Ubiquisys, a company specializing in the deployment of 3G and LTE (News - Alert) intelligent small cells, has now reached the new milestone of deploying 50,000 public access small cells commercially by operators in several countries.


In addition, the company takes credit for completing the deployment of its new G7 indoor small cell hotspot with two operators in Asia that includes deployment in cafes, malls, transport hubs and office public spaces. This project involved deployment of ActiveCell technology in a very tough public environment.

"We are seeing rapid growth in demand for our public access small cells solutions, particularly in the demanding Asian market," said Will Franks, CTO and co-founder of Ubiquisys (News - Alert).

According to Franks, these deployment scenarios represent significant technical challenges, but their adaptive technology was designed to run in open-access mode from the outset.

“We've built a substantial base of public access small cell deployments over the past two years and this real-world experience led to the development of ActiveCell(TM) technology," Franks added.

ActiveCell works perfect with Ubiquisys' globally proven ActiveRadio and ActiveSON systems for small cell self-management and self-organizing clusters.

These exclusive combinations offers carrier grade symbiotic interworking with the macro network, in particular to manage interference effects, while retaining the advantages of simple installation and commodity IP backhaul. ActiveCell consists of groups of software-encapsulated techniques.

Ubiquisys officials say that the small cells running on ActiveCell technology are very cheap on operational costs and can also deal with the real-world requirements of mobile users in public spaces. They have been field proven to meet the demanding network performance metrics of the macro networks they complement.

The deployments help operators benefit from low operating costs and efficient use of spectrum assets, whilst mobile users experience dependable voice and high speed data services.




Edited by Brooke Neuman