Big 5G Event: Cut through the commotion of network slicing
Big 5G Event: Will network slicing really generate revenue for 5G?
Tune into this panel discussion featuring industry leaders as they discuss the future of network slicing and 5G. What is the true promise of network slicing? Will it be manageable, cost effective, and dynamic within the next few years? How much complexity does Open RAN add to the network slicing riddle? Hear what the experts have to say.
You’ll learn
How operators are laying the foundations for network slicing in the future
When we can realistically expect network slicing at scale
Insights as to whether enterprises will prefer private networks over network slicing
Who is this for?
Host
Guest speakers
Transcript
00:00 good day everyone uh welcome to the
00:02 panel at the big 5g conference on the
00:05 commotion
00:06 and cutting through the commotion of
00:08 network slicing and we have five great
00:11 speakers today
00:12 uh but before we get started i'd just
00:14 like to put a little bit of comment on
00:16 the state of network slicing
00:19 network slicing as many of you know was
00:21 long touted as the
00:23 large-scale revenue generator for 5g
00:26 and in many cases viewed as the anchor
00:29 business case
00:31 as we all know it's been a little slow
00:33 to develop
00:34 but i think we're all optimistic that
00:36 with 5gsa and with some extra things
00:38 we're going to be talking about today
00:41 slicing is finally going to be
00:42 manageable cost effective and maybe in
00:45 the next couple of years become dynamic
00:47 so that it's actually cheaper to use 5g
00:50 for a private virtual vpn rather than
00:54 even sd-wan
00:55 so
00:56 let me introduce our speakers and ask
00:58 them to say a little bit about
01:00 themselves
01:01 let's start with anand shah
01:04 hey sue thanks a lot my name is anan
01:06 shah i work for verizon i'm a director
01:08 of technology and product management
01:10 there and as most jobs entail in the
01:12 telco world a lot of 5g under my belt
01:15 but also we concentrate heavily on
01:17 private networks and network slicing
01:22 great
01:23 i'm ray doland
01:25 thanks sue my name is ray dolan i am the
01:27 ceo at cohere technologies
01:30 um cohere has developed a suite of
01:33 x-apps that allows the intelligence that
01:35 currently lives in base stations to be
01:38 left there or moved to the edge data
01:40 center uh a lot of that bears on what
01:43 openran is looking for
01:45 and it directly relates to being an
01:48 enabling technology for network slicing
01:50 so we're looking forward to the
01:51 discussion
01:52 cool uh constantine
01:57 oh thank you sue i'm constantine
01:59 polygonopolis i'm vice president of 5g
02:01 and telco cloud at juniper networks
02:04 and i'm focusing i'm responsible for 5g
02:07 products and solutions we're focusing at
02:09 jury pair particularly on the oren
02:11 architecture
02:13 the rig x-apps are apps
02:15 and the end-to-end smo that stitches
02:17 everything together to deliver the
02:19 promise of network slicing
02:22 great
02:22 franco
02:24 hey it's franco and franco missouri from
02:26 infovista i'm the chief product and
02:29 strategic officer for the company
02:32 improvista is a is a leader company in
02:35 what we call the network life cycle
02:37 automation that means driving from
02:41 the planning to the testing through
02:42 deployment
02:44 everything about the 5g life including
02:47 the network
02:48 license thank you and troy
02:52 hi troy sonya here from bell canada i
02:54 have the pleasure of supporting a team
02:56 that does our strategy for what we call
02:58 our smart core which is the intelligence
03:01 that helps us
03:02 manage and uh and uh monetize
03:05 our best-in-class fiber and 5g networks
03:09 and i'm really looking forward to our
03:11 dialogue today around network slicing
03:13 great
03:14 so let's start off with our first topic
03:17 and i'm going to ask annan to lead it
03:19 off so and how are the operators setting
03:22 up the foundation for really making
03:24 network slicing a big part of revenue
03:26 generation in the future
03:28 absolutely and again i'm super excited
03:30 to be here and happy to talk about
03:32 network slicing it's as it's become a
03:35 serious buzzword in the telecom world
03:37 but hopefully we can dissect the issues
03:39 and provide you with the insights you
03:41 need today um so just some background
03:44 sue i mean the the main thing here is
03:46 that we have built a network especially
03:49 verizon and other mmos across the world
03:52 that feeds 150 million customers uh
03:56 today and it's a
03:58 it's a one single network it's a best
04:00 effort network
04:02 and we're slowly decomposing the network
