Speaking in Chicago at the 4G World conference, ip.access founder and CTO Nick Johnson said: “Our nanoConverge solution will make small cell network planning, upgrade and roll-out easier and more economical for operators all over the world.
“What’s more, the nanoConverge solution will enable operators to make the most of existing infrastructure investments by allowing 2G, 3G and LTE small cells to be controlled and managed from a common platform – it represents true convergence of past, present and future small cell network roll-outs.”
Commenting on the announcement, Peter Jarich, Current Analysis’ Mobile Ecosystem service director, said, “Even operators and vendors who’d previously questioned the value of small cells now acknowledge their importance, not only for next generation networks but also to provide extra coverage and capacity for existing mobile networks. A common small cell core, addressing multiple radio access technologies plays to this importance by helping keep operational complexity and cost down.”
The initial nanoConverge solution provides an easy migration path allowing ip.access’ nanoGSM picocell customers to introduce 3G capabilities to their existing 2G small cell systems. It runs the nano3G Access Controller and IPsec gateway on a blade within the nanoGateway 200 platform (used for the Basestation Controller in existing nanoGSM picocell deployments), and supports up to 500 nano3G Access Points.
Complying with 3GPP’s Iuh and TR-069 small cell industry standards, nanoConverge is built using ip.access’ award-winning Oyster3G technology that is at the heart of the world’s largest femtocell roll-out – the AT&T 3G MicroCell in the USA, developed jointly by Cisco and ip.access.
Johnson confirmed that the nanoConverge solution would be entering operator trials next month, and said that full scale deployments would begin early next year.
Earlier this month, ip.access announced a new C-class residential femtocell to complement its existing range of office, enterprise and public access small cells – all of which use the Oyster 3G technology. As well as supplying the world’s largest femtocell roll-out, the company works with more than 60 mobile operators worldwide.