Tech firms bet optical networks will boost AI, 6G transition

Fast adoption of e-commerce, online streaming media, and workplace productivity tools — particularly during the Covid pandemic — has massive strain on current-day telecom networks.

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Some of the world’s largest tech firms are backing a new kind of telecoms network which they say will help reduce overall power consumption of data-hungry artificial intelligence applications and accelerate the transition to next-generation 6G mobile internet. 

The likes of Microsoft, Google, Intel, and Sony are supporting the little-known initiative referred to as the IOWN Global Forum, a worldwide collective of cloud hyperscalers, telecom groups, and chipmakers. 

These companies are aiming for the full deployment of a “all-photonic” network, or APN, by 2030.  

What are photonic networks? 

IOWN Global Forum is a global group aiming to develop technical standards for all-photonics networks. 

Dozens of major tech firms have signed up as backers. They include the likes of Microsoft and Google, which are behind two of the largest public cloud platforms. 

What’s the goal? 

The goal is to alleviate strain on current-day telecom networks, which is expected to worsen in the coming years amid continued growth in digital adoption and demand for AI — particularly generative AI. 

“Mobile traffic is growing more and more every day,” Katsuhiko Kawazoe, chair of the IOWN Global Forum, told CNBC via email. “There is a need to make efficient use of radio spectrum and of power.”

IOWN technology allows operators to optimize the use of spectrum and power in mobile networks in real time depending on the circumstances, Kawazoe added. 

For example, a major city may require more radio units during office hours than at night. Residential areas, however, will require more units to serve them during the evening, when workers return home. 

IOWN technologies will “allow us to power down for certain circumstances in the network,” Gonzalo Camarillo, head of implementation components at Ericsson and chair of the marketing steering committee at IOWN Global Forum, explained.

Reducing AI’s climate impact

Large language models, like the one behind OpenAI’s ChatGPT, require huge amounts of training data and powerful graphics chips called GPUs. But that comes at a great cost to the climate. 

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Masahisa Kawashima, IOWN technology director at NTT Corporation and chair of the technology working group at IOWN Global Forum, said photonic networks could make smaller data centers far more powerful.

“Data centers are becoming bigger and bigger, and hyperscale data centers are a struggle for societies’ carbon reductions,” Kawashima said.  

“Many data centers are too concentrated in a small area, and that’s causing a big energy demand for that area. But if we use IOWN APNs, we can have users deploy data centers over a wide area,” 

Each of the data centers on this network would resemble a “hyperscale” data center, even if it’s medium-sized, Kawashima said. Developers of AI models can use shared GPU infrastructure in smaller areas to develop their AI models. 

“AI has become the center of competition for many industries, including automotive and pharmaceuticals. Many enterprises are interested in operating their own GPU infrastructures,” Kawashima said. 

What will IOWN’s tech be used for? 

The IOWN Global Forum is exploring several use cases for photonic networks with its partners. One is for banks to use IOWN tech in their backend infrastructure.

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“Distributed computing is really possible, and soon it will be greener and more energy-efficient,” Katsutoshi Itoh, head of connectivity technologies at Sony’s research and development center, told CNBC.

It could help 6G transition, too 

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