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<\/span><\/figcaption><\/figure>Should the V band of radio waves, spanning the wavelengths 56 GHz to 71 GHz, be exempt from licence for expanding highspeed broadband<\/a> coverage or auctioned off for telecom companies to perform backhaul operations<\/a>? Telcos and internet service providers have locked horns over the matter. What will advance popular digital access should be the essential benchmark for evaluating options.

A reasonable compromise would be to split the V band into two parts, assign 7 GHz for licence-exempthigh-speed broadband access at gigabit speed, and assign the remaining 7 GHz for
data backhaul<\/a>. Or the E band can be used for backhaul, leaving the V band entirely for gigabit Wi-Fi.

The greater the pace of digital transformation of life and work, the larger the throughput of data, and the larger the needed carrying capacity. The best way to transport large quantities of data is via optical fibre. However, in India, optical fibre is less widespread than it ought to be, and obtaining the right of way to lay cable has proven to be very difficult. That is why telcos are keen to perform backhaul through wireless means. Besides the V band, the E band, comprising 70 and 80 GHz range, can be used for both backhaul and for distributed broadband access under the IEEE 802.11 protocols for Wi-Fi. Prof V Sridhar of the International Institute of Information Technology suggests bifurcating the V band and using one half for gigabit-speed Wi-Fi, called WiGig, and the rest for backhaul.

Instead of burdening telcos with the cost of acquiring this spectrum, it should be possible to assign it to a couple of specialist backhaul firms, from whom telcos could buy throughput services, with dynamic pricing, an exchange enabling the price discovery. Some innovation is possible.
<\/body>","next_sibling":[{"msid":78923756,"title":"Ericsson picked to deploy 5G city coverage for UK's BT","entity_type":"ARTICLE","link":"\/news\/ericsson-picked-to-deploy-5g-city-coverage-for-uks-bt\/78923756","category_name":null,"category_name_seo":"telecomnews"}],"related_content":[],"msid":78923757,"entity_type":"ARTICLE","title":"View: Licence-exempt the V-band, at least a part","synopsis":"\"Instead of burdening telcos with the cost of acquiring this spectrum, it should be possible to assign it to a couple of specialist backhaul firms, from whom telcos could buy throughput services, with dynamic pricing, an exchange enabling the price discovery\".","titleseo":"telecomnews\/view-licence-exempt-the-v-band-at-least-a-part","status":"ACTIVE","authors":[],"analytics":{"comments":0,"views":111,"shares":0,"engagementtimems":555000},"Alttitle":{"minfo":""},"artag":"ET CONTRIBUTORS","artdate":"2020-10-29 08:40:51","lastupd":"2020-10-29 08:40:51","breadcrumbTags":["telecom news","5G","Broadband","V-band","optical fiber","data backhaul","Industry","backhaul operations","E band (NATO)"],"secinfo":{"seolocation":"telecomnews\/view-licence-exempt-the-v-band-at-least-a-part"}}" data-authors="[" "]" data-category-name="" data-category_id="" data-date="2020-10-29" data-index="article_1">

观点:Licence-exempt v频带,至少一部分

”而不是加重电信公司收购的成本都与这个范围,可以将其分配给几个专家回程公司,电信公司可以购买从他吞吐量服务,动态定价,交换使价格发现”。

  • 发布于2020年10月29日08:40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
无线电波的V带,跨越波长56兆赫到71兆赫,免除高速扩张许可证吗宽带覆盖或为电信公司进行拍卖回程操作吗?电信运营商和互联网服务提供商相持不下。促进流行什么数字访问应该基本基准评估选项。

一个合理的妥协是V带分割成两部分,分配7 GHz licence-exempthigh-speed宽带接入千兆速度,并分配剩下的7 GHz数据回程。或E乐队可以用于回程,离开了V带完全千兆wi - fi。

广告
更大的数字转换的步伐的生活和工作,更大的数据吞吐量,需要承载能力越大。最好的办法是通过光纤传输大量的数据。然而,在印度,光纤普遍低于它应该,电缆和获得正确的方法已经被证明是非常困难的。这就是为什么电信公司热衷于通过无线手段执行回程。除了V带,E乐队,包括70和80 GHz范围,可用于回程和分布式无线宽带接入在IEEE 802.11协议。V bloom教授国际信息技术研究所表明的分叉的V带和使用1/2 gigabit-speed wi - fi,叫做WiGig,回程的休息。

而不是加重电信公司收购的成本都与这个范围,可以将其分配给几个专家回程公司,电信公司可以购买吞吐量服务,从他与动态定价,交换价格发现。一些创新是可能的。
  • 发布于2020年10月29日08:40点坚持
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<\/span><\/figcaption><\/figure>Should the V band of radio waves, spanning the wavelengths 56 GHz to 71 GHz, be exempt from licence for expanding highspeed broadband<\/a> coverage or auctioned off for telecom companies to perform backhaul operations<\/a>? Telcos and internet service providers have locked horns over the matter. What will advance popular digital access should be the essential benchmark for evaluating options.

A reasonable compromise would be to split the V band into two parts, assign 7 GHz for licence-exempthigh-speed broadband access at gigabit speed, and assign the remaining 7 GHz for
data backhaul<\/a>. Or the E band can be used for backhaul, leaving the V band entirely for gigabit Wi-Fi.

The greater the pace of digital transformation of life and work, the larger the throughput of data, and the larger the needed carrying capacity. The best way to transport large quantities of data is via optical fibre. However, in India, optical fibre is less widespread than it ought to be, and obtaining the right of way to lay cable has proven to be very difficult. That is why telcos are keen to perform backhaul through wireless means. Besides the V band, the E band, comprising 70 and 80 GHz range, can be used for both backhaul and for distributed broadband access under the IEEE 802.11 protocols for Wi-Fi. Prof V Sridhar of the International Institute of Information Technology suggests bifurcating the V band and using one half for gigabit-speed Wi-Fi, called WiGig, and the rest for backhaul.

Instead of burdening telcos with the cost of acquiring this spectrum, it should be possible to assign it to a couple of specialist backhaul firms, from whom telcos could buy throughput services, with dynamic pricing, an exchange enabling the price discovery. Some innovation is possible.
<\/body>","next_sibling":[{"msid":78923756,"title":"Ericsson picked to deploy 5G city coverage for UK's BT","entity_type":"ARTICLE","link":"\/news\/ericsson-picked-to-deploy-5g-city-coverage-for-uks-bt\/78923756","category_name":null,"category_name_seo":"telecomnews"}],"related_content":[],"msid":78923757,"entity_type":"ARTICLE","title":"View: Licence-exempt the V-band, at least a part","synopsis":"\"Instead of burdening telcos with the cost of acquiring this spectrum, it should be possible to assign it to a couple of specialist backhaul firms, from whom telcos could buy throughput services, with dynamic pricing, an exchange enabling the price discovery\".","titleseo":"telecomnews\/view-licence-exempt-the-v-band-at-least-a-part","status":"ACTIVE","authors":[],"analytics":{"comments":0,"views":111,"shares":0,"engagementtimems":555000},"Alttitle":{"minfo":""},"artag":"ET CONTRIBUTORS","artdate":"2020-10-29 08:40:51","lastupd":"2020-10-29 08:40:51","breadcrumbTags":["telecom news","5G","Broadband","V-band","optical fiber","data backhaul","Industry","backhaul operations","E band (NATO)"],"secinfo":{"seolocation":"telecomnews\/view-licence-exempt-the-v-band-at-least-a-part"}}" data-news_link="//www.iser-br.com/news/view-licence-exempt-the-v-band-at-least-a-part/78923757">