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Inside TMN Newsletter

ISSUE 08

// 4 March 2016
TMN logo
MWC16, the week that was...

Kontron

Kontron: MWC Resource Hub

Learn what Kontron showcased at MWC16- Videos

XCELLAIR

XCellAir: MWC Resource Hub

Catch up with XCellAir from the MWC showfloor

Accedian MWC Resource Hub

Accedian: MWC Resource Hub

MWC16 award-winning. Check out the videos

Baicells Intel Demo

Unlicensed catches fire

MulteFire the killer, LAA small cell momentum

A new view on network analytics

One theme emerging at Mobile World Congress was the requirement to do something about collecting and managing network data.

 

The vision is broadly this - use virtualisation techniques to move data capture from centralised physcial appliances to a distributed, virtualised instrumentation of the network that can intelligently provide information flows to where they are required.

 

That is the vision. How to get there is more problematic.

 

NetScout was re-presenting its newly merged self following its acquisition of Tektronix Communications, Fluke and Arbor from Danaher Communiciations. Broadly speaking, the company has kept the TrueCall RAN analysis platform that Tektronix Comms had, via its own acquisition of Newfield Wireless. It has also kept hold of elements of Tektronix Communications’ own Iris Session Analyser suite, combining that with is nGeniusOne for a combined service assurance capability.

 

Director of Product Management John English said that the key focus will be providing assurance, instrumentation and analytics that can make sense of the amount of information coming from the network. The company’s virtual probes, based on COTS hardware, will be able to support “new, top-down modern workflow approaches” that curate data where it is collected and flow data that is essential, but retain the ability to go deep intp forensic session analytics where required.

 

“You can’t move everything to the God Box,” English said, encapsulating the problem.

 

Also addressing the issue is Spirent, another company that is assembling its assets in a bid to provide a living, breathing view of service and network performance.

 

Spirent’s Ross Cassan said that customers are complaining of the number of probes they are supporting in the network, and of data overload - something that will only get worse as IoT connectivity takes off and video volumes increase.

 

Spirent’s approach is taking automated “active testing” from the lab to the network, an approach described by Cassan as a “better methodology” that can create a picture in real time for business units, and if necessary feeding into the orchestration platform in a network. There’s still a requirement for probing capacity in the network, but Spirent thinks there is scope to automate test methodologies such as walk/drive testing, deploying virtual tests as VNFs that instrument the network upon any interface.

 

“It’s about going up the stack from L2-4, testing through to the real service,” he added. “You can do what was only available in the lab in the network.”

 

Procera's Cam Cullen said that the advantage of virtual probes is that they can be placed into the network where needed, then moved or scaled up and down as required.

 

Cullen said that Procera has worked hard to provide feature parity between hardware and software probes, with no performance impact. That is not the case for other companies, he implied, which still have some hardware dependencies and need for acceleration.

 

As for what to do with the data you capture, the company was showing a GUI that allowed an operator to view a network in terms of its fitness for purpose per a certain application. So by using the DPI capability and knowing what application flows there are, it can build up a picture if latencies might be affecting a certain gaming app, or throughputs impacting on video experience. It gives operators a view of the actual likely customer experience per app, rather than just a red/green light on a network KPI. 

 

Also thinking hard about how to capture and deliver information across the network for performance management and assurance is Accedian, which was introducing its new FlowBROKER product. At core here is a separation of the analysis from the data tap, so that a more distributed means of access network data can be deployed, but data can flow through the network. For much more on this, see Accedian’s Mobile World Congress Resource Hub.

Meeting carrier infrastructure needs for NFV and SDN​

storyimage

This year at MWC, Kontron was telling the story of building a converged and flexible infrastructure to support NFV and SDN.

 

Click here for exlcusive video content

Cisco's top lines and how 1+1 = 3

Cisco CEO Chuck Robbins gave some top line messages to journalists at a press conference held on the booth.

 

These were: a change is coming and that change will see distributed intelligence across the network. The “value” in providing services to consumers, enterprises and governments is in the data and analytics. Service Providers are at the centre of this, especially if they can build out that distributed intelligence architecture.

 

A key differentiator for service providers will be the ability to deploy security services across this industry infrastructure, with security beginning the moment the packets hit the network.

 

The company was also launching its Ultra Services Platform, which Kelly Ahuja describes as an “easy button” for network virtualisation. What has been missing is automation in configuration and set-up, using SDN principles and cloudification to allow apps to scale up and down in the network with distributed or centralised VNFs. It’s an open platform for third party integration, building an architecture towards a multi-vendor approach.