04:05 to see if we can build 150 million
04:08 networks for each user that's out there
04:12 now of course this flexibility comes
04:14 with price and it's going to be hard to
04:17 properly manage the flexibility won't be
04:19 there so it's going to be of essence to
04:21 have the right management tools in place
04:24 to to have a network
04:26 slicing or to have network slicing in a
04:28 network this big
04:30 so
04:31 as uh as a company right now you know we
04:34 started in the 4g days and in the 4g
04:36 days we went through the same thing when
04:39 we had apns we were thinking of
04:41 20 30 40 50 apns and and where each apn
04:46 will lead to in the network and we were
04:48 so excited about it and at the end we
04:50 found out that hey maybe five 10 apns
04:53 are good enough the same thing can
04:55 happen today
04:56 in network slicing we're looking at
04:58 three big slices right now as you know
05:00 embb which has high throughputs high
05:02 mobility
05:04 we have mission critical as well which
05:06 is maybe low data
05:08 uh no mobility and then you are llc
05:11 which is extremely high latency or low
05:14 latency that you need for mission
05:15 critical applications as well and low
05:17 latency applications
05:19 and then um we can keep expanding from
05:22 that so i think what's very important in
05:25 network slicing if i want to name two
05:27 things are truly understanding the um
05:31 the customer needs that
05:33 digital technologies are means to an end
05:36 not an end themselves okay so when we
05:40 talk about that it's truly understanding
05:42 the throughputs from a
05:44 downlink throughput and uplink
05:46 throughput the jitter that's required
05:48 the latency that's required and maybe
05:51 putting them into categories that equate
05:53 to slices right so
05:56 first we need to understand what the
05:57 customer wants rather than getting into
06:00 the tech hype and the second thing is
06:02 ensuring that the right knobs are in
06:04 place for an mno the right knobs means
06:07 from the device to the ram to the
06:09 transport to the core there are so many
06:12 elements with so many different vendors
06:14 that are involved
06:16 having the right pieces and the right
06:18 knobs in place so we could actually
06:20 create a slice
06:21 and sustain that slice throughout the
06:24 life cycle
06:26 is going to be very important for the
06:27 mnos sue
06:30 excellent point
06:31 troy do you see things the same way or
06:34 does bell canada have a slightly
06:35 different take
06:37 now i'd have to say we're fairly aligned
06:40 um
06:41 you know some of the things that we need
06:43 to really consider is the fact that
06:45 slicing itself is still in its early
06:48 days of course uh we've got different
06:51 levels of maturity depending on the
06:52 vendor or partner that's bringing the
06:54 equipment and the software to the
06:56 network and the early days of course are
06:58 going to be entirely
07:00 manual driven so as we start to deploy
07:03 slicing some of the foundational
07:05 elements that we need to get out there
07:06 are okay obviously if we when we launch
07:08 our 5 gsa core there'll be at least one
07:10 slice you need one for embb and and
07:13 there may be a few others but the true
07:16 promise and i really liked anne's uh
07:19 comment around understanding customer
07:21 need because there are customers who
07:23 have requirements around
07:24 uh uh you know a lot of devices low
07:28 bandwidth
07:29 and so that you know kind of uh speaks
07:31 to the mmtc slice that will be coming
07:33 right as as it gets ratified into hpp
07:35 and gets released with our vendors and
07:37 then there are others who have high
07:39 bandwidth requirements so those three
07:41 natural big slice types are great
07:43 but then inside those the sub slices are
07:46 what becomes really interesting
07:48 and
07:49 there are a lot of customers that beyond
07:51 the specific performance requirements
07:54 for a given slice are also looking at
07:56 slicing as a privacy play as another way
07:59 and you mentioned it early on sue as
08:01 another mechanism beyond sd-wan to uh to
08:04 look at replacing the old mpls kind of
08:07 network right so uh so lots of uh work
08:11 is going on to understand in parallel to
08:13 the work that we're doing to build all
08:16 of the orchestration and automation
08:18 which we'll talk about a little bit
08:19 later um but in parallel we need to
08:22 really understand the customer need and
08:24 what use cases are going to leverage
08:26 that foundational capability of slicing
08:29 now let me ask you troy do we have to
08:32 wait for 5g or are there some things we
08:33 can do on slicing with lte before we get
08:37 to 5g and do with release 15.
