Huawei
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Leon Wang, President of Huawei's Data Communication Product Line, shares Huawei's collaboration with world-leading carriers, leveraging its Xinghe Intelligent Network Solution.
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James Chen, president of the carrier business at Huawei, suggested the telecoms sector is set to be transformed by AI, with AI-augmented networks able to “unleash even more business value” compared to prior foundational technologies.
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Li Peng, Huawei’s corporate senior vice president and president of ICT sales & service suggested that AI will reshape the mobile industry, as IDC also predicts that AI-enabled smartphones will exceed 900 million units globally by 2028.
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At the 10th Ultra-Broadband Forum (UBBF 2024) in Istanbul last week, Bob Chen, president of Huawei’s optical business product line, emphasised the pivotal role of artificial intelligence (AI) in transforming the telecoms industry.
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At the 10th Ultra-Broadband Forum (UBBF 2024) in Istanbul, Türkiye, Huawei's executive director of the board and chairman of the ICT infrastructure managing board, David Wang, presented a keynote on the future of ultra-broadband (UBB) networks in shaping an "all intelligence" era.
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The 2024 Huawei Mobile Broadband Forum (MBBF) kicked off in Istanbul yesterday, with industry leaders gathering to discuss the future of mobile networks, artificial intelligence (AI), and digital transformation.
Forthcoming events
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Episode 13 of the weekly data and telco podcast
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Deutsche Telekom has avoided a clash with the German government by deciding to award Ericsson its contract for 5G network equipment.
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Episode 12 of the weekly data and telco podcast
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Orange is taking the first steps to move to open RAN in its African mobile networks, a step that will see the operators able to offer 4G and potentially 5G as well as older generations.
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The UK’s mobile operators have taken calmly yesterday’s announcement that it will be illegal to buy Huawei for 5G services after the end of the year.
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The US has won its battle to make the UK ban Huawei from new 5G networks, the government announced today.
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Huawei’s revenue growth rate fell from 23.2% to a modest, for the Chinese vendor, 13.1% in the first half of the year.
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Four UK government departments are considering moves to spend millions to enable some of the country’s surviving telecoms engineering talent to rebuild a manufacturing capability.
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Technology is going to become regionalised, but “that does not mean that a full splinternet is inevitable”, says a new report from Fitch Solutions.
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Huawei says it will take “months” to assess the impact of tightening restrictions on using chips designed with US patents.
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Nokia has announced that it plans to use open systems in its radio network – the first such move by a major vendor at a time when smaller equipment makers are putting their hopes in open ecosystems.
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The US is on the verge of winning its battle to persuade the UK to ban Huawei from its telecoms networks, says a former spy chief.