Verizon Business and Amazon Web Services (AWS) will be
expanding their 5G collaboration to deliver private mobile edge computing (MEC)
to enterprise customers in the U.S who want a completely dedicated edge compute
infrastructure on-premise that enables ultra-low latency, higher levels of
security and deeper customization. The solution will
fully integrate Verizon's Private 5G networks and Private Edge platform
with AWS Outposts, a fully managed
service that offers the same AWS infrastructure, services, APIs, and tools to
virtually any datacenter, co-location space, or on-premises facility for a
truly consistent hybrid experience. Verizon enterprise customers can use
private MEC to quickly deploy real-time enterprise applications like
intelligent logistics, predictive maintenance, robotics, factory automation and
more to lower costs and improve safety, precision and efficiency. Corning Incorporated, a leading
materials science and advanced manufacturing innovator, will be the first
company to leverage this private MEC solution.
MEC running on private networks creates a secure, dedicated
computing platform within specific areas such as factories, warehouses, and
large business campuses. The platform supports unified connectivity, compute
and storage, without having the need for the customer to own extensive
networking and IT infrastructure. The new, fully managed private MEC solution
will support a wide range of industrial manufacturing applications, such as
autonomous mobile robots (AMRs), predictive maintenance, quality assurance, and
near real-time monitoring and hazard alerts. Verizon's Private 5G Edge platform
will give customers a reliable, secure, high bandwidth, low latency connection
to AWS services, APIs, and tools running on AWS Outposts. Additionally, two
smaller AWS Outposts - 1U and 2U form factors - will give customers options to
deploy AWS on-premises in space-constrained locations.
"Verizon's 5G is the platform for 21st century innovation
and customers are looking to rapidly innovate, improve performance, and create
new revenue streams," said Tami Erwin, CEO of Verizon Business. "Developers are
already creating new latency-dependent solutions that run on the Verizon/AWS
public MEC service launched last year. Our private MEC offering will
unlock that same potential for enterprise customers who need to maintain a
secure, closed environment in factories, warehouses and other facilities."
The Verizon and AWS edge computing collaboration began with
the launch of Verizon 5G Edge with AWS Wavelength. AWS Wavelength extends AWS
compute and storage services to the edge of Verizon's public mobile network and
provides seamless access to cloud services running in an AWS region. By doing
so, AWS Wavelength minimizes the latency and network hops required to connect
from a 5G device to an application hosted on AWS. Since August 2020, the
companies have announced the general availability of 5G mobile edge computing
via Wavelength Zones in 10 cities across the U.S.
"Private MEC is a natural expansion of our collaboration
with Verizon," said Dave Brown, Vice President Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2) at
AWS. "Customers are already leveraging AWS Wavelength's ability to provide
ultra-low latency access to end users for use cases like video distribution,
inference at the edge, AR/VR, and connected vehicles. Now, Private 5G MEC from
AWS and Verizon brings ultra-low latency to dedicated, closed, on-premises
environments for use cases such as autonomous mobile robots, quality assurance,
and hazard alerting."
Corning Tests Private MEC at Smart Factory
Verizon and AWS are working to integrate AWS Outposts with
Verizon's 5G private network to bring the private MEC platform to life for
Corning Inc. Already, Corning is exploring the benefits of 5G and private MEC
in Hickory, North Carolina, at one of the largest fiber-optic cable
manufacturing facilities in the world. Corning and Verizon are working
with Gestalt Robotics GmbH, a service provider for intelligent industrial
automation, to run highly scalable edge-services on AWS Outposts that provide
autonomous navigation and advanced environmental sensing "as a Service".
Gestalt Robotics' solutions make use of computer vision and machine learning
models to process sensor data received from autonomous mobile robots (AMRs),
then send commands to the AMRs over the ultra-low latency, high-throughput 5G
private network. The service can reduce the need for computing hardware and
battery capacity on the AMRs and enable near real-time interaction and a
closed-loop control of the vehicles delivering high-reliability production
services within the factory.
"We're living through one of the greatest communications
evolutions in history - and at the center of it all are optical networks. At
Corning, our vision is to accelerate the ways in which innovation improves
people's lives and brings the world closer together, which includes partnering
with industry leaders such as Verizon and AWS to make the promise of 5G a
reality," said Michael A. Bell, senior vice president and general manager of
Corning's Optical Communications business. "We believe 5G will revolutionize
the way people and companies interact with technology, and we're excited to
advance these developments in our own plant, where we manufacture the optical
cable needed to support the networks. Now, with Verizon's 5G network and mobile
edge computing solution using AWS Outposts, we're leveraging technologies like
autonomous mobile robots to demonstrate how manufacturers can increase
efficiency."
Watch this Corning video for more.