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CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits June 18, 2020 CBRS Alliance Copyright © 2020

CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

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Page 1: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity BenefitsJune 18, 2020

CBRS Alliance Copyright © 2020

Page 2: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

Welcome

• By joining this webinar you agree to the terms of the CBRS Alliance Privacy Policy and Webinar Disclosure located in the event description.

• This session is being recorded for the CBRS Alliance’s use and distribution.

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Page 3: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

Speaker Introduction

Alan Ewing, Executive Director, CBRS Alliance

Alan Ewing is the Executive Director of the CBRS Alliance, an industry consortium of more than 100 wireless and telecom organizations who believe that LTE-based solutions in the 3.5 GHz band, utilizing shared spectrum, can enable both in-building and outdoor coverage and capacity expansion at massive scale.

CBRS Alliance Copyright © 20203

Melissa Ashurst, VP of Healthcare and Higher Education, JMA WirelessMelissa leads JMA’s business and strategy for Education and Healthcare throughout the United States. Prior to JMA, spent 10 years in the wireless industry with leadership positions at a national system integrator for Distributed Antenna Systems as well as AT&T in the Antenna Solutions Group where she was Southeast Area Manager, Contracts and Business Development, managing multi-million dollar capital budgets. In these roles, she has been a part of some of the most complex DAS projects serving the needs of college campuses, stadiums and large public venues and brings a unique understanding of the Carrier perspective as well as the complexities of successful deployments. Melissa resides in the Metro Atlanta area where she sits on the Board of Directors for the Children’s Center for Hope and Healing.

Page 4: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

Speaker Introduction

Mark Reynolds, Associate Director IT, University of New Mexico

Mark Reynolds, Associate Director, University of New Mexico IT department, is involved in the engineering, design, installation and implementation of many voice, data, Cellular security and video deployments, inside and outside plant infrastructure. Mark has been in Higher Education for 35 years with experience in Telecommunications since 1973 with 45 years in voice, data, security, facilities, RF and Management. Before joining the University of New Mexico in 2003, Mark served as the operations manager for the voice, video, security system and data networking engineering and design at New Mexico Tech in Socorro, New Mexico for 20 years. Mark has over 45 years’ total experience in the telecommunications space with 37 of these years in Higher Education.

Ray Sabourin, Business Development Private Wireless Networks US Enterprise, Nokia

Ray is a Proven Business Developer and Sales leader within large Technology Corporation and start-ups. He has over 30 years of experience and relationship building within the wireless and high-tech industries globally as well as other industries and local businesses across the US and Canada. Ray also has sales experiences in the Webscale, Energy, Manufacturing, Healthcare and Public Sector verticals as well a Wireless Service Providers. His specialties include Sales & Marketing: Business Development, Value based selling, Negotiations, Internal marketing, Account Planning, Business Planning, Strategic Planning, Customer Presentations, Investor Presentations, Seminars and Portfolio Development & Management.

CBRS Alliance Copyright © 20204

Page 5: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

Agenda

• Welcome and Introduction

• What is OnGo and CBRS?

• Connectivity Challenges in Education

• How can OnGo help?

• How to Get Started

• Q&A – 15 min

CBRS Alliance Copyright © 20205

Page 6: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

Q&A, Polling and Survey

We will address questions at the end of the webinar to ensure we have time to cover all material. Use the question function in GoToWebinar to submit questions during the session. We will try to address clarification questions in real-time, but general questions will be handled after presentations.

Throughout the session we will be issuing polls to collect information from attendees to better assess our audience’s view on the subject matter. Results will be shared live on the call. At the end of the event, please take 2 minutes to complete our survey and provide us with feedback on how we can do better at future webinars.

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Page 7: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

What is OnGo & CBRS?Alan Ewing, CBRS Alliance Executive Director

Page 8: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

A Brief History of CBRS

2020201620142012

Initial CommercialDeployments

Launch

ESC Networks Approved and

Deployed

Full Commercial

Service

FCC proposed the CBRS) in December

2012

FCC finalized the proposal

in April of 2014

SAS Test Reports to FCC, NTIA, and DoD for Review and

Approval

NTIA identified the 3.5GHz spectrum in

2010 for possible shared

use

ICD Reports to FCC, NTIA, and DoD for Review and Approval

Launch of OnGo brand and

certification program

2010

CBRS Alliance was formed in mid-2016

to further the shared use of the 3.5GHz

spectrum for 3GPP based deployments

2019

CBRS Alliance Announces Network

and Coexistence Baseline

Specifications

2018

PAL Auction July 2020

CBRS Alliance Announces Release 3 Specs to allow for First U.S. Mid-band

5G Deployments

Page 9: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

A Brief History of CBRS

• Spectrum sharing is codified under FCC “Part 96” (Code of Federal Regulation, Title 47, Chapter 1, Volume 5, Part 96)

