Now I Get It: 5G cell networks

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We’re hearing a lot about 5G lately — but that’s nothing compared to the bombardment of 5G marketing you’ll get in 2019.

5G, of course, is short for “fifth generation cellular network” You had your 2G, and then your 3G, and then your 4G. The cell carriers will turn on 5G networks in a handful of cities this year, and the first phones with 5G will be out early next year.

The first cool thing about 5G is its speed. In cities, it will be 20 times faster than 4G — probably faster than your internet at home or at work. In rural areas, it’ll be seven to nine times as fast.

5G will also have huge capacity — bandwidth — to the point where all cellphone plans will be unlimited. Really unlimited. You won’t get lower-quality video when you’re on cellular. You won’t have to wait till you have Wi-Fi to download a big app.

All that speed and capacity will affect the creation of apps, too. Your “pipe” to the internet will be so fast that it will feel like a wired connection — to much bigger, faster computers than you could ever fit into a phone. We’ll be able to use apps that require far more powerful processors.

Beyond the cellphone

Finally, 5G is the first network standard designed for much more than cellphones.

“The idea was to invent a technology that would run the gamut, from connecting a very simple sensor that needs to send only a few bits of data infrequently, to giving you multi-gigabit-per-second internet access in the palm of their hand,” says Sherif Hanna, Qualcomm’s (QCOM) director of 5G marketing.

“How do you design one technology that can scale those two extremes? How do you use that same technology to do things like enable autonomous cars to communicate with each other, or a pilot on the ground to communicate with a drone that they’re flying a few miles away? We architected 5G to comprehend all of those. That was never done with any previous generation of cellular.”

With 5G, Hanna says, “We’re truly trying to aim for a world where you don’t have to think twice about adding cellular to any object. There’s gonna be a low-power, low-cost option for anything you can imagine. Why would I make this tracker work only with Bluetooth, when I can throw a 5G modem in there and now it’ll work anywhere in the country?”

Millimeter wave

So where on earth is the 5G industry going to find available frequencies of the radio spectrum that haven’t already been snapped up? After all, the cell carriers pay billions of dollars for whatever frequencies that become available.

Qualcomm decided to focus on a set of previously worthless and unused frequencies called millimeter wave.