An emerging technology being trialed by Qualcomm and carrier partners
could ultimately undercut the need for new cell towers by enabling
smartphones to directly communicate with other smartphones.
The issue was front and center last month at the Founders Forum Smart Nation Singapore conference.
Steve Papa, founder of Parallel Wireless told CNBC that smartphones could eventually replace cell towers.
“There’s no reason why your cellphone isn’t the cell tower of the
future,” he said. “We’re just on the cusp of chips coming out where a
$300 chip can power an entire cell tower.”
In February, chipmaker Qualcomm put out a whitepaper based on its trials of LTE Direct, also called D2D, conducted with carrier Deutsche Telekom and Huawei.
From the whitepaper: “LTE Direct is a new and innovative
device-to-device technology that enables discovering thousands of
devices and their services in the proximity of [approximately]500 m, in a
privacy-sensitive and battery-efficient way.”
If fully realized, the tech would autonomously discover other
devices. “This horizontal discovery opens up a much broader network to
app developers and users who do not need specific applications to
receive value.”
LTE Direct uses licensed spectrum, which, in turn, would allow
operators to use LTE Direct as a new way to provide apps and services to
users.
The whitepaper authors wrote that LTE Direct “relies on the LTE
physical layer to provide a scalable and universal framework for
discovery and for connecting proximate peers.”
The technology was trialed by the two carriers and Qualcomm in Bonn, Germany, in September.
The Wireless Networking and Communications Group at The University of Texas-Austin is also conducting research into LTE Direct.
From research led by Professor Jeff Andrews, the group examined the promise of D2D.
“In principle, exploiting direct communication between nearby mobile
devices will improve spectrum utilization, overall throughput and energy
efficiency, while enabling new peer-to-peer and location-based
applications and services. D2D-enabled LTE devices have the potential to
become competitive for fallback public safety networks that must
function when cellular networks are not available or fail.”
In the CNBC interview, Papa speculated as to the utility from smartphones equipped with LTE Direct.
“When you get that far, it’s not that much further to a scenario
where when you’re finished with your cellphone, you can hang it on the
wall and it adds to the cellular network.”
He also discussed the regulatory machinations associated with deployment of new spectrum.
“Who’s going to be in charge is more of a political than a technology
or industry structure question. The reality is that technology will
make spectrum less scarce. When spectrum is less scarce, there’s less of
a need for a natural monopoly.”
http://www.rcrwireless.com/20150518/wireless/cell-towers-could-be-replaced-by-chips-tag17
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