08:41 that's always the the hard question
08:42 because of course the value prop that
08:44 you're trying to generate in the
08:45 marketplace around 5g
08:47 also carries weight and although you may
08:49 be able to do what i would call slice
08:52 like capability you notice my air quotes
08:54 slice-like capability either in 5-g nsa
08:57 or even lte i think the use cases are
08:59 going to be very particular where you
09:01 want to do that and as as operators
09:05 i know typically there's a huge
09:07 competition to you know sell the best
09:10 network and there's a lot of effort that
09:12 goes into ensuring that we win the best
09:14 network claims i know that in canada we
09:17 do that in verizon that's their value
09:18 prop uh south of the border and so when
09:21 you think about that whether it's 4g or
09:23 5g
09:24 selling better than best is really
09:26 challenging
09:28 yeah
09:29 yeah and then do you have any
09:32 extra comments on whether we can do
09:33 something today with lte or whether we
09:35 can even do something today with 5g
09:38 again
09:39 like troy said it's a big debate right
09:41 you have apns you have qos's you have
09:44 qcis is there a combination between
09:46 those two that can get close to slicing
09:49 but remember slicing is much more than
09:51 that slicing is guaranteeing the sla
09:54 slicing is having the orchestration
09:57 to determine whether that kpi or that
10:00 sla is being delivered and if it's not
10:02 spinning up the right resources in the
10:04 right compute to make sure that slice is
10:06 there which is maybe not always there
10:09 for qcis or for apn so slicing takes it
10:13 one step above but we can get maybe 75
10:15 percent there with what we have today
10:18 so franco uh you're coming at it from
10:20 the vendor who actually tries to deliver
10:22 some of that service assurance uh how do
10:25 you see that
10:26 oh he had this great question so i think
10:28 that i'm really following what uh troy
10:30 and anand are saying and i hundred
10:32 percent agree with them in my opinion
10:34 there are five steps that we have to do
10:37 to reach the real net lies in terms of
10:40 automation right now because we have a
10:43 nyberg situation with 4g 5g combined
10:46 together fundamentally i really believe
10:48 that what the operator have to do is
10:50 exactly what anand and tori said just
10:53 select three four major slides
10:55 and fit the current traffic there the
10:58 second level is fundamental automation
11:01 without automation without orchestration
11:03 we cannot reason the next step next step
11:06 is the automation from the service point
11:08 to in the network point of view looking
11:10 the service provider at reality there is
11:13 another automation linked to this that
11:15 is from the user controller the
11:16 capability of the user to select
11:19 automatically what they need what they
11:21 want and from the maybe that is the
11:23 first step the fourth step fundamentally
11:26 has to be in an in a complete
11:28 homogeneous type of network so hybrid
11:31 has to disappear because otherwise you
11:33 cannot really expand everything and the
11:35 fifth step to the mentor is a full
11:38 uh
11:39 artificial intelligence driven type of
11:41 network that fundamentally it's probably
11:44 six seven year the uh far from from now
11:48 but
11:49 the census insurance story has been
11:50 always one of the major discussions sla
11:53 is nothing new it's uh it's on the
11:55 tables in 30 years for different
11:57 productivity but these uh the
11:59 netherlands is bringing a new challenge
12:01 that was not part of the of the past
12:04 fundamentally has to be has to be
12:06 something that changed
12:08 dynamically following the dynamicity of
12:11 the network dynamics of the service
12:13 before sla was a static site the
12:16 customer signed an agreement with the
12:18 with the with the service provider that
12:20 the agreement has specific performance
12:22 figure quality figure and you have to
12:25 verify that these the figure are true
12:27 and are applied and that control is
12:29 delivered but here this figure can
12:32 change and can change the penny by the
12:33 day and the hour and the situation the
12:36 mobility speed and there are a lot of
12:38 parameter so the sla
12:41 insurance system has to really become
12:44 part of the network itself before it was
12:46 a a parallel tools that you can never
12:49 you cannot have but fundamentally was a
12:52 separate element in the new vision of
12:54 the real 5gsa network that's sva network
12:58 with real orchestration this insurance
13:01 has to be built in
13:03 as one of the components of the network
13:05 and this to be a sort of first-career
13:08 for everybody for the customer for the
13:10 operator also because operator will uh
13:14 fundamentally use and leverage other
13:16 type of network think about the public
13:18 network combined with the private
13:19 network so at this point you need to
13:21 have something that really take a look
13:24 to the sla in a much more holistic way
13:26 and provide the vision that really fit
