5G will Herald Industry 4.0 – Saurabh Tewari, Director and CTO (Telecom), Dell

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Voice&Data Bureau
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Saurabh Tewari, Director & CTO, Dell Technologies, addresses 5G Conference

At his industry keynote at the 3rd edition of Voice&Data TLF 5G Conference “5G for Delivering Transformation”, Saurabh Tewari, Director and CTO (Telecom), Dell Technologies, said that 5G will herald the new industrial revolution in Industry 4.0, transforming every vertical.

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5G’s Transformative Power

Talking about the changes that 5G NR can potentially bring, Tewari first mentioned the general statistics related to the performance of the network; the throughput, the handover rate, the latency and so on. He showed that at every aspect, 5G truly becomes a generational shift. For instance, the throughput increases by a factor of 10 from 4G to 5G. At the same time, latency decreases by a factor of 10 as well.

“5G essentially is going to herald the new industrial revolution, or Industry 4.0”, he said.

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Talking about the data across the edge of networks, Tewari said that according to a 2018 study, data sphere, driven by 5G, IoT, Edge, and AI, will reach 175 zettabytes by 2025 annually. Also, he said that this could increase to 200-250 ZB given the pandemic-fueled increase in data consumption.

Out of the 175 ZB, 90 ZB will come from IoT devices, he added, all of which will be real time consumption.

“5G with MEC (Multi-access Edge Computing will deliver transformation across all industry verticals”, the Dell Director and CTO said.

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A 5G and IoT-led Revolution in Manufacturing

Tewari pointed to manufacturing as a key industry vertical for 5G and IoT. “5G is going to play a major, major role (in manufacturing)”, he said.

He added that 5G will help manufacturing not only acquire data, but also to react to it accordingly, with the help of AI and ML. He illustrated the application of the reduced latency; it can enable factories to locate faulty parts and remove them from the production line to avoid defective products.

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He introduced “predictive maintenance”, adding reliability to the manufacturing process. With lower latencies, industry can coordinate manufacturing “to a degree that has never been possible in the past”. This potentially will reduce the time it takes for a product to reach from the production line to the customer. Also, it can dampen the effects of any shocks the supply chain faces; in the post-COVID world, the industry has to be prepared.

Tewari then introduced Dell’s telecom products, that recently were introduced in India as well. The Dell PowerEdge XR11 and XR12, the edge computing servers. He said that these servers had a wide horizon of use, are rugged and “do not compromise on the standard and security”.

“Dell is working with all industry verticals to create products which will essentially work in close coordination with 5G networks, and create solutions that will pretty much transform any industry vertical”, Tewari concluded.