Showing posts with label looks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label looks. Show all posts

Friday, January 3, 2014

5G Wireless: Reality looks to catch up with hype

Don't feel bad if you don't really know anything about 5G wireless networking – because, by most standards, it doesn't actually exist yet. The cross-pollination of codified specifications, new products, and technological innovation required hasn't yet brought 5G to fruition.


What there has been, however, is a lot of hype. Samsung grabbed attention in May with its announcement of a 1Gbps wireless connection it referred to as “5G,” saying it would bring the capability to its production smartphones by 2020.

5GNetwork World - Don't feel bad if you don't really know anything about 5G wireless networking – because, by most standards, it doesn't actually exist yet. The cross-pollination of codified specifications, new products, and technological innovation required hasn't yet brought 5G to fruition.


What there has been, however, is a lot of hype. Samsung grabbed attention in May with its announcement of a 1Gbps wireless connection it referred to as “5G,” saying it would bring the capability to its production smartphones by 2020.


+ Also on NetworkWorld: A brief history of mobile networks | A first look at gigabit Wi-Fi adapters | Blazing Samsungs, or how not to handle a product return +


The European Commission’s Horizon 2020 plan, announced this month, includes roughly $172 million for 5G research and development, and South Korea’s Yonhap News announced that country’s government would spend $475 million on developing a national 5G network, to be completed by 2020. Both proposals cite the transformative effects and massive economic benefits of 5G technology.


The problem, however, is that no one seems to agree on precisely what the term 5G even means. Sathya Atreyam, a research manager at IDC, says that it’s become a buzzword at this point.


“There are many players right now who are claiming that they are investing a lot of dollars in 5G research, [but] they’re all investing in different areas of 5G … somebody’s focused on increasing data speeds, somebody’s focused on better coverage,” he says.


“It reminds me of a story which is often heard,” Atreyam adds. “There are six blind men feeling and touching an elephant and giving their definition of the elephant. Every one is true, but it’s only part of the puzzle.”


Standards bodies like the International Telecommunication Union, the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, and the 3rd Generation Partnership Project are all tracking the various technological developments. The ITU officially recognized the IMT-Advanced standard in January 2012, though it did not use the term 5G in describing the technologies, which include the next generations of the successful LTE and the less-successful WiMAX.


It’s important to remember, of course, that even when a particular “G” term is fairly stable and commonly understood – 3G, for example, is generally agreed to refer to the ITU’s IMT-2000 standard – it isn’t a hard-and-fast official definition. Refinements in WCDMA technology produced HSPA and HSPA+, which are often referred to as “3.5G” or “3.75G,” without fundamentally changing the underlying hardware.


Indeed, those technologies were even more ambitiously titled in the recent past, according to Forrester principal analyst Frank Gillett.
“With 4G, we saw versions of 3G – HSPA+ - called 4G, and then we had to say LTE to mean true 4G,” he says. “I’m expecting to see a lot of silly marketing junk later in the decade, as the 5G stuff ramps up.”


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So what might 5G technology actually look like? That’s not known for sure, but experts like Craig Mathias, a well-known wireless consultant and Network World blogger, think there are clues out there.


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Friday, April 26, 2013

Silver bottoms out, but looks poised for recovery

Traders were more active in mini contracts that the standard contracts due to the uncertainty prevailing in the market, analysts said. Low volumes and fall in open interest in COmex silver portends weakness to continue for some more time in silver. Silver is also not likely to get any support from the base metals complex which also remains weak due to weak

NEWYORK/ MUMBAI (Bullion Street): US silver futures seems to have bottomed out at $22 per ounce levels and looks poised for some upward moves although volume and open interest has dropped signficantly over the past week. At India's Multi Commodity Exchange, Silver May contract is o.64% at Rs 43693 per kg on Monday afternoon trade.

" On daily charts both Comex silver and MCX silver seems to have bottomed out and looking for a push upwards although recovery signs are weak," Sreekumar Raghavan, Investment Strategist at Commodity Online Group said. Prices are still below the 20 day SMA of Rs 47635.40 at MCX while RSI of 19.76 is extremely bearish and still in oversold territory, he added.

Traders were more active in mini contracts that the standard contracts due to the uncertainty prevailing in the market, analysts said. Low volumes and fall in open interest in COmex silver portends weakness to continue for some more time in silver. Silver is also not likely to get any support from the base metals complex which also remains weak due to weak China GDP data although better US Q1 GDP data due on Friday 26 April and Japan's monetary accomodation and likely ECB rate cuts may help push silver prices higher, analysts added.

Next major resistance for Comex silver is seen at $26 while support is seen near term at $22.75 and RSI of 24.42 is still bearish oversold territory, Sreekumar Raghavan added.

"The sharp fall in the prices of gold and silver may have stemmed from the shift in market sentiment towards precious metals. The minutes of the previous FOMC meeting, the decision of BOJ to augment its asset purchase program, the weak economic data on China may have also contributed to the tumble in gold and silver prices. Following such a sharp drop in prices, a correction might occur that will pull up gold and silver. But as the week will progress, if the current bearish market sentiment towards precious metals will persist, gold and silver are likely to resume their downward trend," according to a market review published in Seeking Alpha.


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