13:29 in each of the expectations that the
13:31 different
13:32 participants will have
13:36 so it's getting much more complex but it
13:38 needs to still be end to end and one of
13:40 the other factors that's really changing
13:42 how we look at end to end slicing is the
13:46 new capabilities for including the ran
13:48 as part of the slice and monitoring the
13:50 rent
13:51 so ray maybe you would like to comment
13:53 on how does the complexity that openran
13:56 is bringing to network slicing but also
13:58 the opportunity
14:00 yeah thanks sue and um i appreciate the
14:03 comments from everybody up until now i i
14:05 would say if i could just chime in on
14:06 that question you asked can you do this
14:08 on lte the answer is yes and we'll we'll
14:11 show that very soon we actually have
14:12 already um
14:14 whether the operators want to market it
14:15 as a 5g capability or not it's the same
14:18 radio so why can't you do the same thing
14:20 guys it's an ofdm waveform um
14:22 now having said that uh for openran uh
14:25 it's i actually think openran removes
14:28 the complexity if you do it right as
14:30 opposed to adds complexity
14:32 the vision of opening iran
14:34 in many people's minds is an economic
14:37 issue of trying to disaggregate the
14:39 supply chain it's not an economic issue
14:41 it's an innovation and architectural
14:43 issue all right so
14:45 uh you'll get some better economics too
14:47 you'll get cloud economics if you do it
14:49 right but the primary thing that we've
14:51 discovered is that you can move the
14:53 intelligence to wherever you want now
14:56 think about when you do network slicing
14:57 you're trying to match up what a user
14:59 wants
15:00 including what that user is doing right
15:02 now
15:03 and what they've committed to
15:04 contractually with the ability to
15:06 enforce that across a network and if the
15:08 user plane functions in the core and the
15:10 enforcement and resource allocation
15:11 mechanisms are at the edge it's a very
15:13 complicated thing to do
15:15 if you move the intelligence and all the
15:17 resource allocation into x-apps and you
15:20 put it on a rick closer to the core you
15:22 literally have a natural marriage of the
15:24 slicing elements which is what the user
15:26 wants to do with the ability to enforce
15:28 it across a network
15:29 so what we were able to do a cohere
15:31 using delay doppler
15:33 is to take the resource allocation
15:35 functions we announced this with
15:36 vodafone recently actually vodafone
15:38 announced it we did it in partnership
15:40 with intel and vmware and they also what
15:42 they really didn't focus on slicing they
15:44 focused on spectral efficiency because
15:47 they doubled the spectral efficiency of
15:48 their network which by the way is a
15:50 pretty big thing for most operators
15:52 but what you'll see us announcing in the
15:54 next set of trials that we do is all
15:56 about network slicing because i actually
15:58 think that as big a deal as it is to
16:00 double or quadruple the network capacity
16:03 slicing is the ultimate monetization
16:05 engine it's if you can take a portion of
16:07 your network and on a per bid basis sell
16:09 it for 10x because of the productivity
16:12 benefits and the guarantees that you can
16:14 associate with it that's where
16:16 the real business models come out so
16:18 i actually think openran
16:20 is the answer to the complexity sue it
16:23 doesn't add to it
16:24 but it does add to it if you leave all
16:27 of that compute see there's a certain
16:29 set of cloud economics which says bring
16:31 everything to the core
16:33 but unfortunately in wireless people are
16:34 bringing everything to the edge because
16:36 there's this notion
16:38 that
16:39 the edge is so complicated you need to
16:40 bring the cloud to the base station
16:43 you actually can bring the base station
16:45 to the cloud and that's that's actually
16:46 what we're doing and i'm very excited
16:49 that we're now in partnership with two
16:50 other operators in the u.s one in
16:52 australia and one in in europe doing
16:55 some trials we should be able to show
16:57 this within 12 months possibly within
16:59 even six months
17:00 that's really cool but i would say the
17:02 edge is wherever it needs to be
17:04 hopefully efficiently and dynamically um
17:07 constantine um you juniper's getting
17:10 into this business um
17:12 uh from the from the rick point of view
17:14 and adding intelligence uh do you see uh
17:18 the opportunity the same way or is there
17:20 a lot of complexity to be handled to
17:22 make it work
17:24 thank you sue uh no i see i think uh
17:27 ray said it said it very well
17:30 um it's really a paradigm shift right uh
17:33 i i i think the better question is uh to
17:36 look at um you know what are the new
17:38 opportunities that oren brings to the
17:40 picture right uh the analogy i like to
17:43 uh to use is like asking whether the
17:45 electric motor adds more complexity to
17:48 the av
17:49 right it's a paradigm shift it's a
17:50 different thing and
