MWC Shanghai 2018 video wrap up
Telecoms.com roving reporter Jamie Davies delivers offers his take on MWC Shanghai, featuring an interview with Nokia’s Jane Rygaard.
Telecoms.com roving reporter Jamie Davies delivers offers his take on MWC Shanghai, featuring an interview with Nokia’s Jane Rygaard.
Buzzwords are nothing new to the telecoms and tech space, but 2018 is starting to see the rise of a few more; co-creation and collaboration
The US is going hard and heavy for the consumer side, while Asia readied itself for the wireless assault on enterprise. Europe dithered, without committing, and is now playing catch-up.
Ericsson, Qualcomm and Microsoft have all announced initiatives designed to move the whole internet of things thing along a bit.
While the US and Asia stream ahead in the race for 5G, European telcos are unsurprisingly sceptical over investments; could video be use case which operators are searching for to justify investments in the technology?
Mobile chip giant Qualcomm used the first day of Mobile World Congress Shanghai 2018 to launch new chips for smartphones and watches.
We are paraphrasing with the headline, but the message from Lui Aili, President of China Telecom was very simple; evolve from a consumer focused business or struggle.
Bemoaning regulators has become common place in the telecommunications industry, but that hasn’t stopped the GSMA having another dig at the world’s boresome bureaucrats.
The world’s two biggest smartphone vendors – Apple and Samsung – are close to joining the rest of the industry in a move to electronic SIMs, according to a report in the FT.
Mobile tech company Syniverse commissioned some research prior to MWC Asia to look into consumer attitudes to sponsored mobile usage in the region.
Over at MWC Shanghai this week, Korean operator SK Telecom has announced its intentions to collaborate with Intel on the development of 5G radio access tech.