Picture a world where a single tap on your phone streams a 4K movie in seconds, connects a rural farm to global markets, or powers a smart city’s infrastructure—all happening seamlessly, right now in 2025. The U.S. telecommunications industry is the backbone of this hyper-connected reality, fueling
Tariffs are no longer just taxes; they are blunt instruments that have yanked two Nordic champions into America’s gravity well and forced an industry to reconsider where radios are designed, whose chips run the baseband, and how national security translates into supply contracts and factory floors.
Setting the Stage for a Connectivity Overhaul Imagine a drilling rig in the middle of the North Sea, isolated by miles of ocean, where a single communication delay could mean the difference between safety and disaster. This scenario underscores a critical challenge for offshore industries, where
In an era when changing mobile carriers is as easy as tapping an app yet as fraught as moving a household, the fiercest contest now plays out inside onboarding flows rather than cell towers, with speed, certainty, and reassurance deciding who wins and who churns. What was once a paper-and-store
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
Why Europe’s upper 6GHz pivot sets the stage for 6G A decisive split in the 6GHz band has become Europe’s quiet power move: most of the upper slice heads to licensed mobile while the lower half stays unlicensed, setting a new baseline for how 6G and Wi‑Fi will grow side by side across the region.