AccelerComm joins O-RAN Alliance to improve interoperability and efficiency for open 5G networks

Robert Barnes of AccelerComm

AccelerComm, a company working on 5G with IP to increase spectrum efficiency and reduce latency, has joined The O-RAN alliance. The alliance aims to re-shape mobile networks to be more intelligent, open, virtualised and fully interoperable without compromising performance.

AccelerComm will contribute to the technical development of O-RAN standards, bringing its channel coding experience to reduce latency and increase spectrum efficiency for Open 5G networks. AccelerComm’s technology builds on the successful roll-out of 5G networks going on worldwide, enabling the next generation of use cases requiring ultra-reliable, low latency communications, such as gaming or virtual reality (VR), industrial Internet of Things (IoT), autonomous vehicles and drone control.

The company’s product suite includes a complete channel coding IP solution that delivers reduced latency and power consumption for the most critical components of a 5G system, whilst meeting all the throughput and error correction targets. AccelerComm’s IP packages can be quickly integrated and flexibly delivered for use in custom silicon (ASIC), programmable hardware (FPGA) or as software solutions, covering all use cases within current standards.

“Delivering ultra-reliable low-latency communications (URLLC) is critical to the success of 5G, with a recent report from Rethink Research showing that 69% of mobile operators surveyed see it as ‘Very Important’ to new 5G revenues and enterprise return on investment,” says Robert Barnes, vice president sales & marketing AccelerComm. “We are delighted to have joined The O-RAN alliance in order to help support their mission through reducing latency and increasing efficiency in 5G networks being deployed around the globe.”

AccelerComm provides LDPC, polar and turbo FEC solutions which enable optimal performance of communication systems and reportedly solve the challenges that would otherwise limit the speed of 5G, namely the error correction decoding that is required to overcome the effects of noise, interference and poor signal strength.

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