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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Huawei is leading Samsung by six to four in the launch of 5G handsets and other terminal devices, with three other companies launching two devices each.
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Operators face a complexity challenge as they introduce new 5G services. At Huawei’s consulting and service solution sales department, president Steven Wu explains how the company is helping this huge transformation. Interview sponsored by Huawei
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Nine leading technology companies – two Chinese and seven from the US – have set up a new group designed to improve performance of data centres.
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Reports from Tehran suggest that Iran is looking to privatise its telecoms infrastructure company and introduce competition.
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Excluding Huawei from the UK’s 5G infrastructure would be “massively disruptive” to Vodafone UK’s plans to move on to the next generation of mobile technology.
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Huawei has started its battle for survival by challenging the US government under the terms of the US constitution.
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Seven telecoms equipment makers are responsible for 80% of worldwide sales to service providers, with Huawei well ahead of all the others.
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In a dramatic escalation of the fight between Huawei and the US, the Chinese vendor is about to sue the US government.
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Kenya’s Safaricom is to upgrade its 100Gbps fibre backbone to 400Gbps, to cater for the increasing amount of video being transmitted over the network.
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Indonesian operator XL Axiata says is it building the first transport network in south-east Asia that is ready for 5G services.
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Swiss operator Sunrise is to buy Liberty Global’s cable operation in the country for the equivalent of €5.5 billion.
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Huawei’s chairman Guo Peng has accused the US of spying on the world – and says that’s why the US wants to block Huawei telecoms kit.