AT&T doubling down on 5G Flying COW, robot dogs
Deploying 5G is challenging. AT&T is investing in novel ways to do it cheaply and quickly.
Deploying 5G is challenging. AT&T is investing in novel ways to do it cheaply and quickly.
As carriers wind down their 3G networks, they close the door on a network that laid the foundation for many of today's most popular wireless services. Compared to 5G, it was an easy sell.
Carriers want to use open architectures to build cloud-native and 5G services, but putting all the pieces together isn't that simple. Dell is rolling out a series of new tools to help make it happen.
Qualcomm's Flight RB5 5G Platform aims to accelerate development for commercial, enterprise and industrial drones as well as edge computing.
Samsung has been selected as a vendor of vRAN and 5G solutions by Vodafone - its first 5G network kit supply deal with a major European mobile operator.
The partnership will initially focus on health care, energy and aviation use cases.
There's the ultra-high-speed Verizon advertises, which is available only in a few urban spaces, and then there's Verizon's 5G-speed Dynamic Spectrum Sharing 5G, which is available almost everywhere.
While labelled a merger of equals, in accounting terms, Vodafone is swallowing up TPG while simultaneously bringing a ton of baggage and discarding another ton on its current owners.
With the US playing catch-up in a capitalism game it may have already lost, a “game-changing” opportunity arises: one that could reset the rules to the US’ advantage. If only its leaders don’t muck it up first.
Despite some countries' reservations about Huawei, Greece is busy running 5G projects with the Chinese giant.