Vodacom Central Region has switched on 5G mobile network in Mangaung Municipal District, with other municipal districts in the Free State and Northern Cape provinces to go live later this month.
The 5G network is currently available on five live 5G sites in Free State and supports both mobile and fixed wireless access services. Vodacom customers with 5G enabled devices, and within a 5G coverage area, are now able to access the new 5G network in Free State province.
In May 2020, Vodacom switched on South Africa’s first live 5G mobile network in three cities – Johannesburg, Pretoria, Cape Town. This network supports both mobile and fixed wireless services and is currently available in Gauteng, Western Cape, Limpopo, Mpumalanga and KwaZulu Natal Provinces.
To launch the 5G network in Free State, Vodacom used the temporary spectrum assigned by the Independent Communications Authority of South Africa (ICASA), specifically 1x50 MHz in the 3.5 GHz band. Vodacom has decided to use the 700 MHz band for wide scale mobile, 5G coverage and is supplementing network capacity with 3.5 GHz where required.
Evah Mthimunye, Managing Executive for Vodacom Central Region says: “We are pleased to bring 5G network footprint in Free State. This is part of phase one rollout and we are currently preparing for the second phase. The 5G network is going to play a vital role in accelerating digital transformation in various industries across the province. This is a demonstration of our commitment to invest in the latest networks to bridge the digital divide.”
Short for the ‘fifth generation’ wireless mobile network, 5G is the newest iteration of our global mobile networking standard. It promises much higher download and upload speeds, lower latency (the time it takes for a connected service to respond to your command) and far greater capacity, speed and increased coverage. 5G offers three major advantages:
Speed: 5G is around 10 times faster than 4G. It is designed to work at average speeds of 150-200Mbps, and peak speeds can reach above 1Gbps. This means people will be able to download a full 4K film in around 3 minutes (compared to over 15 minutes on 4G).
Low latency: latency is the time it takes for a device connected to an online service to respond to your inputs or instructions, otherwise known as lag. Reducing this time lag is crucial in making, say, virtual reality (VR) and augmented reality (AR) applications faster to respond.
Huge capacity: this just means that it can handle lots of people and services accessing the network at the same time, even in densely populated areas.
Given these advantages, here are some of the things 5G network can deliver:
High 4k and 8K video quality movies, cloud gaming, remote education and remote healthcare.
Download movies much faster and stream games without any interruptions.
Carry out remote surgery in near real time using robotic arms.
Benefit from AR guidance and training via smart glasses or car windscreens.
Help drones co-operate in emergency situations.
Enable smart city infrastructure (such as traffic lights) more efficiently.
Provide faster speeds and this increase in speed will allow IoT devices, including those with healthcare and industry applications, to communicate and share data faster than ever.
More 5G devices are expected to become accessible to South Africans in future. Already we are seeing the introduction of increasingly cost effective 5G enabled smartphones around the world, not just in the premium segment but also in the mid-tier segment.