17:52 oren i agree with ray oran takes away
17:55 complexity shifts the complexity out of
17:58 the infrastructure
18:00 and we have a truly intelligent software
18:02 driven now radio infrastructure right
18:05 can you imagine
18:07 how simple how powerful it is to be able
18:09 to upgrade the capabilities the features
18:11 of the radio
18:13 through a few key strokes as opposed to
18:15 you know uh uplifting entire uh you know
18:19 uh
18:20 boxes and uh
18:21 and bbqs and and uh radio units etc so
18:25 it's a very powerful um
18:28 model new model
18:30 and i think eventually it will take
18:33 some time for us to get it right
18:36 but then it will bring huge improvements
18:39 in tco for operators but most
18:42 importantly new capabilities that you'll
18:44 be able to uh to deliver to the
18:46 customers to the end customer right that
18:48 is not possible today the other thing
18:50 that i want to bring uh to the attention
18:52 here regarding complexity is that we
18:54 keep thinking about aura only
18:57 that's one big part there are three what
18:59 i call three
19:00 major semantic domains in the 5g
19:03 uh the run
19:05 the transport
19:06 and the core and you have many
19:09 incarnations of this right even within
19:11 the run you have transport you have the
19:12 mid hall you have
19:15 several islands of transport
19:17 you may have the functions of the core
19:20 distributed across different clouds etc
19:22 so how do you stitch all of that
19:23 together to deliver them to an sla
19:27 that goes back to what anand was saying
19:30 the importance of the of the
19:32 orchestration automation visibility
19:35 and uh dynamic control right
19:38 so uh as part of of
19:41 delivering that capability we have to
19:42 start thinking about the concept of
19:45 multiplexing right you've got one
19:47 physical infrastructure that needs to
19:48 have the ability to
19:51 other scale onto virtual resources and
19:54 on top of that we need to have to figure
19:55 out exactly how we manage
19:58 the concept of multiplexing
20:00 multiple disparate use cases onto the
20:02 same physical infrastructure to deliver
20:05 them to an sla
20:11 you're muted sue thank you i'm sorry
20:14 thank you um that's very interesting um
20:17 in the interest of time i think we have
20:19 to push on to the next topic but i think
20:21 it's related and that how does this all
20:23 fit into the private networking world so
20:26 maybe you can take that thought you were
20:28 just giving constantine and look at how
20:30 that means what the enterprise is going
20:32 to do with this kind of slicing
20:34 capability
20:36 uh that's the 1 billion or 1 trillion
20:39 dollar question right how the private
20:42 5g and the public clouds the public
20:47 5g networks are going to come together
20:48 right and who is going to do what
20:50 i believe that
20:53 we're going to see uh three buckets in
20:55 the industry one is the standalone
20:58 private
21:00 5g and 4g for that matter cbrs in the
21:03 u.s is really taking off
21:05 uh we're going to see the so-called
21:07 neutral neutral cost which is a you know
21:10 mix of private with in combination with
21:13 public
21:14 5g and then the big question is how
21:18 successful operators are going to be to
21:20 deliver the end-to-end network slicing
21:22 as a service
21:24 whereby an enterprise can really get
21:26 into a portal
21:27 set up their own use case their own
21:29 network
21:31 dimension it for a number of users maybe
21:34 have different slices multiple slices
21:37 and deliver all of that value through
21:39 the operator i think
21:40 that would be if the operators managed
21:42 to unlock that that would be a huge new
21:45 revenue stream for operators right and
21:48 that's probably the more uh challenging
21:50 use case to to realize
21:52 uh but if we you know if we look at the
21:55 industry the private enterprise
21:58 we cannot really fit them into one model
22:00 there are many verticals that have
22:02 different requirements and some of them
22:05 are aligned more with a private
22:07 standalone use case some of them
22:10 will have to rely on the operator to uh
22:12 to provide you know the capability of
22:14 network slicing and the private network
22:17 as as a as an operator-led
22:20 uh service
22:23 so
22:24 you know i don't think we can we can fit
22:26 everything into one model
22:27 but um
22:30 you know most likely the standalone is
22:32 going to um
22:34 rear its end first and then we're going
22:36 to see operators really unlock the um
22:40 you know the complexity of offering
22:42 end-to-end network slicing standalone uh
22:45 private 5g through network slicing which
22:47 i think is the most interesting the most
22:49 challenging use case but the most
22:51 powerful one
22:52 so and i saw you nodding um
22:55 is that how verizon is going to launch
22:57 it or do you see 5g
22:59 private networking being sort of islands
23:01 or do you see a hybrid multi-domain
23:04 public-private network
23:06 so
23:07 both um the way i see it is that if you
23:09 look all the way on the left right you
