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Previous Forbes Columns

December 2, 2020
Amazon’s AWS News Highlights Shifts in Semis, Hybrid Cloud and 5G Edge

November 11, 2020
5G Networks Moving to Cloud with IBM Satellite and AT&T Connection

October 27, 2020
Consumer WiFi Offerings Expand with Qualcomm Immersive Home Platform

October 20, 2020
Qualcomm Extends Reach Into 5G Infrastructure

October 8, 2020
US Carriers Prep 5G Networks for iPhone 12 Launch

September 24, 2020
Samsung Networks and Verizon Bring mmWave 5G Indoors, Enable Private Networks

September 9, 2020
Amazon Career Day Highlights Shift to Tech Jobs

September 3, 2020
Samsung’s New Foldable Comes Close to Perfection

September 2, 2020
Intel Refocuses on PCs with Evo Platform Brand and 11th Generation Core

August 26, 2020
Will 5G Networks Move to Open RAN?

August 12, 2020
Microsoft Resets Android Expectations with Surface Duo

August 5, 2020
Rural Broadband Possibilities Improving with CBRS Options from Samsung Networks

July 29, 2020
New IBM Offering Highlights Rise of Specialty Clouds

July 23, 2020
New Research Shows Pent-Up Demand for Private 5G Networks

July 14, 2020
Google Redefines Multi-Cloud Computing

July 8, 2020
Look Out, Here Comes 5G, Phase 2

June 25, 2020
How Will 5G Networks Get Faster? Densification

June 16, 2020
5G Complexity Makes Testing Critical

May 19, 2020
New Chip Advancements Highlight 5G Momentum

May 5, 2020
IBM Brings Open Hybrid Cloud Strategy to 5G and the Edge

April 29, 2020
New WiFi 6E Standard Brings 5G-Related Technologies to Local Area Wireless

April 15, 2020
Microsoft’s New Azure Edge Zones Highlights Opportunity to Combine 5G and Edge Computing

April 9, 2020
Samsung Breaks $500 Barrier for 5G Smartphones with New A Series

March 30, 2020
Microsoft Purchase of Affirmed Networks Highlights 5G Focus Shifting to Infrastructure

March 24, 2020
Spectrum-Sharing Technologies like CBRS Key to More Robust Wireless Networks

March 10, 2020
Major Chip Vendors Driving Revolutionary Changes in 5G Infrastructure

February 27, 2020
CBRS vs. C-Band: Making Sense of Mid-Band 5G

February 18, 2020
5G Latency Improvements Are Still Lagging

February 13, 2020
T-Mobile, Sprint Merger Likely to Bolster US Competitiveness for 5G

February 11, 2020
Samsung S20+ And Ultra Launch Finally Brings “Full 5G” to Market

February 3, 2020
The Top 5 Fallacies About 5G

January 9, 2020
CES Previews What to Expect from 5G in 2020

2019 Forbes Columns

 

















Forbes Column


December 8, 2020
Marvell Brings Traditional Network Infrastructure Tools to 5G Open RAN

By Bob O'Donnell

While it may not be as sexy as 5G phones, one of the hottest topics in the telecom world is Open RAN (Radio Access Network). The basic idea with O-RAN (as it is commonly called) is to bring the type of flexibility and choice to network infrastructure equipment that the cloud computing world discovered when it moved away from costly, specialized devices to relatively generic computer servers. In both instances, the effort is happening through a combination of more generalized hardware and standardized interfaces. (See “Will 5G Networks Move To Open RAN?” for more.)

Traditional network infrastructure vendors such as Ericsson, Nokia and, most recently Samsung Networks, have dominated the telco equipment space for decades with mostly proprietary, expensive solutions, often based on specialty chips like FPGAs (Field Programmable Gate Arrays). A big part of the reason has been the enormous complexity of these devices, as well as the critical need for utility-level reliability.

As with many areas in tech, over time these devices have been able to move more of their functionality to a software-based environment, removing some of the dependence on specialized hardware, while at the same time opening up more flexible and (ideally) less expensive options for creating networks. By moving to a more software-focused architecture, the ability to add new types of features and more efficiently use the hardware through virtualization techniques has become significantly easier.

