• About
  • Advertise
  • Careers
  • Contact
  • About
Thursday, May 15, 2025
No Result
View All Result
NEWSLETTER
iotarizona
  • Home
  • Tech
  • IoT
  • Development
  • Enterprise
  • Data & Analytics
  • Smart Cities
  • AI
  • IIoT
  • Manufacturing
  • Connected Cars
  • Home
  • Tech
  • IoT
  • Development
  • Enterprise
  • Data & Analytics
  • Smart Cities
  • AI
  • IIoT
  • Manufacturing
  • Connected Cars
No Result
View All Result
iotarizona
No Result
View All Result
Home Tech

6G wireless? Samsung is already outlining its plans

in Tech
6G wireless? Samsung is already outlining its plans
0
SHARES
32
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Samsung has started to publicize its direction for 6G, the next generation of wireless networks likely to supercede 5G sometime in the next decade. The company joins Nokia and a few other organizations that are exploring the upgrade.

Connected machines and artificial intelligence will feature prominently in future use-cases, as will digital twins, hi-fi mobile holograms and immersive extended reality (XR), the company says in a white paper.

6G features will include better spectral and energy efficiency and a requirement for trustworthiness that, “addresses the security and privacy issues arising from the widespread use of user data and AI technologies,” Samsung says in an associated news release.

Faster data rates

From a technology standpoint, Samsung says it will be aiming for peak data rates of 1Tbps and latency less than 100 microsec, “fifty times the peak data rate and one-tenth the latency of 5G.” 6G will use terahertz frequencies, which are well above microwave and millimeter wave, along with optimized antennas. Spectrum sharing enhancements and more sophisticated duplexing will be used to better utilize wireless frequencies, Samsung says.

Reliability also is mentioned as a focus. But it’s the projected megatrends that Samsung says will propel 6G that are most interesting.

6G will connect machines

While legacy products like voice may still be a feature, it will be vehicles, robots, construction machinery and factory equipment that will become prime “connected machine” users. “Smart sensors installed in various infrastructures” will be a part of that, Samsung says.

In terms of new use-cases, Samsung thinks that a combination of virtual reality, artificial reality and mixed reality called XR will be set in motion by 6G. Roadblocks to XR include hardware limitations, in particular processing power, and battery performance, but also wireless capacity. Samsung thinks 6G will solve these issues. An example: AR alone needs 55.3 Mbit/sec to support 8K displays, Samsung says, and XR needs even more.

With enough bandwidth, holograms could display gestures and facial expressions in real time, but with a peak data rate of 20Gbps, 5G is too slow, Samsung says. Holograms of 19.1 gigapixels, for example, require 1Tbps throughput, which would be Samsung 6G’s top speed.

Digital twins, too, could enter mainstream usage with 6G, Samsung says. Industrial uses could include detecting problems in sensors remotely. “A user could physically move within a remote site by controlling a robot in that space entirely via real-time interactions with a digital-twin representation of that remote site,” Samsung says.

“Increasingly, machines will need to be connected by means of wireless communications,” Samsung says.

Join the Network World communities on Facebook and LinkedIn to comment on topics that are top of mind.

Copyright © 2020 IDG Communications, Inc.

Premium WordPress Themes Download
Download Premium WordPress Themes Free
Download WordPress Themes
Download Nulled WordPress Themes
free download udemy course
download samsung firmware
Download Best WordPress Themes Free Download
free online course
ADVERTISEMENT
Next Post
Balloon-powered internet service goes live in Kenya

Balloon-powered internet service goes live in Kenya

Recommended

Cisco, Google reenergize multicloud/hybrid cloud joint development

Cisco, Google reenergize multicloud/hybrid cloud joint development

NASA to use data lasers to beam data from space to Earth

NASA to use data lasers to beam data from space to Earth

Facebook Twitter Youtube RSS

Newsletter

Subscribe our Newsletter for latest updates.

Loading

Category

  • AI
  • Analysis
  • Connected Cars
  • Connected Vehicles
  • Data & Analytics
  • Development
  • Enterprise
  • Healthcare
  • IIoT
  • IoT
  • Manufacturing
  • News
  • Oil & Gas
  • Security
  • Smart Cities
  • Smart Homes
  • Standards
  • Tech
  • Uncategorized
  • Wearables

About Us

Advance IOT information site of Arizona, USA.

© 2019-24 iotarizona.com.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Tech
  • IoT
  • Development
  • Enterprise
  • Data & Analytics
  • Smart Cities
  • AI
  • IIoT
  • Manufacturing
  • Connected Cars

© 2019-24 iotarizona.com.

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In