Dish, racing to build a 5G network in the United States by 2023,
has chosen a new technology called Open Radio Access Network
(O-RAN) that uses software to run network functions on the
cloud, reducing the use of physical equipment.
As part of the collaboration, Dish and Amazon will help develop
5G applications, such as low-latency augmented reality gaming
experiences, serve contextual advertising, or orchestrate the
movements of a robot at a disaster site.
"We have exposed our ambition and our technology to a number of
enterprise customers and we are in deep discussions," Dish Chief
Network Officer Marc Rouanne said in an interview.
AWS Vice President David Brown said the partners had discussed
working together for around 18 months ahead of the deal signed
on Wednesday.
It is not exclusive and AWS has an existing
https://aws.amazon.com/
blogs/industries/verizon-and-aws-deliver-mobile-edge-computing-to-customers-in-boston-and-the-bay-area
partnership with telecom operator Verizon.
"If AWS and Dish were to partner on going after the enterprise
opportunity together – leveraging Dish's network and AWS'
enterprise services infrastructure and sales force – that would
be exciting," Jonathan Chaplin, an analyst at New Street
Research, said.
Dish, with its new network built on the latest technologies,
could become a threat to traditional telecom operators, such as
Verizon and AT&T.
"They will have a lower cost than Verizon and so will be able to
undercut on price," Chaplin said.
Rouanne said Dish is on track to reach its goal of covering 20%
of the U.S. population by June next year, and at least 70% of
the population by mid-2023, as part of its commitments to the
U.S. Federal Communications Commission.
(Reporting by Supantha Mukherjee, European Technology & Telecoms
Correspondent, based in Stockholm; editing by Barbara Lewis)
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