23:11 have us a purpose-built public network
23:14 that is best effort as you move to the
23:17 right um you might get uh uh some
23:20 network slicing capabilities here on the
23:23 public network as you move further to
23:25 the right to get more ownership of those
23:27 resources you may have a private network
23:30 in a sense as a network slice from the
23:32 public network right
23:34 there might be a private core that's a
23:35 hosted private core that could be
23:37 delivered as a network slice to your
23:40 on-premise solution and then if you go
23:42 all the way to the right we're talking
23:44 about an on-site private network and
23:46 where you have
23:47 all the rand resources all the core
23:50 resources transport resources dedicated
23:53 to your enterprise whether it's a
23:55 walmart a coke whatever it is all those
23:57 resources dedicated to you now the cool
24:00 thing about the private network is that
24:02 it'll be a handful of vendors it'll be a
24:05 handful of platforms not as complex and
24:08 not as much of a variable as we have in
24:11 the public network so what you'll see is
24:14 you'll see 5g standalone come out much
24:17 earlier on private networks you'll see
24:20 network slicing coming out much earlier
24:22 on private networks and public networks
24:24 just because it's easier to deliver a
24:27 static slice on
24:28 a box that is delivered by let's say one
24:31 vendor that's out there right so you'll
24:33 see those economics come
24:36 to fruition because
24:37 it's a
24:39 it's a now it's purpose-built for the
24:41 enterprise you could do a lot of
24:43 experimentation on that private box
24:45 itself so you'll see network slicing
24:47 standalone all those new features come
24:49 out on private networks quicker
24:52 cool
24:54 so
24:54 let's turn to how do i actually operate
24:57 and monitor these kind of networks
24:59 because we've said it can be simpler but
25:02 that's by hiding the complexity because
25:04 there are more choices and more dynamics
25:07 so uh let me ask franco
25:10 from info vista's perspective how can
25:12 operators really monitor manage and
25:15 deliver those capabilities with a an
25:17 easy-to-use user interface to both
25:19 private networks and their own network
25:22 operations center
25:24 yeah thanks to this great question
25:26 remember that they regard the complexity
25:28 the step the logical step
25:31 to ensure that the private network works
25:33 uh like uh the owner is expecting are
25:36 always the same from the planning time
25:39 when you plan the network that's going
25:41 to be a dedicated network and hybrid the
25:44 network as a network as a service from
25:46 an operator from the planning time to
25:49 the time in which you define the
25:51 services that you want to have over the
25:53 network to the time in which you ensure
25:57 that everything is there and when the
25:59 step are always the same and the type of
26:01 tools fundamentally and approach is
26:03 exactly the same of course the scale is
26:05 different skill is different
26:07 and that will make the difference and i
26:10 agree with that and then that is much
26:12 more simple than today because the scope
26:14 and the powerful number is easier subset
26:17 of the scope of the problem that you
26:18 have in a public network of course
26:20 because because you have a variety of
26:22 type of customer instead when you talk
26:23 about the enterprise the the the set of
26:26 customer or profiles there is a it's a
26:30 definitely less but fundamentally the
26:33 product we have is always the same the
26:35 planning it's linked to test and defined
26:38 sla that you can have within the private
26:40 republic network doesn't matter of
26:42 course it's just a subset of this
26:44 then
26:45 they provide everything about the
26:47 performances the inventory and the
26:49 planning and fundamental insurance of
26:51 different services and the fourth one is
26:54 become predictive in terms of uh
26:57 diagnostic root cause analysis
26:58 troubleshooting these are the four major
27:00 steps toward achieve the final target
27:03 that is optimization and then is a it's
27:06 a complete circle it's a loop that
27:08 different than the past has to run
27:10 continuously it's not just something
27:12 that you do today and then you do one
27:14 year from now
27:16 the optimization the planning the
27:18 insurance is something that you'd have
27:19 to do 24x7 and of course in the private
27:22 network that is less critical
27:25 than fundamentally in the public network
27:27 where as i said the type of profile of
27:29 the customer has so many so various that
27:32 the network has to adapt in a much more
27:36 dynamic way than the product but
27:38 definitely i really believe and we
27:40 really believe that private network will
27:42 be probably one of the major
27:44 marketing business for the next 10 years
27:47 so ray let me ask you um as you try to
27:50 link your new technology into all of
27:52 these automation and operations tools is
27:54 that something that 5g makes it easier
27:57 to integrate than it's been in the past
