5G: A transformation in progress
Early 5G deployments are now under way, and general awareness of 5G is increasing. However, fully operational 5G networks that can support advanced business-transforming use cases are still under development.
Early 5G deployments are now under way, and general awareness of 5G is increasing. However, fully operational 5G networks that can support advanced business-transforming use cases are still under development.
The big themes that will emerge at CES 2019 are really like installments on broader business trends. We aim to separate the fact from fiction.
Samsung will be providing a sneak peek of its 2019 5G smartphone during CES this week, CEO HS Kim has said, with the tech giant also unveiling a series of robotic applications called Samsung Bot Care, Samsung Bot Air, Samsung Bot Retail, and Samsung Gems.
Japanese telco goes with Swedish and Finnish equipment manufacturers.
Sprint has used CES 2019 to unveil a small cell smart home product with LTE and Alexa integration, as well as confirming a Samsung 5G smartphone launching in the summer.
Telstra has announced multiple agreements to offer commercial 5G smartphones to customers in the first half of 2019.
Sprint is combining its Curiosity IoT platform and its 5G mobile network to power a smart city in South Carolina and an autonomous vehicle test track in Georgia, and to launch more precise mapping technology.
It doesn’t take an expert to assert that 5G will be a major theme of this year’s Las Vegas show. But will the 5G devices on display there soon need to be replaced with “real 5G” devices?
AT&T is working on hospital and stadium use cases for its newly launched 5G network, as well as announcing that it will be connecting Toyota and Lexus cars with LTE between 2019 and 2024.
5G connectivity will be "a quantum leap compared to 4G," Verizon CEO Hans Vestberg said during his CES keynote.