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Satnews Daily
March 22nd, 2018

GLOBECOMM Heading into CCA Mobile Carriers Show


GLOBECOMM will introduce at the CCA Mobile Carriers Show an integrated solution set of acceleration, optimization, fronthaul, switching and backhaul capabilities to support the 3G/4G evolution to the emerging 5G standard.

CCA Mobile Carriers occurs from March 27-29 in Las Vegas — GLOBECOMM may be visited at booth 300 on the show floor.

GLOBECOMM’s solutions enable carriers to extend mobility cost-effectively and profitably into rural, remote and underserved regions, where the standard fiber-to-the-base-station architecture is challenged.  The company has broad experience and expertise in creating and managing hybrid networks that bundle fiber, microwave and satellite to generate attractive business cases for hard-to-serve markets.  These connectivity solutions are complemented with hosted switching that supports CDMA, GSM/UMTS, LTE and moving forward 5G and value-added services including CALEA, SMS and MMS support.  GLOBECOMM can provide satellite Data Offloading and Optimization solutions and services to allow mobile network operators the option of creating an overlay data network, during or even post LTE rollout, to increase cell site data capacity. Furthermore, the company also provides base station and backhaul equipment, connectivity to Tier 1 and 2 international carriers and lifecycle support.

Immediately before the show, GLOBECOMM will release its latest white paper, “Taming the Capacity Beast.”  It outlines enormous increases in capacity demand created by 4G and evolving 5G for both fronthaul and backhaul, and offers solutions for specific technologies including X2 and CPRI/eCPRI that will be challenged to function beyond the fiber architecture available in dense urban and suburban markets.  Globecomm is able to provide solutions including offloading and optimization on the backhaul between cell site and network via satellite, when terrestrial networks may have failed, and primary satellite transport in regions without terrestrial backhaul options.

White paper author Sathya Maruthi of Globecomm noted that as much as half of the U.S. population lives in small cities and rural areas where optical fiber is not going to be the cost-effective answer to fronthaul and backhaul demand. Network engineers are already seeing the challenges coming their way as 5G rolls out, and the time is right to discuss hybrid connectivity solutions that can close the business case.