• Wireless Innovation Forum (WInnForum) and CBRS Alliance work cooperatively to develop testing and certification schemes to support CBRS Band deployments

Page 10: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

CBRS Alliance Membership – 160+ Strong and Growing

Board Members

Full, Adopter, and Advisor Members

Page 11: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

Industry Organizations with a Primary Focus on CBRS

– Standards development organization

– Radio technology neutral

– Functionality and architecture for SAS and ESC

– Requirements, processes, and methods for protection of incumbent users

– Interoperability requirements and protocol definition

– Common framework for FCC testing and certification

– Industry alliance

– Evangelize LTE and 5G-based CBRS technology, use cases and business opportunities

– Develop technical requirements for CBRS use cases

– Establish an effective product certification program for LTE equipment in the 3.5 GHz band ensuring multi-vendor interoperability

Page 12: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

CBRS 3-tiered spectrum sharing in the US

Opens up 150 MHz spectrum for new commercial use without impacting incumbents

Incumbents are protected

from interference from

PAL and GAA

PAL has priority over GAA,

licensed via auction, 10 MHz

blocks, up to 7 licenses

GAA can use any spectrum not

used, yields to PAL and

incumbents

Incumbents

Priority Access Licenses (PAL)

Tier 1

Tier 2

Tier 3

PAL

WISP

3550 3600 3700 MHz3650

GAA

FSS RX

Military radar: ship-based ground based

General Authorized Access (GAA)

Page 13: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

Unprecedented Government/Industry Collaboration

“NTIA’s groundbreaking engineering work and close collaboration with the FCC, DOD and industry played a critical role in opening up the 3.5 GHz CBRS band for next-generation wireless services. New 5G and 4G operations in the band will create tremendous value for our nation – both in terms of their contributions to GDP and further strengthening U.S. leadership in wireless technologies. We look forward to seeing the new licensed services in the band, which provides an optimal balance of capacity and coverage and will facilitate rollout of 5G.”– Douglas Kinkoph, NTIA Associate Administrator, Jan. 27, 2020 speaking about CBRS FCD

“The FCC has made it a priority to free up mid-band spectrum for advanced wireless services like 5G. And today, I’m pleased to announce the latest step to achieve that priority: the approval of four systems that will enable the 3.5 GHz band to be put to use for the benefit of American consumers and businesses.”—Chairman Ajit Pai, Federal Communications Commission, Jan. 27, 2020

Page 14: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

Learning the Lingo

• Use “OnGo”

• When describing the use of shared spectrum technology. In the 3.5 GHz band: “OnGo enables connectivity without compromise.”

• To describe the official CBRS Alliance OnGo Certification Program: “Radios will be OnGo-Certified.”

• Use ”CBRS Alliance”

• When referencing the organization behind the OnGo brand: “The CBRS Alliance is an industry organization focused on driving the

development, commercialization, and adoption of OnGo™ shared spectrum solutions.”

• Use “CBRS”

• To describe the band and/or the FCC ruling: OnGo will enable expanded business opportunities in the CBRS* band.

• Suggested use of “3.5 GHz” or “Band 48” as the preferred terminology, whenever possible.

Page 15: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

Connectivity Challenges in Education

CBRS Alliance Copyright © 2020

Page 16: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

Ray Sabourin

Business Development Private Wireless Networks US Enterprise, Nokia

Page 17: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

OnGo for Higher Education

With the recent announcement for the Federal

Communications Commission (FCC)

who authorized full commercialization of OnGo

services using the 3.5GHz CBRS band. The

Citizens Broadband Radio Service (CBRS) and

Private LTE offers a new opportunity to the higher

education industry to integrate mobile broadband

access within operations and to benefit students,

faculty and staff at University and other Campus

Environments

Page 18: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

Sensors

UseCases

IOT Technology Evolution with wireless Sensors

Temp. Humidity Vibration Location Light Sound Video

Flow Air quality Ultrasonic Magnetic Rotation Movement

Gateways

Op

era

tio

nal T

ech

no

log

y

Processing capability, data conversion,northbound uplink, southbound communication

▪ Precision and tolerance▪ Environmental conditions and vibration

▪ Size

▪ Energy efficiency

▪ Industrial interfaces

▪ Manageability

▪ Hazardous environment (ATEX)

