AWS Private 5G
19 points by jeffbarr 2 years ago | 10 comments- tyingq 2 years ago"New – AWS Private 5G"
"It supports 4G LTE (Long Term Evolution) today, and will support 5G in the future."
Heh.
- jlawer 2 years agoIf this has sufficient range, I could imagine it being a no brainer for a lot of businesses that have to stand up quickly (Resources, Warehousing, Tourism). This would give massive flexibility to stand up a new location. The real question is range, and home much this is affected by your neighbours. I imagine in urban areas range will be much smaller then what would be possible on a mine site for instance.
Combined with a Starlink system, you could deploy a single central point and have sufficient capability to cover an entire campus. While not well supported currently (60 day minimum hire), I could imagine it would be a massive boon to those who setup music festivals and other outdoor events. 150mbps is perfectly fine to run POS transactions and basic coms.
- Anunayj 2 years agoI thought such network would be great for university campus, but then i looked at the pricing, effectively 72$/sim/month.
- teleforce 2 years agoIndian government did sponsor 5G R&D research project led by IITM together with other Indian universities several years back. It should be ready and tested in their campus networks by now. If their project work as expected it can provide cost effective 5G solutions in university campus.
- teleforce 2 years ago
- thedougd 2 years agoI was hoping their partnership with Dish would allow me to instantly spin up a 5G network slice with my VPC over the top.
This is cool too.
- tguvot 2 years agoit's a CBRS network. According to gsmarena there are 21 devices that support band 48 on 5g and 23 devices that support bands 42/43 on 4g (supposedly they merged into band48 but not listed there like this).
used to work long time ago in company that was cbrs sas administrator. nobody was sure where to sell it to
- donavanm 2 years agoIt seems like target users would be something like industry and logistics handling? You need a moderate number of mobile clients, complex physical topology, and very good coverage? The number of sims, 10s to 100s, seems to low to get in to rfid/material handling territory.
- tguvot 2 years agoif you will look at their use cases (https://aws.amazon.com/private5g/) , it's kinda all over. When it's actually better than well designed wifi for private deployment.. hard to say. especially given scarcity of hardware that supports it. for industrial deployments it's even overlaps with industrial 5g + slicing (or whatever it's name today) that telecoms really would like to sell.
sas operators had hope that it will be deployed in office buildings/etc to improve connectivity for people who are inside, but... wifi. also there is need in some roaming between building operator network and proper MNO (or mno deploying cbrs network in building, which is not cost effective). and there are also DAS/cellular repeaters/femtocells/etc.
- tguvot 2 years ago
- donavanm 2 years ago
- Mo3 2 years agoCrap, 7.2k per month, no private cellular networks for us
- wmf 2 years agoNot 5G, seven thousand dollars a month, lame.