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    HomeNewsCars, IoT, LTE set to fuel diameter signalling growth, claims Oracle

    Cars, IoT, LTE set to fuel diameter signalling growth, claims Oracle

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    Connected cars, the cellular Internet of Things and LTE technologies will fuel the growth of diameter signalling in the coming years, a new report has claimed.

    Oracle’s sixth LTE Diameter Signalling Index found there were 214.6 million messages per second (MPS) generated last year by diameter signalling, which routes data across a network.

    This will grow at a compound annual growth rate of 22.6 percent before hitting 595 million MPS by 2021. Connected cars will be responsible for the sharpest increase in growth, creating 9.4 million MPS by the same date, a rise of 30 percent.

    However, LTE technologies will continue to be strong contributors. The report found LTE broadcast will have a CAGR of 23.1 percent before hitting 224.5 million MPS by 2021, almost 38 percent of total messages.

    [Read more: LTE Broadcast Alliance head laments branding, lack of handsets as tech fails to shine]

    While the report said new kinds of signalling protocols are likely to be developed to coincide with 5G, demand for diameter signalling will continue with smartphones accounting for an estimated 76 percent of all wireless connections by 2021. Oracle added cellular IoT standards, such as NB-IoT and LTE-M, will also help bolster diameter signalling traffic.

    Greg Collins, Founder and Principal Analyst, Exact Ventures, which wrote the report, said: “Diameter signalling traffic continues to grow significantly with little end in sight. While smartphones continue to be the traffic leader, applications such as connected cars and IoT promise a significant impact to network traffic in years to come.

    “Diameter signalling controllers continue to be vital network elements, which help enable operators to secure their network borders and to efficiently and effectively route signaling traffic.

    “As such, it is critical for CSPs to understand what’s driving traffic and where, enabling them to avoid signalling traffic issues than can cause network outages, thereby reducing customer satisfaction and increasing customer churn.”

    With 61 million MPS, Western Europe will trail behind Central and Southern Asia (62.4 million MPS) and Oceania, Eastern and South-Eastern Asia (265 million MPS) by 2021.