Small Cell Forum launches "Release One" in new project to promote operator deployment

Asian Small Cell Forum, Seoul, South Korea—March 18, 2013 —The Small Cell Forum (Small Cell Forum) is an independent industry and operator association that supports global small cell deployment. The Forum today announced the Small Cell Release One project. This is the first delivery document in its Release project, which helps global operators including Chinese operators to successfully apply the technology by providing an easy-to-understand comprehensive information package. The theme of Release One is the home market, which provides the complete work content that operators need to know to deploy femtocells (also known as home base stations). Release One also includes some important preliminary work on future delivery documents, including small cell technology for enterprises, urban hotspots, and rural areas. The Release project is applicable to WCDMA, cdma2000, TD-SCDMA, and LTE FDD and TD-LTE. As Chinese operators are introducing new technologies to promote their service innovation, the Release project will provide them with great support when deploying small cell technology in their 3G networks and future LTE networks.

China is one of the fastest growing mobile communication service markets in the world. With the popularity of mobile Internet devices such as smartphones and tablets, and the diversification of applications, there has been a rapid increase in data traffic through wireless infrastructure. Small cell technology is a method that has been proven to enable operators to meet customers ’desire for better data communications when expanding their 3G networks and launching LTE networks. At the 2012 China Small Cell Summit Forum, China Mobile Suzhou reported that femtocell technology can help operators carry indoor data traffic. The experience of the Chinese operator shows that small cells have a significant and positive effect in maintaining turnover and expanding user scale. Small cell technology has also laid a solid foundation for the future deployment of LTE.

On the one hand, Release One is aimed at operators who are planning to deploy home base stations after the market and technology verification has matured, while also assisting other operators in planning the deployment of new enterprise-level, urban hotspot areas and rural small cell base stations. It provides all business cases and technical details, including equipment specifications recommended for RFP, as well as best practice cases for operators who have successfully deployed femtocells on a large scale. Release One also includes the latest information to support new enterprise-level, urban hotspot and rural network deployments, including two important new white papers on backhaul transmission and the launch of rural networks, which specifically address the widespread concerns of operators There is also an operator agreement on the key requirements for public access to small cell base stations:

· The Rural Small Cell White Paper states that there are no barriers that prevent the technology from being used to bridge the digital divide between developed and developing markets. In fact, a representative business case shows that even in the relatively low operating income market of developing countries that require expensive satellite backhaul transmission, operators can achieve a profit of $ 50,000 per year per site-in developed National market profit can be increased to 196,000 US dollars. This is very important in addressing the digital divide and is part of the drive to reach the next billion users.

· The conclusion of the backhaul white paper concludes that backhaul transmission does not constitute an obstacle to the deployment of public access small cells. A full range of application cases show that from high-traffic urban hot spots to rural blind spots can be effectively managed through the use of optical fiber, copper cable and wireless backhaul transmission technology. Backhaul was once seen as an important constraint for the deployment of small cells: this white paper explains how these concerns can be overstated, and also points to a viable solution that can now be commercially supplied.

· After having gathered the operation industry and reached an agreement on the key requirements of household small cells, the Small Cell Forum is now developing key requirements for future public access equipment. This includes an enhanced version of the public access luh small cell standard, fully open X2 interoperability for LTE products, and enhancements to small cell devices that support multiple technologies (3G, LTE, and Wi-Fi). These requirements will drive the Forum ’s work in supporting future public access deployments and will also become a key focus of the future Release project.

In the next 12 months, the Small Cell Forum will publish Release Two, which will include major advancements in enterprise-level small cell technology, and will also release Release Three, which focuses on urban hotspot small cells (metrocells). Importantly, these documents will contain lessons learned from the ongoing deployment, as well as evolutionary methods and standards. Subsequent Release documents will include important progress in rural small cells and multi-technology small cells. Multi-technology small cells intelligently combine 3G, LTE and Wi-Fi, reflecting the ongoing cooperation between the Small Cell Forum and the Wireless Broadband Alliance.

"The small cell industry has reached a critical period. More than 98% of operators believe that small cells are crucial to their future1, and the number of home base station products alone has exceeded the number of macro cell base stations in the world; meanwhile, by 2017, Small cells will account for more than 85% of all base stations2. However, existing deployments are concentrated in about 50 pioneer operators, most of which are very large operators in developed markets. How can we help the next 150 Cautious, operators of all sizes from all over the world launching various types of small cells? "Said Gordon Mansfield, chairman of the Small Cell Forum." Our new Release project is designed to meet this challenge. Every The Release version provides everything an operator needs to know to successfully launch a small cell with minimum risk for profit. Other industry organizations (including the Broadband Forum and 3GPP) also rely on the powerful effects of the official Release to promote Applications such as DSL, optical fiber and 4G technology. "

Each release includes a concise summary of all the things an operator needs to know when deploying small cells, as well as detailed documents such as market drivers, business cases, etc., as well as including standards, operator lessons, and The key technical information of regulatory information, and also includes a set of recommended equipment specification albums that are required to be purchased by purchase (RFP). In addition to the device album, Release One can be obtained for free from the Small Cell Forum Release site. The device album is a document that only members of the small cell forum can get--

Supporting introduction:

Adrian Scrase, Chief Technology Officer of the European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI) and Director of the 3GPP Mobile Core Competitiveness Center, said: "This project strengthens the role of the Small Cell Forum as a key market representative partner in 3GPP, effectively bringing the needs of its members into play Entered the standard environment. 2013 is a year when the Small Cell Forum and 3GPP are looking forward to strengthening cooperation, because our technical specifications are deeply embedded in the device configuration file, and the latter is the core of the Small Cell Forum Release project.

Robin Mersh, CEO of the Broadband Forum, said: "Combining affirmed best practices and various open standards into one public document provides an important resource for the growth of small cells. At the heart of all successful communication technologies It is the common pursuit to achieve interoperability. We are very happy to see that the Broadband Forum's broadband management standard TR-196 has become the core of the latest and standardized small cell deployment. "

Shrikant Shenwai, CEO of the Wireless Broadband Alliance, said: "We are very proud to collaborate with the Small Cell Forum to help realize this vision of the future that will bring the convergence of mobile communications and public Wi-Fi networks to reality. The Wireless Broadband Alliance and Small Cell An important part of the forum's cooperation is: it will focus on how to perfectly integrate public Wi-Fi hotspots and small cells with licensed frequency bands to enable operators to provide users with the best possible broadband experience. "

About Small Cell Forum

The Small Cell Forum () aims to support the widespread adoption of small cells. Small cell base stations are low-power wireless access points operating in authorized frequency bands. They are managed by operators and have intelligent functions based on edge operation. They have achieved improvements in cellular network coverage and capacity, and can be applied to homes and businesses, as well as public areas such as cities and villages. They contain a variety of technologies called femtocells (also known as home base stations, femtocells), picocells, picocells, microcells and metrocells. The forum has more than 140 members, including 68 operators representing 46% of the global mobile users and more than 3 billion mobile users, as well as telecommunications hardware and software providers, content providers and creative emerging companies .

[1] Report on the situation of the small cell market in the fourth quarter of 2012--http: // TIal-for-future-of-networks

[2] Report on the market situation of the Small Cell Forum in the first quarter of 2013

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