SOUTH KOREA TO LAUNCH 5G SERVICE SO FAST USERS CAN
DOWNLOAD AN ENTIRE FILM IN JUST ONE SECOND
Ø South Korea is now investing £900million in 5G services
Ø Trial service expected in 2017 with commercial service by December
2020
Ø Will allow users to download a 800MB movie file in one second
Ø Speeds up to 1GB per second are 1,000 times faster than 4G
South Korea is to
introduce a blazing fast 5G mobile internet service, quick enough to download a
full length feature film in less than a second. While most of the world has yet
to experience the improvements offered by 4G services, the technologically
advanced country has announced a
£900million (1.6 trillion won) in its successor. South Korea's science
ministry said it aims to implement the technology, which is about 1,000 times
faster than the 4G, within six years.
Speedy:
South Korea are investing £900 million into 5G wireless internet services
capable of downloading an entire film in a single second.
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5G will allow users
to download a 800-megabyte movie file in one second, compared with 40 seconds
using 4G, the science ministry said, adding that such speeds would help South
Korean firms win overseas deals.
A ministry spokesman
said: 'We helped fuel national growth with 2G services in the 1990s, 3G in the
2000s and 4G around 2010. Now it is time to take preemptive action to develop
5G.'
'Countries in
Europe, China and the United States are making aggressive efforts to develop 5G technology
and we believe there will be fierce competition in this market in a few years,'
it said.
Under the roadmap, a
trial 5G service will be rolled out in 2017 and a fully commercial service in
December 2020. Priority will be given to developing key features for the new
network, including Ultra-HD and hologram transmission as well as cutting-edge
social networking services.
Related industries
will be able to rack up sales of 5G-related devices and infrastructure
equipment worth 331 trillion won from 2020 to 2026, the ministry estimated. The
government hopes to implement the plan with investment and cooperation from
operators such as SK Telecom and Korea Telecom as well as handset makers like
Samsung and LG.
It also aims to
expand the telecom infrastructure equipment industry, which is relatively
weaker than the mighty mobile device sector. Led by Samsung - the world's top
handset maker - South Korea has a leading 30-percent stake in the global mobile
device market.
'But the (telecom)
infrastructure equipment industry has only a 4.4 percent share in the global
market, with exports very limited,' the ministry said. Chinese equipment makers
including Huawei have expanded their presence in the global market from 12
percent in 2007 to 26 percent in 2012.
Huawei announced in
November that it was looking at a 5G commercial rollout by 2020, with a minimum
investment of $600 million to develop the technology. Seoul intends to take up
to a 20 percent stake in the world's telecom infrastructure equipment market by
2020, according to the ministry.
New opportunities
South Korea is renowned for being at the forefront of internet technology with
broadband speeds that consistently out-pace those in Europe or the United
States.
Officials said the
new service would also mean people on bullet trains running faster than 500 kilometers
(310 miles) an hour would even be able to access the Internet, compared with
300 kph currently.
'Bullet trains
around the world keep getting faster, with some in China running as fast as 500
and 600 kilometers per hour,' said one ministry official who declined to be
named.
'If we have the
technology to allow fast Internet access in these trains, it can open new
opportunities for us globally,' he said.
Samsung Electronics
announced back in May that it had successfully tested 5G technology, managing
data transmission of more than one gigabyte per second over a distance of two kilometers.
Samsung said it had
found a way to harness millimeter-wave bands which have proved to be a sticking
point for the mobile industry to date.
The test used 64
antenna elements, which the tech titan said overcame the issue of 'unfavourable
propagation characteristics' that have prevented data travelling across long
distances using the bands. However, it made clear that the technology would not
be available commercially before the end of the decade.
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