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KT, Verizon test world’s first 5G live hologram call

Two mobile carriers from South Korea and the US held the world’s first live hologram international call service via the companies’ fifth-generation networks on Monday, testing the future of the telecom service industry.

The demonstration came as the heads of the two companies -- KT CEO Hwang Chang-gyu met Verizon CEO Lowell McAdam -- held a meeting in Seoul to discuss ways to expand bilateral partnership on services under development including a live hologram video call.
Verizon CEO Lowell McAdam (left) and KT CEO Hwang Chang-gyu demonstrate a hologram video call via a tablet PC at the KT headquarters in Gwanghwamun, central Seoul, on Monday. (KT)
Verizon CEO Lowell McAdam (left) and KT CEO Hwang Chang-gyu demonstrate a hologram video call via a tablet PC at the KT headquarters in Gwanghwamun, central Seoul, on Monday. (KT)

In the demonstration, a KT employee held a meeting with a Verizon employee who appeared as a hologram image on a monitor in the KT headquarters building.

It was the world’s first successful end-to-end 5G network interworking, according to the two firms. Both 5G trial networks were deployed over a 28 GHz spectrum.

“The collaboration under the current partnership of Verizon and KT has been very productive as shown by the demos we have seen today,” McAdam said. “We will continue to work together to lead the global 5G business by developing innovative technologies and services.”

KT is developing the hologram live call as its flagship 5G-based immersive media services along with Sync View, 360-degree Live VR and Omni-View services that are being studied by the International Telecommunication Union.

Global cooperation on the 5G network is essential to enabling the hologram live service that requires high data rate, massive traffic volume and low latency on a worldwide scale, according to KT.

“If the 5G network is commercialized, 3-D hologram video calls will be available as one of the representative 5G-based services,” said a KT spokesperson. “Through a complete hologram video call, users will be able to meet a person in a remote area in a real size in real time.”

The two companies also tested interconnection of their orchestrators, a key system to control virtual infrastructure resources, based on the software defined infrastructure, known as SDI, for the first time. Both companies plan to jointly propose the specification of the orchestrators as an international standard.

According to market research institute SDxCentral, the related market size is expected to reach $105 billion in 2020.

KT’s Hwang said the two firms will elevate their cooperation from technical development to launching complete services.

“Neither one company nor one country alone can commercialize 5G by itself, let alone by 2019,” KT’s Hwang said. “Therefore, collaboration, like what we have with Verizon, is all the more important in order to establish the global 5G mobile ecosystem.”

The Verizon CEO also met with SK Telecom CEO Park Jung-ho on the same day and discussed partnerships on the standardization of 5G technologies, co-development of solutions for the 5G Automotive Association and the exchange of Internet of Things platforms.

Verizon and SKT will enhance collaboration particularly on 5G-based connected car technologies, the two firms said. They agreed to co-develop SKT’s vehicle to everything technologies, known as V2X technologies, and other telematics solutions.

“SKT will continue working with world-class telecom companies to move forward the standardization of 5G technologies,” said SKT’s Park.

Park is also set to meet with Tim Hoettgest, chairman of Deutsche Telekom, next Tuesday to talk about collaboration in the artificial intelligence business.

By Song Su-hyun (song@heraldcorp.com)
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