For decades, telecom base stations were locked ecosystems. A single vendor provided the proprietary hardware, firmware, and software. Enter O-RAN (Open Radio Access Network). It redefines the gNB (5G base station) by disaggregating it into three core units: the RU (Radio Unit) , the DU (Distributed Unit) , and the CU (Centralized Unit) .
Technical Insight: The critical interface is the Open Fronthaul between the RU and DU. Unlike traditional CPRI (Common Public Radio Interface) which requires high bandwidth for raw I/Q samples, O-RAN splits the physical layer. The DU handles low-PHY functions (FFT/iFFT), while the RU handles the radio frequency transmission. This reduces fiber requirements by roughly 66%, allowing operators to use generic servers for baseband processing.
Takeaway: By standardizing the communication protocol between these components, network operators can mix and match best-of-breed hardware, reducing vendor lock-in and lowering the total cost of ownership (TCO) for 5G densification.