All this is, of course, peering into technology deep space. Rollouts of 5G networks have been patchy, despite the promise of enterprise applications like the Internet of Things (IoT). The stepped-up data consumption from 4G networks is yet to materialise, which is likely to get a boost as 5G-Advanced standards are introduced. 6G is expected to build on that with a combination of artificial intelligence (AI) and sentient networks that could fuse the digital and physical worlds. Use cases include networks as small as 100 metres for cars that allow hundreds of sensors to communicate among themselves at sub-millisecond latency. 6G networks will be more energy-efficient, with architecture optimised for performance to increase spectrum productivity and provide security against cyberthreats.
India has made rapid strides in 4G data consumption and is making up for lost time with one of the world’s fastest 5G rollouts coinciding with new protocols that should encourage adoption. It needs to be ready to catch the next technology wave. One is 6G and counting.