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Rajen Vagadia, president of Qualcomm India & SAARC, told ET there was hardly any difference between SA and non-standalone (NSA) mode 5G smartphones. “It’s a software driven difference… we have around 50-60 million 5G smartphones in the market today. If an operator launches SA-based 5G, then the device will remain the same and it will require a software update.”
The comment follows
CEO Gopal Vittal‘s views that non-standalone 5G architecture – which Airtel will use to deliver 5G initially – has a more mature device ecosystem than those supporting SA mode.
“There is a possibility that if the chip is a little bit older – from 2020, then the OEM (handset maker) might not issue a software. But a good part of 50-60 million 5G devices can become SA devices,” Vagadia said.
The 5G NSA mode straddles existing 4G infrastructure such as mid-band spectrum (1800 MHz, 2100 MHz bands) with the 3300 MHz band, to offer 5G speeds. This mode is globally accepted as the necessary step before transitioning into a 5G standalone (SA) era where all infrastructure transmit only 5G signals.
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