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Following on from my (rather controversial) post the other day about #6G and #IMT2030 needing to be indoor-primary and also have an IEEE / #WiFi candidate, I'm now going to *further* annoy various people.
There's a lot of talk about 6G being a "network of networks". This follows on from previous similar themes about #convergence and #HetNets. At one level I agree, but I think there needs to be a perspective shift.
There
has been a long string of attempts to blend Wi-Fi and cellular, going
all the way back to UMA in the 2G/3G era around 2005. (I was a
vociferous critic).
There's been a alphabet-zoo of acronyms
covering 3GPP gateway functions or selection/offload approaches - GAN,
ANDSF, TWAG, N3IWF, ATSSS - and probably others I've forgotten. From the
Wi-Fi side there's been Hotspot 2.0 and others. More recently we've
seen an attempt to bridge fixed and mobile networks, even going as far
as pitching 3GPP-type cores for fixed ISPs.
Pretty much all of
these have failed to gain traction. They've had limited deployments and
successes here and there, but nobody can claim that true "converged
wireless" is ubiquitous or even common. 99% of WiFi has no connection to
cellular. Genuine "offload" is tiny.
But despite this, the 6G
R&D and vision seems to be looking to do it all over again. This
phrase "network of networks" cropped up regularly at the 6GWorld #6Gsymposium events I attended this week. It now usually includes integrating #satellite or non-terrestrial (NTN) capabilities as much as Wi-Fi.
But
there's a bit of an unstated assumption I think needs to be challenged.
There seems to be unquestioned acceptance that the convergence layer -
or perhaps "umbrella" sheltering all the various technologies is
necessarily the 3GPP core network.
I think this is a problem.
Many of the new and emerging 6G stakeholders (for instance enterprises,
satellite operators, or fixed providers) do not understand 3GPP cores,
nor have the almost religious devotion to that model common in the
legacy cellular sector.
So I think any "convergence" in IMT2030
must be defined as bi-directional. Yes, Wi-Fi and satellite can slot
into a 3GPP umbrella. But satellite operators need to be able to add
terrestrial 6G as an add-on to their systems, while Wi-Fi controllers
(on-prem or cloud based) should be able to look after "naked"
(core-free) 3GPP radios where appropriate.
This would also flow
through to authentication methods, spectrum coordination and so on. Also
it should get reflected in government policy & regulation.
My view is that 3GPP-led convergence has largely failed. Maybe it gets fixed in 5G/6G eras, but maybe it won't. We need #5G and 6G systems to have both northbound and southbound integration options.
I
also think we need to recognise that "convergence" is itself only one
example of "combination" of networks. There are numerous other models,
such as bonding or hybrids that connect 2+ separate networks in software
or hardware.
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