An anonymous reader quotes a report from ZDNet: For years, 5G wasn’t able to deliver on its high-speed, low-latency promises. Things have changed. Today, 5G is finally delivering on its performance promises. A big reason for that, proclaimed Arpit Joshipura, the Linux Foundation’s general manager of Networking, Edge, and IoT at ONE Summit North America, a networking trade show, is 5G’s open-source networking foundation. Joshipura said, “The industry has surpassed the tipping point when it comes to leveraging open source for enabling digital transformation. Leading organizations are using our projects’ code — which continues to evolve and mature — in real-world deployments to scale.”
How big a tipping point? According to Joshipura, 5G deployment is now over 50%. And according to some analysts, by 2030, 5G will reach $7 trillion — that’s trillion, not billion — in economic value. Behind all this, Joshipura said, “is a radical shift toward open networks and frameworks. This continues irrespective of economic and political headwinds. Indeed, open source is probably the only area that hasn’t been impacted because of its ability to cross borders and boundaries to do what needs doing.” The Linux Foundation is working on an End-to-End, 5G Super Blueprint to bring together a wide variety of open-source networking programs and projects.
“While still a work in progress, it maps out a way to bring together multiple open-source and cloud-native projects into a relatively simple 5G deployment map,” adds ZDNet. “It’s designed so that any telecom can put together a high-bandwidth, low-latency, scalable, and cost-effective digital networking infrastructure all the way from end-user devices to the edge to cloud applications.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – Thanks To Open Source, 5G Cracks 50% of the Telecom Market