How Will 5G Affect Manufacturing?
5G makes it
possible to build “smart factories” that can draw on the power of connectivity
for to achieve greater safety, efficiency, and automation
As a ZDnet
article put it in "Will the smart factory benefit from 5G? Industry
experts weigh in", the benefits of 5G for manufacturing include better
data streams in real time, though it goes beyond that through enabling greater flexibility:
“Through
Internet of Things (IoT) networks of sensors on the factory floor and through
the supply chain, operators can be made aware of problems not in a linear
fashion, but through the real-time collection and analysis of data ranging from
machine performance, staff activity, and logistics — as well as through
predictive analytics.”
In the video
below, you can see a brief presentation on how AT&T and Samsung showcase
the factory of the future that capitalizes on advanced technology that runs on
5G. The 5G Innovation Zone at Samsung Austin Semiconductor allows visitors to
experience seven different uses cases in manufacturing that will improve safety and efficiency while expanding
the possibilities of robots that are aware of their surroundings.
5G in Healthcare
Telemedicine
could really take off without the latency problem not just for diagnosis of
remote patients but even for surgery.
Back in
2018, the The American Medical Association (AMA) included a push for expanding
connectivity among its policies. As Dr. Gerald E. Harmon pointed out, “Patients
stand at the intersection of health and technology. Without broadband and wireless, patients in
underserved areas will face even greater health challenges."
The way 5G
enable automation and robotics to advance in manufacturing is being explored
for healthcare to realize the vision of remote robotic-assisted surgery. In
January 2019 the first remote-surgery equipment using 5G mobile network
technology was tested in China when a doctor in Fujian removed the liver of in
a different location.
The 5G
connection allowed him to control the robotic arms that carried out the surgery
with only .1 seconds of lag time.
As it says
in the description of the video below, “Researchers said the high-speed can
reduce the risk of deadly medical mistakes, and raises hopes that 5G-enabled
remote surgery will soon be reliable enough for use on human patients.”
5G and Its Role in Retail
5G extends
the usability of virtual reality (VR) and augmented reality (AR), which could
give people the chance to try on things virtually at home or in stores.
In an April
2019 press release, Gartner proclaimed “100 Million Consumers Will Shop in
Augmented Reality Online and In-Store by 2020.” The release quotes Anna Karki,
principal research analyst at Gartner, who said that consumer demand and
expectations for retail experiences are prompting retailer to find
technological solutions, including “AR and VR to offer customers a unified
retail experience inside and outside retail stores.”
Karki
explained that it enables customers to experience “immersive environments” by
referencing IKEA’s Place app that makes it possible to see various pieces of
furniture available for sale within their own homes. She added that "AR
can be used outside the store after a sale to increase customer satisfaction
and improve loyalty.”
The same
release quotes Sylvain Fabre, senior research director at Gartner observing
that 5G can be used to improve "not only customer engagement but also the
entire product management cycle of brands.” He pointed out that: “5G can
optimize warehouse resources, enhance store traffic analytics and enable
beacons that communicate with shoppers’ smartphones.”
See more specific applications for retail in the video below:
5G Driving
the Future of Transportation
Connectivity
can make diving safer.
As explained
in Carritech, 5G enables two types of communication that are key to improving
safety for drivers: “Vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V) and vehicle-to-infrastructure
(V2I).” One way V2V can be used in alerting a driver that cars ahead are
braking even before the driver can see the brake lights ahead.
As many
collisions are caused by hitting cars that come to sudden stop, prior notice
can avert a serious accident. Should the condition necessitating stops be one
in the road, the V2I communication can allow the driver to know that in time to
take an alternative route and avoid congestion.
Such
awareness of other cars and road conditions
are prerequisites for the safe operation of autonomous vehicles. (Read 7
Autonomous Vehicle Myths Debunked.)
Autonomy
analyst Tasha Keeney was quoted in The Drive referring to the potential
benefits of being able to transmit more larger streams of data in real time,
including a ”full video feed or more information from the full sensor suite.”
That can be
especially helpful in emergency situations that call for some intervention from
“human remote operators.” Both the V2V and B2I data can also better direct the
autonomous cars for safety and efficiency.
5G Shaping Agriculture
With real-time
data delivered via 5G, farmers can monitor, track, and automate their systems
to optimize results.
The Internet
of Cows is already in place with dairy farmers applying sensors and smart
collars to their cows to pick up on data in real-time. One company that offers
that service in app form called Me+Moo is UK-based 5G Rural First. The company
intends to demonstrate the value of 5G for agriculture through the app that
keeps farmers aware of what their
cows are doing at all times, and they did get buy-in from the government. .
An ABC News
article about its implementation quotes Mark Gough, one of the herdsman at the
Agricultural Engineering Precision Innovation Centre: "You can be at one
end of the building, you get an alert, it's telling you exactly which cow it
is, what the problem potentially is, and it's an instant assessment."
Beyond
merely relaying data, the same principles that make autonomous driving possible
can enable farms to operate autonomously with self-driven tractors and other
machines. That was demonstrated in England by the Hands Free Hectare project, which is managed by
Harper Adams University and Precision Decisions.
You can see the video of the hands free wheat harvest taking place here:
Gartner
predicted that by 2020, worldwide 5G wireless network infrastructure revenue
will hit $4.2 billion, an amount that represents an 89% increase over the $2.2
billion figure associated with 2019.
That rapid
rate of growth just a single year attest to the proven benefits of 5G for a
whole array of industries.
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