Samsung wins 5G deal with NTT DoCoMo in Japan
Samsung Electronics won another important contract in 5G infrastructure with the addition of Japan’s NTT DoCoMo, including open Radio Access Network (O-RAN)-compliant solutions. Financial terms were not disclosed.
Samsung said its solutions will play a crucial role in
expanding the operator’s network coverage and improving the 5G user experience.
Samsung’s 5G radios will be deployed as part of the agreement.
“Samsung will support DoCoMo with its innovative 5G technology,
including O-RAN-compliant solutions, to bring enriched 5G services to users,
advance digital transformation for businesses, and improve society at large,”
Samsung said in a press release.
Although a big name in the Android handset market, Samsung
historically was not the first name to spring to mind in the RAN market, where
Huawei, Ericsson, Nokia and ZTE dominate. But with geopolitics eliminating
Huawei as an infrastructure provider in the U.S. and other markets and
Samsung’s increasing emphasis on networks, its profile is rising.
In 2020, Samsung ranked No. 5 in the global RAN market, with
a revenue share between 5% and 10%, according to Stefan Pongratz, vice
president at Dell’Oro Group.
In Japan, Samsung also has a deal with KDDI, where it’s been
providing various radio base stations supporting mid-band (3.7-3.8 GHz and
4.0-4.1 GHz), as well as millimeter wave at 28 GHz, and virtualized RAN.
Samsung’s other major markets include its home territory of
South Korea, with all three major operators, as well as in India with Reliance
Jio. In the U.S., it won a $6.6 billion contract with Verizon last year, and
provided gear to Sprint before it merged with T-Mobile. It also has some
business with AT&T, although that’s mostly for fixed wireless access (FWA)
using Citizens Broadband Radio Service (CBRS) spectrum at 3.5 GHz, Pongratz
said.
“In short, Samsung is now a major player in India, Korea,
U.S./Canada, and Japan,” he said.
DoCoMo targets 70% coverage
DoCoMo is the largest of Japan’s major mobile operators,
with nearly 82 million users. It earned a reputation as being at the forefront
of technology during earlier wireless migrations and it’s still viewed as a
technology leader relative to its peers, according to Pongratz.
Late last year, DoCoMo announced that, along with Qualcomm
Technologies, they were able to carry out the world’s first commercialization
of 5G sub-6 GHz carrier aggregation to bring multi-gigabit mobile experiences
to DoCoMo customers.
5G carrier aggregation enables better 5G performance. With
select devices powered by the Qualcomm Snapdragon 865 Mobile Platform with the
Snapdragon X55 5G Modem-RF System, customers can get download speeds up to 4.2
Gbps.
DoCoMo’s 5G sub-6 GHz carrier aggregation combines 100 MHz
carrier in band n78 and a 100 MHz carrier in band n79 to boost 5G performance
and network capacity.
DoCoMo began commercial operation of the 28 GHz millimeter
wave band in September 2020.
The operator, which launched its 5G service a year ago, is
targeting 70% 5G coverage by the first half of 2023. KDDI and SoftBank also
launched 5G in March 2020, with Rakuten launching 5G in September.
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