11 | CBRS takes a step forward as NTIA completes testing (簡訳:CBRSはNTIAがテストを完了すると一歩前進します) | ----------- | |
FierceWireless: Wireless | 2018-12-13 22:30 | ????0? | |
The Wireless industry is an ever-changing world where big ideas come along daily. Our subscribers rely on FierceWireless as their must-read source for the latest news, analysis and data on this increasingly competitive marketplace. Sign up today to get wireless news and updates delivered to your inbox and read on the go. Indeed, the CBRS Alliance—an association of wireless companies looking to deploy LTE and other technologies into the 3.5 GHz band—acknowledged the work the government agency has put into its testing effort. “There’s been an unprecedented amount of collaboration to get us to where we are today,” Federated Wireless CTO Kurt Schaubach wrote on the CBRS Alliance’s website. “NTIA-ITS has shown itself to not only be extremely competent in evaluating SAS capabilities throughout the pre-test and testing process, but also to be an enormously dedicated team. We know for a fact that the testing team at NTIA-ITS was in the lab working through the Thanksgiving holiday—a testament to their dedication and partnership with the industry ecosystem.”It’s no surprise that the NTIA’s ITS is involved in the issue. The NTIA is essentially a steward of spectrum for government users and is therefore playing a key role in the CBRS space because the 3.5 GHz band is being shared between commercial users and the military, mainly the U.S. Navy. The spectrum sharing scenario for CBRS is a first-of-its-kind in the world.Importantly, CBRS testing isn’t the only thing on the NTIA’s plate. The Trump administration recently tasked the agency with tallying the nation’s spectrum resources, including any spectrum currently used by government users that could be released for commercial purposes. “One of the biggest challenges we face as an agency is a dual mandate from Congress. My job is to protect our government incumbents to make sure they have the assets they need, and to respond to Congress’s mandate to make more spectrum available for the private sector,” explained NTIA’s David Redl in a new post on the agency’s website. “By getting some good data on a longer timeline, we’re hopeful we can do some planning for the longer term, and build a framework that can survive well beyond this administration.”Further, Redl said that the NTIA may well be able to release additional spectrum for commercial uses: “We are trying to make more shared spectrum available. We could end up with a very large chunk of spectrum in the mid-band, which is the sweet spot for both coverage and capacity to come meet our 5G needs. The President has made it very clear that he expects us to be leaders in 5G and secure 5G, not just getting equipment out there but equipment that we know meets our national needs in terms of protecting Americans’ data. The work on the mid-band is particularly critical.” -- ???????? | |||
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