5G Testbeds : With 5G poised to ramp up digital transformation worldwide, research communities are joining forces to maximize their collective return on testbed investments.
Explained: Why Standardization of 5G Testbeds Urgently Requires?
New Delhi (ABC
Live India): 5G Testbeds : Standardization experts have formed a new focus group at the
International Telecommunication Union (ITU) to optimize the “testbeds" for
rolling out effective, sustainable fifth-generation (5G) infrastructure and
services.
With 5G poised to ramp up digital transformation worldwide, research
communities are joining forces to maximize their collective return on testbed
investments.
Know About Term Testbed
A testbed is a platform for conducting rigorous, transparent, and replicable testing of scientific theories, computational tools, and new technologies. The term is used across many disciplines to describe experimental research and new product development platforms and environments.
The new ITU Focus
Group on 'Testbeds federations for IMT-2020 and beyond' responds to urgent
needs to build a technical and business ecosystem for the sustainable
development, evolution, and federation of testbeds – the physical and virtual
laboratories and testing spaces for new and emerging technologies.
“The accelerating digital transformation of our economies relies on the combination
of increasingly complex technologies in fields from 5G and the Internet of
Things to big data, cloud computing and machine learning," said ITU
Secretary-General Houlin Zhao. “This focus group aims to build new partnerships
to help test labs making mutually reinforcing contributions to innovation, to
everyone's benefit."
Urgent
need for broader 5G cooperation
Accelerating industry automation spurred by the COVID-19 pandemic has amplified
the urgency to create the international cooperation framework for 5G testbeds.
Open to all interested parties, the focus group aims to build broader knowledge
of the specializations of different testbeds and identify opportunities for
mutually beneficial interactions. It will also provide a platform to harmonize
specifications for testbed interoperability, fostering and enabling high
degrees of quality assurance and security.
“Testing certain technologies and associated use cases requires an extensive
set of components and resources that few test labs are able to host in
isolation, and this is becoming especially apparent as we enter the 5G
era," said Focus Group Chairman Giulio Maggiore, from ITU member Telecom
Italia. “Federated testbeds could 'open source' test results to bring greater
sustainability to industry and academia's work to decrease time to market for
promising innovations."
Growing
complexity
Testbeds run by industry and academia play an essential part in bringing
game-changing digital technology breakthroughs to market.
But increasingly complex networks call for more sophisticated – and more
expensive – testing environments to support the coexistence of a diverse range
of information and communication technology (ICT) applications and services.
The focus group will report to ITU's expert group on standardization for
protocols and test specifications, ITU-T Study
Group 11.
Its work is intended to build on the new ITU standard Q.4068
specifying open application programming interfaces for interoperable testbed
federations, which defines a generic reference model for such federations and
describes the foundational elements of this model.
The first meeting of the
focus group is scheduled for 4-7 April 2022 online.
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