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Tuesday, March 15, 2022

AWS serves up a soup-to-nuts menu of its 5G Dish Network platform - TelecomTV

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In the final feverish hours before MWC22 opened its doors to the global mobile networking community, about 60,000 of whom decamped to Barcelona for the best part of a week, Amazon Web Services (AWS) decided it was time to share some details about how it is underpinning one of the most compelling developments of recent years – the build-out and launch of Dish Network’s Open RAN-based greenfield 5G network in the US.

On Sunday 27 February, AWS posted a blog titled ‘Telco Meets AWS Cloud: Deploying DISH’s 5G Network in AWS Cloud’ that is attributed equally to five network architects and engineers, including Ammar Latif, Senior Telecom Solutions Architect at AWS, and Ash Khamas, principal 5G solutions architect for DISH Wireless. (Thanks to Mike Dano at Light Reading for bringing the blog to my attention.) 

The blog essentially details how AWS has planned and built out the distributed cloud hosting platform for Dish’s 5G radio access and core network functions since landing the deal in April last year to help Dish deliver the ground-breaking national, Open RAN-based 5G service in the US. 

The blog makes for a great read, even for those of us who don’t really understand much of it. What it does do, though, is lay out and show exactly how the theory so often shared by many in the cloud native networking sector during the past few years is being put into practise, and the impact it has on how the network runs, because this is a long way from the traditional mobile network set-up. 

It outlines the overall supporting cloud architecture, how the various types of data centre assets are used to support various levels of functionality, and how the national AWS platform across the US will be used by Dish: For example, AWS Breakout Edge Data Centers (BEDCs) are deployed in AWS Local Zones and are used to host ‘5G NFs [network functions] that have strict latency budgets... [and] also provide Internet peering for general 5G data service and enterprise customer-specific private network service.” The BEDCs also host the centralized unit (CU) element of the Open RAN architecture and the User Plane Function (UPF) that “anchors user data sessions and routes to the internet. The BEDCs leverage local internet access available in AWS Local Zones, which allows for a better user experience while optimizing network traffic utilization. This type of edge capability also enables DISH enterprise customers and end-users (gamers, streaming media and other applications) to take full advantage of 5G speeds with minimal latency. DISH has access to 16 Local Zones across the U.S. and is continuing to expand.” 

The blog’s authors also provide details on cloud zone redundancy, core connectivity, deployment automation, CI/CD security and more. And in one of the few comparison elements to the blog, the authors note that the AWS platform delivers, on average, an 80% reduction in cloud native function (CNF) deployment and update time “when compared with traditional deployment models (days to minutes).” 

(Sidebar note: What the blog’s authors don’t delve into overall is how the work of the past year or so compares to what would have needed to be done using ‘traditional’ network technology and associated operations. But that comparison, from a cost perspective, spring to mind because that is a point hammered home time and time again, including at MWC22, by Tareq Amin, who led the build of Japan’s greenfield 4G/5G network at Rakuten Mobile. That architecture is not underpinned by a public cloud giant – it runs on Rakuten’s own cloud platform, which it is lucky enough to have courtesy of the Rakuten Group’s extensive digital activities – but Amin stresses time and time again that any attempt to build a new, greenfield 4G or 5G network the ’traditional’ way and hope to be on time and financially competitive would be impossible – the numbers simply don’t stack up. This is also what has driven 1&1 in Germany to take a cloud-oriented and Open RAN approach to its planned greenfield network. But what is the total cost of building and running any of these networks and how would that have compared using an alternative deployment strategy over the lifetime of a network and service delivery? That’s the multi-billion dollar question to which we will never have the definitive answer...)

Of course, the whole blog is positive about the design, functionality and capabilities – caveats, doubts, pitfalls and nightmare scenarios are not to be found. But it’s a great insight into the thinking behind and planning of what is currently the most anticipated 5G launch in the telecoms industry.

And this, perhaps, is the most important point of all, at this stage... the Dish 5G service is yet to launch – in fact, it is now long delayed, with the initial commercial service launch due to have started in Las Vegas on any number of occasions last year. Of course, Dish is not going to launch until it is confident it has a knockout service with which to emerge and take on the US mobile incumbents, because AT&T, T-Mobile US and Verizon are ready and waiting to give Dish a rough ride, and a report from last December suggested there was still a lot of work to be done in the Nevada launch market. 

But Dish doesn’t have that much time to get up and running: It currently doesn’t have any commercial service, and only has until June to meet its licence obligation to cover 20% of the US population with its 5G service, a target that rises to 70% population coverage only a year later. 

Can the AWS-based approach help it with a much speedier roll-out than could previously have been imagined? We’ll find out during the next three months.

- Ray Le Maistre, Editorial Director, TelecomTV

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"dish" - Google News
March 15, 2022 at 10:27PM
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AWS serves up a soup-to-nuts menu of its 5G Dish Network platform - TelecomTV
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What channel is truTV? How to watch 2022 NCAA Tournament games on DirecTV, Dish, Spectrum & more - Sporting News

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It's truTV season.