At the same time, a key benefit of dedicated systems is the reliability and consistent level of performance that they provide. In addition, there are no concerns around interoperability, because in most deployments of network infrastructure equipment, all the critical components come from the same vendor. To be clear, most carriers buy equipment from multiple network infrastructure vendors to ensure diversity and competitiveness, but the little-known truth is that they still tend to use all the same vendor’s equipment in one geographical location and a different vendor’s gear in a different place. Very little mixing and matching between network equipment vendors occurs in a given location.

One of the main goals of O-RAN is to enable more flexible combinations of equipment by opening up the interfaces between these systems. The trick is, it has to do that while maintaining the same reliability of the traditional “closed” systems, and that’s proving to be a challenging goal.

Semiconductor maker Marvell took an important step towards helping maintain that reliability by introducing a new line of O-RAN-focused chips that are based on silicon designs currently being used in the more recent software-based network equipment from the traditional makers. In other words, it’s taking key elements from devices such as CUs (Centralized Units), DUs (Distributed Units), and RUs (Radio Units), customizing them for the unique requirements of the Open RAN market, and making them available. The goal, obviously, is to bring the kind of reliability and performance that the traditional infrastructure players have been using and put them into the hands of a new and different set of infrastructure vendors (or even those within traditional vendors who are working on O-RAN compliant hardware).

Specifically, Marvell announced new versions of its Octeon Fusion baseband processors dubbed Octeon Fusion-O (for Open RAN) that take the core capabilities of the part and then add optimizations for O-RAN applications, including the ability to compress and decompress the eCPRI (Enhanced Common Public Radio Interface) signals that pass between a cell tower’s RUs and the CUs and DUs used to process the signals. Traditional closed networks use “regular” CPRI for these signals, but each vendor offers a slightly different (but incompatible) flavor, making interoperability very challenging. eCPRI was developed as an open standards-based interface that could enable Open RANs.

The reason this matters is that the Octeon Fusion parts are currently integrated into traditional network infrastructure equipment and are deployed across multiple LTE and 5G carrier networks around the world, making them a well-known, well-understood part of traditional networks. Leveraging these existing capabilities into the Octeon Fusion O chips not only adds credibility to the solution, it also makes it easier to integrate software, originally developed to work on the Octeon Fusions, into new O-RAN solutions. In fact, part of Marvell’s O-RAN offering includes software to help with this process.

Marvell is making the Octeon Fusion O parts available both as standalone components for inclusion into integrated DU designs, or as virtualized DUs in the form of a PCIe-based accelerator card that plugs into x86-based servers that can be used to run other aspects of a 5G core network.

In addition to the Octeon Fusion O parts, Marvell also unveiled a multi-MIMO (Multiple Input, Multiple Output) RU design in conjunction with Analog Devices. The design offers up to 32 channels of simultaneous transmission and reception, a first for O-RAN applications, and a critical tool to help with the “densification” of 5G networks. (See “How Will 5G Networks Get Faster? Densification” for more.) Finally, the company also debuted a new Ethernet switch chip called the Prestera DX 7300 that’s intended to be used as a component with these 5G O-RAN systems and reference designs.

All told, it’s a fairly complete set of tools that should bring new levels of credibility and reliability to the 5G Open RAN marketplace. Of course, even with these increased assurances, O-RAN continues to face a bit of an uphill battle with established “brown field” carriers that have large amounts of traditional infrastructure equipment in place. It can be very expensive and technically challenging to make the transition from “closed” systems to open ones. Plus, some carriers have expressed concerns about the fact that it can often take the efforts of multiple vendors to pull together a complete solution, leaving them without a single throat to choke should a problem arise. As a result, a lot of the early success for O-RAN has been with new “green field” carriers, such as Rakuten in Japan, or in the burgeoning market for private 5G networks, which all have to be built from scratch.

Over time, however, the speed, flexibility, and cost benefits are likely to lead to much more rapid adoption of O-RAN technologies even among existing carriers. Marvell’s new offerings look to provide an important step in that direction.

Disclosure: TECHnalysis Research is a tech industry market research and consulting firm and, like all companies in that field, works with many technology vendors as clients, some of whom may be listed in this article.

Here’s a link to the original column: https://www.forbes.com/sites/bobodonnell/2020/12/08/marvell-brings-traditional-network-infrastructure-tools-to-5g-open-ran/

Forbes columnist Bob O'Donnell is the president and chief analyst of TECHnalysis Research, a market research and consulting firm that provides strategic consulting and market research services to the technology industry and professional financial community.