PLDT, Smart Communications explore open RAN in Philippines

Arvin Siena of PLDT

PLDT Inc (PLDT) and its wireless subsidiary Smart Communications, Inc. (Smart) are batting for more improvement and talent upskilling as Philippines joins the global push for new and disruptive technologies, including open radio access networks or open RAN.

“There used to be talk about the Philippines being behind in technology, but that is untrue. We are now among the leaders in Asia-Pacific in testing and exploring new technologies, particularly for telco networks,” says Arvin L. Siena, PLDT and smart VP and head for network strategy and planning, at Future of Connectivity with open RAN and open networks forum held by the Asia Open RAN Academy (AORA) on July 20 in time for its first anniversary.

At the event, Siena shared PLDT and Smart’s experience exploring and testing the open RAN proof of concept (PoC). Earlier this year, Smart has demonstrated open RAN which will potentially allow telcos like smart to mix and match hardware and software from any vendor by allowing the different components of the radio network to be disaggregated with the use of open-source software and general-purpose hardware. Open RAN’s benefits include helping Telcos save on cost, enabling operators to be more flexible and agile, and making their network more intelligent and efficient, which will, in turn, pave the way for the best customer experience and more new services.

“As open RAN presents many opportunities, innovation will be key. This is what AORA hopes for that in the Philippines, more people will be involved in developing platforms, services, and applications for this technology,” says Siena, adding that it is best to start early to overcome the challenges ahead.

Launched last year, the Academy is an alliance of academic, Government, and industry stakeholders working throughout the Philippines and the Indo-Pacific region to advance an open, interoperable, reliable, and secure internet and vibrant digital ecosystem.

“Our systems and processes are based on technology we have been using for many years, and this requires many changes in the way we design and organise our infrastructure, the way we set up our organisations, and the knowledge, skill set, and competencies of our people to evolve the network into a future-proof architecture. It is good that we are preparing for this now through a partnership with the academe. These are among the challenges we need to understand and conquer moving forward,” says Siena.

Siena likewise underscored the potential for the local developer community with the opportunities that open RAN will present for them. “The Philippines has not been focusing on developing applications for telcos, so the software we are using today in serving and enabling call flow and data flow are developed in other countries. Just imagine if developers in the Philippines work on applications for local mobile networks to run on local infrastructure. The opportunity for us is huge,” says Siena.

PLDT and Smart’s support for a more new culture in the Philippines are aligned with the focus areas of the government-mandated Private Sector Advisory Council (PSAC) ‘s digital infrastructure pillar, which supports the Government’s overall push for nationwide digitalisation to narrow the digital divide.These also reinforce PLDT’s commitment to its aspirational multi-year transformation, elevating customer experience as one of the key priorities.

Comment on this article below or via Twitter: @VanillaPlus OR @jcvplus

RECENT ARTICLES

Samsung and O2 Telefónica introduce vRAN and Open RAN network in Germany

Posted on: May 3, 2024

Samsung Electronics and O2 Telefónica announced on Thursday that the companies launched their first virtualised RAN (vRAN) and Open RAN commercial site in Germany. It is the first time that

Read more

Telxius expands submarine cable route from Dominican Republic to Puerto Rico

Posted on: May 2, 2024

Global connectivity provider Telxius is opening its latest submarine cable route with the extension of SAm-1 between Punta Cana in the Dominican Republic to Puerto Rico. The route is in

Read more