BT and Nokia collaborate on live VR broadcasts over 5G

8 March 2017

BT and Nokia show off Virtual Reality

BT has announced that it is teaming up with Nokia to research the use of 5G to enable live virtual reality broadcasts.

5G promises to provide significantly higher bandwidth and lower latency than current 4G network standards, which will open up new possibilities for broadcasters looking to provide fully-immersive live entertainment.

In particular, such immersive VR broadcasts would work well in the realm of sport. Given that BT has just this week extended its rights to broadcast live Champions League football until 2021 at a cost of £1.2 billion, it’s easy to see why it might be interested in pushing the frontiers of sports broadcasting.

Best seat in the house

To this end, BT and Nokia teamed up at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona last week to show how 5G-type technologies could be used to transmit high-quality VR footage. Attendees were able to use VR headsets to watch a replay of the UEFA cup match between Tottenham Hotspur and CSK Moscow.

Viewers wearing VR headsets were able to experience being seated in a ‘virtual VIP box’ within the football stadium, granting them a uniquely immersive viewpoint from which to watch the match.

This high quality VR footage was captured using a Nokia OZO camera. First announced in July 2015, the OZO is a professional-grade 360-degree camera, featuring eight synchronised 2K x 2K camera lenses and accompanying directional microphones, all arranged evenly in a spherical housing.

The OZO is the first such camera to enable the real time monitoring of 360-degree footage capture, thus enabling the kind of professional live VR capture that BT is after.

Enter 5G

Of course, capturing such VR footage is one thing, but broadcasting that footage quickly and reliably is another. That’s where BT is hoping that 5G will come in. At MWC, Nokia was again on hand to provide the relevant technologies for the VR showcase.

In particular BT was able to rely on Nokia’s 5G FIRST solution, which includes Nokia Air Scale Massive MIMO adaptive antennas and Cloud-RAN implementations based around Nokia AirFrame, to transmit the football match over a super-fast wireless mobile network connection.

With BT’s acquisition of the UK’s biggest mobile operator, EE, in August 2016, the UK telecoms giant clearly sees 5G connectivity as a major component of its broadcasting ambitions. Thanks to Nokia’s pioneering VR camera and 5G technology, we can now get a glimpse at that future.

Howard Watson, CEO of BT Technology, Service & Operations, said: “5G and VR are both technologies with enormous potential. This exciting joint research with Nokia is allowing us to explore how they can work together to provide a transformative experience for our customers in the future. Drawing on the high bandwidths and low latencies of 5G will allow us to go beyond the already compelling VR experiences that are possible over 4G, and cater for more interactive future VR content which will place people right at the heart of the action.”

Have you read our guide: How Will 5G Boost VR and AR?

Image credit: Shutterstock

Technical Writer at 5G.co.uk

Jon has nine years experience of writing and editing copy for leading publications, as well as attending technology shows and events and conducting interviews. Currently working with 5G.co.uk, TechRadar, Trusted Reviews, T3, Digital Spy, What Mobile, Pocket Gamer, and The Gadget Show.

Ofcom’s next 5G spectrum auction could finally deliver on 5G’s full potential

Ofcom has laid out its plans for the auctioning of 26GHz and 40GHz mmWave 5G spectrum.

As seen on:
Washington Post logo
Financial Times logo
Guardian logo
BBC logo
Telegraph logo
Forbes logo