MediaTek believes 6G will bring speeds 10 times to 100 times faster than 5G. That is not an unusual prediction. Indeed, every mobile digital generation has increased bandwidth by 10 times to 100 times, and reduced latency about 10 times, each generation.
Devices might also have the ability to sidelink, much as current devices can use Bluetooth for short-range device-to-device communications.
Other changes are possible. “A distributed MIMO deployment, where Tx-Rx signal pairs are not just bound to one node/site but distributed across multiple sites and nodes, has the ability to improve spectral efficiency and user experience across an area,” MediaTek says. That would not eliminate the use of transmitting “cells,” as the architecture is described as “cell free,” but rather mean user devices could communicate with more than one radio site at a time.
There would still be transmission cells, but user devices would be free to connect with any adjacent cells and not be restricted to a single tower or radio. The practical advantage for end users is that the edges of a cell would no longer be a transmission quality issue.
With a traditional one-cell connection design, lower signal strength at cell extremities has always meant reduced signal quality. In the cell-free design, signal quality close to the radio would be the same as quality at the edge of any single radio’s coverage. That includes the degree of packet loss.
The ability to incorporate non-terrestrial (satellite) connections with mobile connections also is envisioned. Artificial intelligence should be a native capability.
In the spectrum area, frequencies in the 7 GHz to 24 GHz bands will probably be parts of the 6G standard, as will spectrum sharing, MediaTek says.
No comments:
Post a Comment