 

With this talk of automated cloud management, the press conference coincided with news of Ericsson’s selection by Telefonica as a provider of datacentre infrastructure, automation and cloud management technology to a part of its Unica project in Germany. Given the Cisco-Ericsson partnership, and the overlap between these capabilities and Cisco’s USP, TMN wondered if Ericsson’s introduction also gives Cisco a route into that contract?

 

“With Unica it is early days,” said Rima Qureshi, Ericsson Chief Strategy Officer, in response to our query. “There is a joint deal desk and where it makes sense to collaborate then we will. One-plus-one must equal three for the service provider, and if there is joint value then we will work together.”

When Machines Rule The Network

MWC RH Accedian

Weaving The 5G Network Fabric

 

This is the story of how operators can design instrumentation as part of the network fabric, creating the visibility they require to manage and monitor the elastic, automated networks of the future.

 

Click here for exclusive video content with TMN's very own Keith Dyer and Patrick Lopez. 

 

Edge flows, test flows and IoT Security

Vasona Networks was promoting a new capability to improve the quality of experience for mobile video. Using its traffic optimisation capabilities between the cell site and the network. It has come up with a way of inspecting queues to see what packets are coming up, and inserting a label into a packet header that instructs the CDN what rate to send the video at. It calls this Best Sustainable Rate. It said that in a live CDN installment it had seen a 20% reduction in the number of stalled plays.

 

The solution is called Smart Guided Video Rate. Vasona thinks the market is moving towards it in general with its software designed to sit on virtualised infrastructure. I thinks it can use its SmartAir platform to enrich other apps that would benefit from the insights it can provide into cell-level and application performance. Accordingly it is introducing an API to expose that information to application developers. It thinks that edge based apps (perhaps in the ETIS MEC NFV model) will only increase, taking out the requirement to loop control and signalling to the core and back.

 

EXFO was introducing a new procedure called TestFlow - essentially an automated test procedure for field technicians that are sent out to test fibre to the antenna deployments - things like RF and fibre characterisation, CPRI emulation and so on. At the moment operators are often reliant on contractors to do this work for them, and have little control of the test methodology, and often sketchy documentation. The new process is, Exfo said, cutting test time in half, as well as increasing the quality of the test work being done.


IoT was a massive topic at MWC in general, but one particular aspect was being highlighted by signalling platform provider Adax. Adax’s Robin Kent is concerned that the sheer volume of connections, and their often inherently chatty nature (think a connected car app) will overwhelm the security and transport architecture inherent in current mobile signalling.

 

To put that right, he thinks the industry should adopt the RFC4895 call to enhance SCTP - introducing a new authentication layer before a device can connect to the network. Adax has just done so, adding the new feature to a product that will support 10,000 associations at any one time.

How to build cellular networks like WiFi…

Parallel Wireless Video

TMN met with with Rajesh Mishra, CTO of Parallel Wireless, to discuss how the company’s vRAN solution is changing the economics of small cell deployments for rural, enterprise, and public safety markets.

 

Click for Video

More on The Mobile Network this week

1. Vodafone trials hyper-local marketing in live Madrid Network

Leverages radio optimisation tech for potential revenue raiser.

 

2. Core Network Dynamics targets edge core applications with OpenEPC

If intelligence moves to the edge, here's one way of doing it.

 

3. Orange (finally) on verge of VolTE, says LoRa a short term fix

Interview with head of Technical and Network Strategy.

 

4. The Best 5G demos at MWC16, and otherwise

A look at some 5G, and not quite 5G, demos at the event.

Managing Wi-Fi Performance

MWC RH XCellAir

At MWC 2016 last week, XCellAir was telling the story of managing the performance of unlicensed spectrum.

 

Click here for exlcusive video content

// In This Issue

A new view on network analytics

Meeting carrier infrastructure needs for NFV and SDN​

Cisco's top lines and how 1+1 = 3

When Machines Rule The Network

Edge flows, test flows and IoT Security

How to build cellular networks like WiFi…

More on The Mobile Network this week

Managing Wi-Fi Performance

 
/ Watch This Space /

Look out for details about a very special next issue of TMNQ Magazine. 

 

Drop us a line to register your interest and to learn how your organisation can be involved. 

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// MWC16 Insights // Democratising Telco Analytics

Learn how telco analytics has been democratised, unlocking the benefits of real-time insights and helping business and technical teams create a truly customer-centric approach. Watch Video

 
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