▪ Hygiene

MetersVoltage Current Heat

Gas Water

▪ (Hazardous) Environment

▪ Hygiene

▪ Processing power

▪ Storage and interfaces

▪ Uplink and downlink

▪ Industryprotocols

▪ Northbound protocols

▪ Size

▪ Certificates

▪ Antenna

▪ Ease of use

▪ Power supply

▪ Remote access

▪ Manageability

Sp

eci

fica

tio

n

Sp

eci

fica

tio

n

CommunicationLoRa

Lo

w late

ncy

Relia

bili

ty

Ava

ilab

ility

Hig

h late

ncy

Lo

w s

peed

Public network

Private network

5GNB-IoT LTE-M LTE

Energy management Construction Automation Enhanced

maintenance

Indoor/outdoor

positioningDigital

twinCloud

robotics

Direct uplink

of sensors

or meters

3 6 4347 5

Private networks

2

OnGo Private LTE incl. MEC

Page 19: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

• Future Networks will significantly change the Supply

Chain world as we see it

Key Business Drivers for OnGo Private LTE

Network Investment

Full mobility Use Cases

Semi & fully automated and remote

controlled machines ease operational

work (AGVs, robots)

Secure data connectivity High reliability demands on the wireless network

Smart Campus/Classroom Technology adoption

Cost efficient wireless solution to cover both indoor and outdoor campus.More business critical devices and

applications demand higher reliability

Campus and Classroom technologies are an

integral part of higher education recruitment

efforts

PLTE requires less APs for large deployments, less infrastructure, lower power consumption and maintenance

The increase is wireless IoT device require

the 3GPP LTE standards to address Cyber

Security concerns

Page 20: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

OnGo addressing USE CASES in Higher Education and

Campus environment

Smart

Classrooms

Campus Transportation

Tracking

Fixed Wireless

Broadband

Wireless Video

Connectivity

Reliable Wireless Connectivity

for Automated Vehicles

Broadband content for student

housing/Hospitality

Wireless Connectivity for

Entrance Access

Automation

Facility

Management

Voice

Communication

Wireless Connectivity

for Drones

Interactive Smart

Boards, Podium

PoS – Mobile

ECommerce

1

2

5

8

39

7

10

12

6

Emergency booth (Blue

Phones)

14 15

13

Indoor & Outdoor positioning

4

VR/AR for

Classrooms

11

Page 21: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

Digital Stadium

Public transport

EntryGate 1

TicketStand

EntryGate 2

Hallways

LTE & 5G

Edge CloudData Center

LTE & 5G (4x4 MiMo)

Open Edge

PLTE+5G (4x4MiMo)

1500 users

1500 users

1500 users

1500 users

5G 4G

400 users

400 users

Page 22: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

Smart Digital Stadium applications enabled by Mobile Edge Computing on Open Edge

RT Video Streaming Augmented Reality Live Virtual Reality Video Analytics Real-Time Tracking

Smart Stadium

MEC

LTE & 5G Radio

• MEC (Mobile Edge Computing) Platform• Versatile platform for edge apps• OnGo Private LTE Wireless• Std. server HW• Standardized by ETSI Std. cloud apps

Open Edge:• Real time fan services• “Fat” stadium content• Private staff applications• Real time analytics

Cloud:• Web services• Internet content• Offline analytics

Page 23: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

Home

Unit

CPEHome

Unit

CPE

Self-install app• Guided home installation

Home Outdoor Modem• Key to offering competitive speeds

OnGo CBRS Radio Access Network• Use capacity of existing OnGo RAN for FWA

or

• Add dedicated OnGo FWA capacity

Nokia Residential WiFi Gateway• Same robust home experience as fiber

Controller• Monitors network

• OSS management interfaces

Connecting Student homes with CBRS OnGo LTE technology

Nokia OnGo FastMile Indoor & Outdoor Fixed Wireless Solutions

Point of sales app• Verify coverage before selling services

Page 24: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

4G /5G Gateway With integrated WiFi

Install App

Video

Internet

Gaming

Beacon

Beacon

Nokia WiFi

Nokia WiFi

4G/5G Receivers

PoE to home

network

Outdoor receivers

• Ideal where signal strengths are weak

• Avoid first wall attenuation for maximum speed

• Greater spectral efficiency

• Installation aided with Nokia Wireless app

When to use what

Outdoor receivers and indoor gateways

Indoor gateways

• Ideal where signal strengths are strong

• Place near a window for best signal

• All gateway, WAN and LAN features in one device

• Installation aided with visual cues on the Gateway

Nokia Confidential

Page 25: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

Melissa Ashurst

VP of Healthcare and Higher Education, JMA Wireless

Page 26: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

Why Higher Education Values OnGo

CBRS Alliance Copyright © 202026

WiFi Cellular

• Dedicated, controlled, secure

and versatile connectivity

• High capacity UL or DL

• Indoor and/or outdoor

• Ecosystem of endpoints

• Mix of voice, video and data

• Multiple services platform

• Complement WiFi and cellular

• Path to 5G

• Private network ownership

Enterprise

Connectivity

Page 27: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

S M A R T C I T Y E C O S Y S T E M S

Data Acquisition

Connectivity EcosystemDigital Competencies

Structured Communications

Automated Operations

Digital Knowledgebase

Seamless

ControlsHuman

Elastic Sliced

Sensory

DemandStates Location

ResponsePolicyAI

• S M A R T H E A L T H • S M A R T L E A R N I N G • S M A R T B U I L D I N G S • S M A R T U T I L I T I E S • S M A R T T R A N S P O R T A T I O N • S M A R T C I T Y •

