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    Home5G & BeyondBest of 2014: Most read stories of the Year

    Best of 2014: Most read stories of the Year

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    The most read stories of 2014 showed the diversity of topics affecting the in-trays of operator executives across Europe. Readers’ most popular stories included areas including virtualisation, SIM card innovation, chipset manufacturing and Voice over LTE. 

    1. SDN, NFV field trials blossom this year, claims research

    The consensus among the mobile industry is that software defined networking and networking functions virtualisation is some years away from hitting the mobile industry mainstream.

    However, this did not stop research from Infonetics about how trials of the tech sharply rose in 2014 being the most popular story of the year.

    The research, which Mobile Europe first reported on in April, found the technology was increasingly moving from the lab into the field as operators became more comfortable with it.

    2. EE deploys Wi-Fi heat maps to track Asda customers

    Mobile payments had another mixed year, as operator excitement largely failed to be matched by consumer demand. Operators looked elsewhere to reap the potential of mobile devices in the retail sector, with EE’s use of heatmapping technology one of many examples.

    3. UK MVNO launches national roaming SIM card

    As the year drew to a close, attempts by the UK government to enforce widespread connectivity were greeted with horror by mobile operators. One MVNO capitalised on the controversy, issuing a new SIM card that enabled users to jump between the country’s four operators.

    4. Truphone awarded patent for new SIM identity switching tech

    In October, Truphone was awarded a patent for technology allowing SIM cards to automatically switch identity when they enter another country. 

    5. Access all areas: Inside EE’s VoLTE, VoWiFi test centre

    VoLTE became more popular as 2014 progressed, with operators announcing widespread implementation of the technology, or plans to trial it. Mobile Europe got a sneak peek of its plans when it visited its north London testbed.

    6. Qualcomm dominates smartphone chip and baseband tablet processor markets

    Qualcomm was one of many chipset makers vying for domination in consumers’ smart devices in 2014. Competition was rife as rivals pushed the envelope of technology into the LTE-Advanced era of 4G. However, Qualcomm was the one to beat, with research in February revealing it had sewn up more than half of the smartphone market.

    7. Acision launches white lavel OTT messaging service, diameter signalling product 

    OTT remained a big deal, with Facebook’s eyecatching acquisition of WhatsApp proving a nice piece of pre Mobile World Congress new. Acision revealed plans to help smaller players capitalise on the market, with a white label service launched this year.

    8. GSMA calls for calm amid 5G clamour

    One unusual critic of the tumult of 5G hype during the past 12 months was the industry body GSMA. It called for a reality check about exactly what the technology should do, amid a wave of marketing teams trying to beat each other with fresh benchmarks.

    9. EE admits to VoWi-Fi issues, still confident of 2014 launch

    While EE was excited about the potential of its voice over Wi-Fi and LTE technology, it later admitted to the difficulty of launching the former. However, the UK’s biggest operator, which was subject to a December takeover bid by BT, stressed it would launch the service by the end of 2014.

    10. Beacon technology behind Weve’s new loyalty scheme for retailers

    In February, UK joint venture Weve launched a new loyalty scheme for retailers. The joint venture between EE, O2 and Vodafone was an advocate of the potential of mobile phones for marketing and payment purposes, despite the services taking more time to catch on than hoped.