Q&A with Joe Hou of Huawei and board member of OPEN-O
OPEN-O is an open source unified orchestrator project for telecoms virtualization launched at Mobile World Congress 2016 by the Linux Foundation.
OPEN-O is an open source unified orchestrator project for telecoms virtualization launched at Mobile World Congress 2016 by the Linux Foundation.
The automotive industry has let out a collective sigh of relief as the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration confirms Tesla’s self-driving cars are safe.
IBM has reported another consecutive quarter of decline, but fortunes in the cloud hint it might not be long before Big Blue sorts itself out.
With the growth of artificial intelligence, the fears of many have started to become a reality as jobs start falling to the machines.
Intel has continued its ride on the ever-growing IoT wave, as it announced a new platform to introduce the technology to the world of retail.
ETSI has launched a new Industry Specification Group which will focus on the development of IoT for smart cities applications and beyond.
Research from Gartner has estimated more than 40% of data science tasks will be automated by 2020, highlighting the ambitions of AI.
In another example of glacial bureaucracy, a committee from the European Parliament has written a report which recommends a meeting about robots and AI.
LinkedIn founder Reid Hoffman is one of a host of investors banking rolling a new initiative to develop ethics and governance standards for artificial intelligence.
At long-last the European Commission (hereafter known as the Gaggle of Red-tapers) has outlined its plan to address the regulatory imbalance between telcos and OTTs in Europe.
A series of Nvidia announcements around AI and connected cars at CES underpin a ludicrous 12 months, in which its share value has surged by more than 200%.
Among the monstrous number of announcements to come out of CES this week a major battle is emerging in the smart home arena.
The Week In Wireless gang is back for 2017 with another special episode featuring all of your favourites. Tim, Jamie, Scott, Mary, Richard, Alex and Henry all return to the podcast studio to forecast the biggest trends we can all expect in telecoms and technology across the coming 12 months. Will Nokia and Ericsson right 2016’s wrongs and renew the three-way battle with Huawei? Will anyone find a proper use for wearable? Will Mary go off on another rant? Will Tim ever get over his laryngitis?!
This episode was recorded immediately after the festivities of The Christmas Special – we’ll let you draw your own conclusions.
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Accenture has released new research which indicates the impatient and increasingly demanding digital consumer is driving artificial intelligence adoption.
The human race thought it had a bit longer, but the end is in sight. Or at least it is in Japan, where IBM’s Watson has started taking our jobs in the insurance sector.
It’s the first week of a new year and that can mean only one thing, another CES is just around the corner – here we have a look at what we can expect from the world’s biggest consumer tech event.
Telecoms.com partnered with mobile industry consultancy Northstream to bring you ten predictions for the telecoms industry in the coming year.
While 2016 proved to be a solid year for incremental advancements in 5G, IoT and cloud computing, 2017 is set to be a big year for a number of breakthrough technologies.
It’s Christmas time and the Week in Wireless gang is here with your favourite guests from 2016. Mary Clark, Richard Fogg, Henry Burrell and Alex Wood join Tim, Scott and Jamie to go over everything the last twelve months brought us.
Full of festive cheer, Christmas dinner and lovely lovely beer, the gang reflect on the highs, the lows and the hilarious of 2016. So pour yourself a glass of sherry, sit down by the fire, get comfortable and let A Week In Wireless guide you through the year that was.
Software giant Microsoft has continued its diversification drive with the launch of a bunch of clever things loosely grouped into the artificial intelligence silo.