Actually, it's time for March Madness. But, because of Turner Sports' considerable coverage of the NCAA Tournament, it's also time for cable subscribers and streamers to find out where they can watch the Turner TV station, which carries a not-insignificant number of tournament games in 2022.

This year, truTV will carry 13 games alongside TNT (12) and TBS (21). Combined, the three TV stations will show 46 of 67 NCAA Tournament games (if you include the First Four), compared to CBS' 21. All the more reason for a refresher on where you can find it, regardless of cable or streaming service.

With that, The Sporting News has everything you need to find truTV, the reality TV station-turned-NCAA Tournament broadcaster:

TSN's MARCH MADNESS HQ
Live NCAA bracket | TV schedule | Predictor tool

What channel is truTV?

The NCAA in April 2010 reached a 14-year, $10.8 billion deal with CBS and Turner Broadcasting Systems to give both networks broadcasting rights to the tournament (a deal that now extends through 2032).

Here's what that means for college basketball fans: Turner Sports — a subsidiary of WarnerMedia's entertainment division — will broadcast the majority of the NCAA Tournament on one of three stations: TBS, TNT and, of course, truTV.

Below is where you can find the latter of those three channels:

Provider Channel (SD/HD)
AT&T UVerse 164/1164
Verizon FIOS 183/683
DISH Network 242
DirecTV 246
Spectrum Varies by location (area code search)
Xfinity Varies by location (area code search)

MORE: Watch select March Madness games with Sling TV (free trial)

How to live stream March Madness games for free online

Cord-cutters can stream the NCAA Tournament for free online at NCAA March Madness Live. Other options include Sling TV (which offers a free trial) and several other dedicated streaming sites.

Below is a full rundown (not every option includes Turner Sports channels):

Streaming option Cable subscription needed? Free? Cost Free trial?
Paramount+ No No $11.99/month Yes
NCAA March Madness live No Yes
fuboTV No No $64.99/month Yes
DirectTV Stream No No $69.99/month No
Hulu Plus Live TV No No $69.99/month Yes
YouTube TV No No $64.99/month Yes
Sling TV No No $35/month Yes

When does March Madness start in 2022?

  • Date: Tuesday, March 15
  • Time: TBD

March Madness technically starts with the First Four games on Tuesday, March 15, which will set the final 64-team field. March Madness proper begins with Round 1 on Thursday, March 17. It concludes with the national championship game on April 4.

Round Dates
First Four March 15-16
Round 1 March 17-18
Round 2 March 19-20
Sweet 16 March 24-25
Elite Eight March 26-27
Final Four April 2
National championship April 4

MORE: Print your 2022 March Madness bracket here

NCAA Tournament games on truTV

TruTV is tentatively scheduled to broadcast 13 NCAA Tournament games — twi more than last year — from the First Four through the second round. The per-round breakdown has yet to be released.

First Four

Tuesday, March 15

Game Time (ET) TV
No. 16 Texas Southern vs. No. 16 Texas A&M-Corpus Christi 6:40 p.m. truTV, Sling TV
No. 12 Wyoming vs. No. 12 Indiana 9:10 p.m. truTV, Sling TV

Wednesday, March 16

Game Time (ET) TV
No. 16 Wright State vs. No. 16 Bryant 6:40 p.m. truTV, Sling TV
No. 11 Rutgers vs. No. 11 Notre Dame 9:10 p.m. truTV, Sling TV

Round 1

Thursday, March 17

Game Time (ET) TV
No. 4 Providence vs. No. 13 South Dakota State 12:40 p.m. truTV, Sling TV
No. 5 Iowa vs. No. 12 Richmond 3:10 p.m. truTV, Sling TV
No. 8 San Diego State vs. No. 9 Creighton 7:27 p.m. truTV, Sling TV
No. 1 Kansas vs. No. 16 Texas Southern/Texas A&M-Corpus Christi 9:57 p.m. truTV, Sling TV

Friday, March 18

Game Time (ET) TV
No. 2 Auburn vs. No. 15 Jacksonville State 12:40 p.m. truTV, Sling TV
No. 7 USC vs. No. 10 Miami 3:10 p.m. truTV, Sling TV
No. 1 Arizona vs. No. 16 Bryant/Wright State 7:27 p.m. truTV, Sling TV
No. 8 Seton Hall vs. No. 9 TCU 9:57 p.m. truTV, Sling TV

Round 2

Round 2 times will be released following the completion of Round 1 on Friday.

Saturday, March 19

Game Time (ET) TV
TBD TBD TBD

Sunday, March 20

Game Time (ET) TV
TBD TBD TBD

We may earn an affiliate commission when you sign up for a streaming service through our links. The Sporting News' affiliates have no influence over the editorial content included in this article.

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"dish" - Google News
March 15, 2022 at 06:59PM
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What channel is truTV? How to watch 2022 NCAA Tournament games on DirecTV, Dish, Spectrum & more - Sporting News
"dish" - Google News
https://ift.tt/FRg6UdM

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