COVID-19 Pandemic Forces Experts to Emphasize on 5G & Edge Computing

  • The urgency around 5G snaps back with more breath than it would have ever had even just 1 month ago.

  • The current COVID-19 pandemic – which is forcing millions of employees to work from home – is helping to shine a light on the value of reliable networks.

  • Edge computing can help speed up web-based services by moving computing functions physically closer to the customers actually using them.


As Americans hunker down to slow the spread of the new coronavirus, some top business executives are arguing the crisis will put even more emphasis on the deployment of networking technologies, including small cells, edge computing and 5G.


The amount of work that will be done in a remote sense is absolutely going to change, and that is one of the things 5G enables. Because with 5G, some of the biggest uses are going to be in companies. I think this will accelerate those kinds of applications on the other side [of the crisis], and it will change the way that we're able to do our work.

- IBM Chairman and CEO GinniRometty.


Citing Rometty's comments, the Wall Street analysts at Wells Fargo speculated that the "urgency" around 5G "snaps back with more breath than it would have ever had even just 1 month ago."


Rometty isn't alone. Longtime networking executive Marc Ganzi agreed that the current COVID-19 pandemic – which is forcing millions of employees to work from home – is helping to shine a light on the value of reliable networks.


He said specifically that edge computing and small cells would play a key role in ensuring videoconferencing, video streaming and other online services perform as needed.


Ganzi's comments are particularly noteworthy considering he's lined up to take the CEO job at Colony Capital in July. The company is a global investment firm with a focus in part on mobile communications, and it manages $36 billion in capital alongside $13 billion of its own investments.


"These networks have to keep going," Ganzi said during a conference with investors organized by Wall Street research firm Wells Fargo. He argued that networks in general aren't designed for the types of real-time networking stresses that the global coronavirus crisis has created.


Ganzi explained that edge computing can help speed up web-based services by moving computing functions physically closer to the customers actually using them. Not surprisingly, Colony counts a 20% interest in DataBank, which operates data centers for edge computing around the country.


READ MORE: DON’T FALL FOR THIS CORONAVIRUS ‘5G SYNDROME’ HOAX ON FACEBOOK

As for small cells, Ganzi noted such devices can allow operators to handle additional traffic. He also said they can play into an operator's edge computing strategy since small cell nodes can be centrally controlled in a C-RAN network design – and that the C-RAN hub can be used for edge computing services. A centralized radio access network (C-RAN) design involves routing a handful of antennas into one central location. (Colony also has an investment in small cell company ExteNet Systems.)


IBM's Rometty and Colony's Ganzi aren't alone in speculating on how the current pandemic might affect the telecom industry specifically and the macroeconomic situation in general in the coming months and years.


In a note to investors last week, the Wall Street research analysts at MKM Partners wrote:

We believe the COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated society's transition to broadband and digitization by at least a decade, and that this trend will continue to march forward.

- The Wall Street research analystsspan class="fa fa-quote-right" style="font-size: 45px; padding: 0 10px; color:#000">


 

READ MORE: HERE'S WHY 5G AND CORONAVIRUS ARE NOT CONNECTED

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