28:00 absolutely sue and i i think the
28:02 comments that have been made here are
28:04 just spot-on uh private network
28:06 opportunity is massive
28:08 uh i i think from franco's point of view
28:10 agree anan said it's going to come first
28:13 initially it's going to become it's
28:15 going to come first because it appears
28:16 easier but then there'll be a question
28:19 in this continuum that anon described
28:21 where its best efforts public wide area
28:24 highly
28:25 you know individualized but localized in
28:28 an enterprise those are two different
28:30 supply chains
28:32 question now for the industry is are the
28:35 wide area cellular guys going to become
28:36 enterprise savvy
28:39 or are the enterprise guys going to
28:40 become part of the supply chain for the
28:42 traditional cellular guys i will tell
28:44 you that i'm heavily biased towards the
28:46 latter
28:48 this is the time of massive disruption
28:50 the enterprise guys intuitively know and
28:53 the cloud guys intuitively know
28:55 communication scale and i t
28:58 the question is can they crack the last
29:00 black box which is the radio access
29:02 network and that's what cohere is
29:04 helping them do
29:06 i i call this the pc revolution for
29:08 radio when you can put your own
29:10 components together and make it make a
29:12 good solution
29:14 but you may still need a little tuning
29:16 to make it uh optimal uh so uh we're
29:19 we're getting close to the end of our
29:21 session but we have one major topic
29:23 which i'm going to ask everyone to
29:24 comment on but have troy kick off so
29:27 when can we really expect all of this to
29:30 come together
29:31 what's a realistic time frame
29:34 so as we said thanks very much sue and i
29:37 have to say that the comments in general
29:38 have been really really good
29:40 um
29:41 what i would say is we talked at the
29:44 outset of laying the foundation and
29:46 that's kind of the stage that we're at
29:47 now there's changes uh that have been
29:50 mentioned in terms of the radioaccess
29:52 network and adding intelligence there
29:53 ultimately slicing is is not just about
29:55 the ram though as we've mentioned it's
29:57 it's really you know ue ran transport
30:00 various types of transport out into the
30:02 core and some even think about slicing
30:05 including the apps that sit on the cloud
30:07 at the edge of the network right and for
30:09 the experience for the end customer
30:11 whether it be consumer or whether it be
30:13 enterprise to truly be assured
30:16 you need to have some visibility across
30:18 all those elements and that to me is
30:20 what slicing is really bringing to the
30:22 table that's new we've been doing
30:24 prioritization in qs on both wireline
30:26 and wireline networks for you know
30:28 dozens of years right but what's
30:30 different here is we're looking at the
30:32 resources in real time and saying can i
30:35 assure this new slice that's being
30:37 requested and following the life cycle
30:39 of that slice so that's why we're saying
30:42 starting out of the gate it's going to
30:43 be a very low number of slices it's
30:45 going to be manual while we learn about
30:46 it learning about the interaction the
30:48 dependencies between those high level
30:50 resources that we need to manage and
30:52 also we'll start plugging in our big
30:55 data machine learning capability so that
30:58 we can actually understand the patterns
31:00 that happen in the network and start to
31:02 build algorithms for closed loop
31:04 capability and so that kind of ai
31:08 leading into orchestration and
31:10 automation
31:11 i see as as really starting to
31:14 hit mainstream probably
31:17 very late next year and early in 2023 uh
31:21 in terms of operators being able to
31:23 start to offer more automation in their
31:26 5g slicing services and you know i see
31:29 that you know initially it will be
31:32 putting on new slice types more easily
31:34 being able to manage the network more
31:35 easily being able to hit the demands
31:37 that our customers are going to have and
31:39 and new
31:41 uh services and mapping those service
31:43 requirements to the slice
31:45 performances that are going to be given
31:47 that is key and that i think there's not
31:49 enough effort uh being talked about and
31:52 put into it's not just about the network
31:54 it's about what sits on top of the
31:55 network that's what matters at the end
31:57 of the day and that's what we need to
31:59 you know start putting our eye towards
32:02 and then we i start seeing you know 2023
32:05 2024 when now we're getting into dynamic
32:07 slicing even as was mentioned earlier
32:10 multiple slices per large enterprise
32:12 customer and it becomes really
32:14 interesting when you start mixing the
32:16 private and public network because i
32:19 didn't comment on it earlier but i truly
32:21 believe that this is going to be the
32:23 largest swath of this is probably going
32:25 to be hybrid where we've got private
32:27 network resources that need to be on
32:29 site for survivability and performance
