Nokia is hogging the limelight this week. Hot on the heels of announcing its CEO's departure, the vendor coughed up a trio of fixed access portfolio additions that will help to strengthen one of the units that will likely come under scrutiny when new CEO Pekka Lundmark takes over in September. (See The long goodbye: Nokia in limbo as Suri steps down as CEO.)
The three new products are:
More details about these product additions, replete with marketing hyperbole, can be found in the Nokia press release right here. (See Nokia adds to its access portfolio.)
Nokia is (sometimes overly) keen to stress the role these products can play in an operator's 5G strategy, as one of its key propositions is its ability to deliver an integrated set of network products, from optical backbone all the way to the customer's premises and, increasingly important, inside those walls: That differentiates it from Ericsson, which largely relies on partners beyond its core expertise of the radio access network.
And there's little doubt that operators are keen to abandon the days of multiple access networks and use a single infrastructure for residential and enterprise broadband services as well as 'anyhaul' applications for shunting 4G and 5G data traffic: That's where support for software-defined capacity management comes in with the Lightspan MF node, as an operator can reserve a "network slice" over the access network that is dedicated to 5G transport traffic, for example.
These products would have been unveiled at Mobile World Congress, hence the heavy emphasis on the 5G messaging for non-cellular network elements. Now Nokia just needs to prove their worth to the operator community and help to bring its fixed access unit back into growth mode after its sales dipped by 5% year-on-year in 2019 to €1.88 billion (US$2 billion).
— Ray Le Maistre, Editor-in-Chief, Light Reading, special to Broadband World News