Enabling Higher Education Functions

Page 28: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

OnGo Deployment Flexibility for Higher Education

WiFi

CellularPublic

Private

Data CenterInfrastructure

Radio Access System

In BuildingClassroomLaboratory

VenueStadium

Arena

CampusPublic SpaceMixed Use

NeighborhoodMetro AreaRemote Site

Page 29: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

Multi-Service Private and Public Networks

29

Parking

Systems

Safety &Security

AR/VRLearning

Traffic Management

Asset TrackingLogistics

Kiosk &Displays

InternalCommunicatio

n

1

23

45

6

7

89

10

11

12

13

14

15

SpectrumAccessSystem

4G/5G Radios

Example Edge Devices and Solutions

CBRS150MHz

@ 3.5GHz

SharedSpectrum Domain Proxy

CBSD-SAS

Mobile ExperiencePublic Private

Core Service Options

Private

Private

Public

Radio Access System

Public

Multi-ServiceBaseband

• M U L T I - C O R E S E R V I C E S • M U L T I - C H A N N E L S • N E T W O R K S L I C E S • M U L T I - U S E C A S E •

Dual ConnectivityCarrier Aggregation

RedundancyFailover

Page 30: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

What’s Next for Higher Education and Shared Spectrum

PAL Coexistence Capacity5G Support

Page 31: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

Mark ReynoldsAssociate Director IT,

University of New Mexico

Page 32: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

University of New Mexico

• 27,000 students

• 5,000 faculty and staff

• University, Health Sciences, University Hospital, Branch campuses

• Public LTE – Verizon (2), AT&T (1) T-Mobile (3), Sprint

• Small cell – Verizon – Code Blue, AT&T light pole

• Aruba WiFi University 4000 Access Points

• Cisco HSC-UH 4000 Access Points

• Crown Castle – iDAS Football and Basketball stadium

• 100,000 IP end points (hardwire connections)

Page 33: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

University of New Mexico

• LEEDS standards (Low-E glass)- credits for energy savings

• Reduction of carbon footprint - emissions

• Architecture firms suggesting Public LTE in new builds

• iDAS with different integrators

• Challenges for iDAS systems – Funding for Capex, Opex

– Support

– Refresh

– Design

– Integrators

– GSA, sole source

Page 34: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

University of New Mexico

Private LTE – CBRS / OnGo for Higher Education

• Examples of Higher Education – versus hard wired IP (Removing from the Public IP network)

▪ Emergency outdoor devices like phones that can connect via CBRS

▪ Transit systems like University Buses, Hospital Buses

▪ CCTV outdoor systems

▪ Outdoor systems for Facilities (watering systems), parking structures

▪ Point of sale systems

▪ Athletic events

▪ Life safety systems

▪ Mobile voice

▪ University events for outdoor connections

▪ Campus police for two-way communications via IP radio or Cell

▪ Mass notification

Page 35: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

University of New Mexico

Private LTE – CBRS / OnGo for Higher Education

• Challenges for CBRS

• Value and Return on investment

• Migration of technology from IP to CBRS Frequencies

• Capex and Opex (Like iDAS) model

• Integrators

• Support – RF engineering, IT, owners of the technologies to migrate from/to

• Project plan to migrate technologies to CBRS from IP or Public LTE or both

• Buy in from Executive management, Purchasing, ownership of the product and process

• Refresh

Page 36: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

University of New Mexico

How can OnGo Help?• Access the University systems that would benefit from the CBRS technologies

• Present on integrators

• Present on the Return on Investment

• The pro’s and con’s of moving to CBRS (private LTE)

• Present on other higher education locations that have migrated or are migrating to CBRS technologies and the reasons, direction and contact for references

• Capital costs

• Operational costs

• Support modeling

• University responsibilities for moving to CBRS technologies

Page 37: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

Resources for Reference

• CBRS website and resources:

– Website - https://www.cbrsalliance.org/

– Education Use Cases https://www.cbrsalliance.org/in-building/education/

– Blog: Shared Spectrum Could Solve Internet Access Challenges During COVID

– Video: What is CBRS?

– Whitepaper: Cost of Modeling In-Building Wireless with OnGo

– Report: Private LTE Enterprise Networks Using OnGo Technology

CBRS Alliance Copyright © 202037

Page 38: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

Q&A

Any Questions?

Page 39: CBRS Alliance Analyzes Education Connectivity Benefits

Thank You!Questions can be sent to [email protected]

CBRS Alliance Copyright © 2020