32:31 reasons think control on a factory floor
32:34 think medical you know surgeries
32:37 you can't there is no room for error in
32:38 those cases but
32:40 customers walking onto those campuses
32:43 are still going to need to have public
32:44 network access right so understanding
32:47 that and separating those two accesses
32:49 via slicing i think is going to be a
32:51 really cool use case and that's going to
32:53 be
32:54 that's going to be what our future looks
32:55 like
32:56 pass it off to the rest of the panelists
32:58 yeah we've only got about three minutes
33:00 left so i think what i'll do is ask each
33:02 of you in in responding to the time
33:04 frame for what when we'll see network
33:06 slicing to also add your own comments
33:08 about what are the two or three most
33:10 important things you want everybody to
33:12 take away so anna why don't you go next
33:15 okay
33:16 troy was spot on when it comes to the
33:18 management automation orchestration of
33:20 the network it's going to be tough their
33:23 physical network functions their virtual
33:25 network functions their containerized
33:26 network functions some are on arm based
33:29 hardware some are on x86 we have a slew
33:32 of vendors from wind river to red hat to
33:35 vmware that are out there it's it's a
33:38 little bit messy so having the right
33:40 knobs in place to orchestrate a slice
33:42 end to end is going to be a little tough
33:45 and that's why maybe troy is saying
33:47 end of 20 22 early 23 which seems
33:50 accurate right and the other point is
33:52 that right now it's a push technology
33:54 right we're creating the slice we're
33:56 trying to make it fit into some um some
33:59 customer need but if it becomes a pull
34:02 technology if there's some value that
34:04 could be created if there's a business
34:05 justification behind it where customers
34:08 really need the slice i guarantee you
34:11 network operators vendors will work
34:12 twice as hard to getting this out the
34:14 door so that's going to be the the
34:16 science that we have to figure out
34:18 behind network sizing constantine how do
34:21 you see it
34:22 yes i i completely agree with uh what
34:25 was said and uh i think troy hit the key
34:28 notes here
34:30 um
34:31 i also believe that it's going to be 20
34:33 late 2023 before we see end to end
34:36 slicing in all of its glory and i
34:38 believe we'll see dynamic
34:40 network slicing a bit more optimistic on
34:43 that
34:44 the takeaway that i want to underscore
34:47 here is that network slicing is not just
34:49 about 5g or 4g or 6g
34:52 network slicing is going to affect
34:55 everything in the networking industry
34:57 okay it's fundamental new way of doing
35:00 networking um and uh we're going to work
35:04 before uh we run in 5g right so
35:08 um that's the first takeaway the other
35:11 is the oran right the oran is i call it
35:13 the operating system of the radio right
35:14 now it opens new capabilities we're
35:17 going to see smart radios uh introducing
35:21 new features in the radio if we unlock
35:24 the secret of how we bring that into the
35:27 end-to-end
35:28 sla and ecosystem i think we're going to
35:31 to see new use cases that um
35:35 will be really disruptive
35:37 in the industry
35:38 um
35:39 so franco we've got about one minute so
35:43 we need to be ver be curious and brief
35:45 but what are your key takeaways
35:48 yeah they make make uh key takeaways
35:50 very similar i think that 2023 is a year
35:53 in which we start to see something
35:54 serious intentional dynamic fundamental
35:57 network slicing as info vista we have
35:59 launched these nla the network life
36:01 cycle automation that exactly the design
36:04 and from the designing time to the
36:06 testing the monitoring to their uh the
36:08 optimization exactly to be sure that we
36:11 can provide the
36:13 monitoring the capability to ensure that
36:16 the operator will deliver the network's
36:17 license in a dynamic way as the customer
36:20 the respect
36:21 and ray you get the last word um
36:24 you seem to have a vision for how this
36:26 all comes together but there are a lot
36:27 of pieces
36:28 well 12 to 18 months sounds right to me
36:31 i would focus on anon's comment this is
36:33 more likely to be pulled by the
36:35 enterprise than pushed by the operators
36:37 i don't say that because the operators
36:39 don't get it i say it because the money
36:40 is in the poll
36:42 with a large enterprise on the other
36:44 side
36:44 everyone will line up around that and it
36:47 will happen almost overnight think about
36:50 how fast the iphone changed this world
36:51 from a 3g to a 4g world a large
36:55 enterprise use case will pull slicing
36:57 into this network
36:58 faster than you can say network slicing
37:02 it's probably years ago
37:04 great with that i have to bring this
37:06 wonderful session to a close uh thank
37:08 you all it's been a great session and
37:10 let's hope we all get together to debate
37:12 this again in the next few months
37:15 have a great day thanks very much the
37:17 sheriff's license 23
37:19 yes yes