Some of the biggest carriers in Australia, Vodafone, Telstra and even Chinese manufacturer Huawei are preparing for the next generation of mobile phone network, 5G, even though 4G has only just been rolled out.
New mobile generations come around roughly every ten years and with every new generation there is a wave of marketing to spruik the benefits of more downloads and faster internet speeds. The fifth generation (5G) is due in 2020. However, if it does eventuate then, will it be all that different to 4G?
The fifth generation (5G) is still developing. The International Telecommunications Union has formed a number of focus groups to examine what it might look like. One of its markers will be an increase in the number of customers that can be serviced with the same amount of spectrum, but with improved speed. Spectrum consists of the range of electromagnetic frequencies that the carrier is licensed to use. Spectrum licenses are expensive. Consequently one of the design goals of mobile networks is that spectrum be used as efficiently as possible.
Another characteristic that might make for a generational change is the emergence of the Internet of Things. This means more of the machines we own will be communicating using the internet. Many of us already use fitness trackers and GPS devices that synchronise wirelessly with cloud based storage.
This will extend to include many more of the things we interact with or use. So for example existing household systems and appliances such as air conditioning, security, smoke detectors, energy consumption, and vehicles might all be monitored and perhaps controlled via the internet. Networks that enable this might be the distinguishing feature of 5G.
Some of the projections for growth in these areas is extraordinary. Cisco believe there will 50 billion devices connecting to the internet by 2020 compared to the current 15 billion.
In many ways the current 3G and 4G networks are not ideal for Internet of Things. The Internet of Things is likely to consist of many devices generating small amounts of data at regular intervals. What matters in this environment will be wide network coverage, long battery life and low cost of deployment. Perhaps it is this that will drive the next generational change in mobile.

Changes have not just been about bulk. Andrew Fogg/flickr, CC BY
Looking back over the changes in mobile generations, it’s clear to see there has been substantial increases in capacity of the mobile network, changes in the way it works and the services it provides. There’s a lot more to changes to mobile networks than just the marketing hype.
The first generation (1G) of mobile network in Australia was the Advanced Mobile Phone System (AMPS). It was developed by Bell Labs and used analogue communications techniques which were simpler to produce but more susceptible to interference and power hungry. The original 1G phones were bulky.
The move to the second generation (2G) in Australia was with two network technologies, GSM and CDMA. These network technologies were digital, much more secure than 1G, used less energy and made more efficient use of the scarce resource of spectrum. However, they were designed with the assumption that they would be used mainly for phone calls rather than accessing the internet. Accessing the internet using 2G was complicated and communications speeds were slow, typically less than 10 kilobytes per second.
The move to the third generation (3G) occurred following the increasing popularity of the internet in the 1990s, so 3G was built with internet communications in mind. It was designed to deal with the natural asymmetry in many internet based communications. For example, watching a video mostly involves traffic from the server to the viewer. Very little traffic occurs in the other direction. Allocating the same capacity in both directions was a waste of valuable bandwidth.
We are now seeing the deployment of the fourth generation (4G). As well as increased speed from hundreds of kilobytes per second in 3G to potentially tens of megabits per second in 4G, the main change 4G has provided is an all Internet Protocol (IP) core.
This change is not obvious to mobile phone users but it enabled carriers to reduce the number of different networks they had to manage. It also means that phone calls are treated as just another service whereas in previous generations it was the dominant or only service. This change reflects the reality that most communication across mobile networks is now data.
Philip Branch does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond the academic appointment above.
Philip Branch, Associate Professor in Telecommunications Engineering, Swinburne University of Technology
This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.



Google Gemini Co-Lead Noam Shazeer Leaves for OpenAI Amid AI Talent Race
Trump Says Anthropic No Longer Seen as National Security Threat
Anthropic Restricts Global Access to AI Models After U.S. Security Review
Samsung Gains Interest from BYD, Google, AMD as AI Chip Demand Strains TSMC Capacity
SK Hynix Shares Hit Record High After Shipping Next-Generation HBM4E AI Memory Samples
Anthropic Officials Meet White House Over AI Model Outage
SoftBank Shares Drop as OpenAI Losses and Rising Costs Spark Investor Concerns
AI Memory Boom Sparks Global Chip Supply Crunch
Elon Musk Becomes World's First Trillionaire After SpaceX IPO Surge
US Raises Concerns Over Possible ASML EUV Machine Transfer to China
Apple Signals Product Price Hikes Amid Rising Memory Chip Costs
SpaceX IPO Sparks Market Optimism as Shares Surge 19% on Trading Debut
ByteDance Eyes Iluvatar, Baidu AI Chips Amid China’s AI Push
Trump Administration Delays DeepSeek and CXMT Trade Blacklist Designations Amid U.S.-China Tensions
SpaceX Stock Gets $175 Target as Analysts See Massive Growth Ahead
SpaceX IPO Set for Explosive Debut as Valuation Tops $2.2 Trillion 



