensor, extreme connectivity, cognitive, automated and specialized architectures, and security and trust.

Among these six components, the partnership between the companies will initially focus to demonstrate the benefits of AI-based learned waveform in the transmitter with a deep learning receiver in the mid-band, as well as to test high data rate indoor communications in the sub-THz band.

The plan is to set up environments for experiments and demonstrations in Docomo and NTT premises in Japan and Nokia premises in Stuttgart, Germany, and to begin performing the desired tests and measurements in 2022, the statement said.

\"Centre<\/a><\/figure>

Centre should allot 5G spectrum directly to private firms, says TCS COO<\/a><\/h2>

This pits the Tata group company against telecom operators such as Reliance Jio Infocomm and Bharti Airtel, which want airwaves to be auctioned to licensed entities. The telcos’ view has been backed by the Department of Telecommunications (DoT) and the matter will now be decided by the cabinet.<\/p><\/div>

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<\/span><\/figcaption><\/figure>NEW DELHI: Finnish telecoms gear maker Nokia Monday said it is partnering with Japanese firms Docomo<\/a> and NTT<\/a> to jointly define and develop key technologies towards the sixth-generation or 6G<\/a> technologies.

“The collaboration will focus on two proof-of-concepts for emerging 6G technologies: an AI native air interface and sub-THz radio access,” Nokia said in a statement.

These aim to demonstrate a performance gain with an AI-based 6G air interface compared to a conventional air interface, and to show that high-data rate beamformed access can be achieved in a high frequency band at 140 GHz, the statement added.

Nokia said it envisions six technologies to be the vital components of future
6G networks<\/a>, which includes new spectrum technologies, AI native air interface, network as a sensor, extreme connectivity, cognitive, automated and specialized architectures, and security and trust.

Among these six components, the partnership between the companies will initially focus to demonstrate the benefits of AI-based learned waveform in the transmitter with a deep learning receiver in the mid-band, as well as to test high data rate indoor communications in the sub-THz band.

The plan is to set up environments for experiments and demonstrations in Docomo and NTT premises in Japan and Nokia premises in Stuttgart, Germany, and to begin performing the desired tests and measurements in 2022, the statement said.

\"Centre<\/a><\/figure>

Centre should allot 5G spectrum directly to private firms, says TCS COO<\/a><\/h2>

This pits the Tata group company against telecom operators such as Reliance Jio Infocomm and Bharti Airtel, which want airwaves to be auctioned to licensed entities. The telcos’ view has been backed by the Department of Telecommunications (DoT) and the matter will now be decided by the cabinet.<\/p><\/div>