Nokia working with 30 mobile operators as plans on to introduce high-capacity 5G chipsets
January 29, 20181.1K views0 comments
Nokia said it is set to introduce new silicon chipsets for running next-generation 5G wireless networks.
The chipsets promise to cut antenna size in half, triple data-handling capacity and cut the power consumption of mobile towers.
The company on Monday said the chipsets, known as Reef Shark, are expected to ship in volume during the third quarter of 2018 and can be inserted into Nokia’s existing AirScale family of 4G and 5G-ready network gear.
Nokia said it was working with 30 mobile operators to deploy the new chipsets into their wireless towers, meaning that the first networks could be upgraded later this year with mass-market deployments to follow as 5G-ready devices hit the market.
Reef Shark chipsets are designed to work in so-called Massive MIMO antennas that are able to send and receive dozens of separate streams of data, offering many times more network capacity and greater wireless coverage from a single cell tower.
The chipsets will allow the size of antennas on average to be cut in half to as small as 45 centimetres (18 inches) tall from existing antennas that currently range in size from one metre (3.3 ft) to 2.6 metres tall, enabling them to be installed in far more locations.