Imagine a world where a surgeon performs a life-saving operation remotely with zero lag, or a stadium full of fans streams live game highlights in perfect clarity without a hitch. This isn’t science fiction—it’s the promise of 5G Standalone (SA) technology, a game-changer in telecommunications.
A sharp shift is underway as hyperscale AI meets telecom at production scale, and Vodacom’s alliance with Google Cloud turns that shift into a concrete market test of whether cloud data platforms and generative AI can reset network economics across customer care and assurance. The partnership aims
Setting the stage: a promise made amid a shifting telecom landscape Public memory still lingers on a bold assurance from 2018, when T-Mobile sought Sprint’s assets and promised that the merged carrier would employ more people than the two companies did separately, a claim that ran against the grain
Picture a bustling airport terminal where every passenger, from hurried business travelers to families on vacation, expects instant access to high-speed internet for navigation, communication, or entertainment. This isn't a distant dream but a pressing reality driving a revolution in indoor
Imagine sitting down with Vladislav Zaimov, a seasoned telecommunications specialist whose career has been defined by a passion for enterprise connectivity and safeguarding vulnerable networks. With decades of experience, Vladislav has witnessed the evolution of broadband technology firsthand and
Telecom’s race toward a single “Network Foundation Model” and GPU-powered AI-RAN sounded bold because a unified AI brain and monetized edge silicon promised simplicity, speed, and new revenue, yet the pitch glossed over a stubborn truth about networks: plausible is not good enough when physical