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Noovle becomes TIM’s first ‘public benefit’ company

Noovle is TIM’s cloud and edge services company.

TIM says Noovle reflects the corporate goal of operateing in an increasingly sustainable and transparent way regarding its green policies.

Noovle’s data centre network uses the most advanced technological and security standards in line with international best practices (LEED Gold), according to TIM, to win its Benefit Company status.

The cloud company makes efficient use of space, has reduced energy consumption and pays particular attention to the materials used and has adopted circular economy models to “regenerate” servers and equipment to lengthen their useful life.

Feeling the benefit

Benefit companies were introduced in Italy in 2016 to identify companies that pursue specific purposes for common benefit, with the aim of generating value for citizens, businesses and manufacturing companies in the country.

To maintain its status, Noovle undertakes to publish annual sustainability results, through an Impact Report, measuring the social and environmental benefits it provided with the aim of becoming a reference model.

Furthermore, the company envisages progressing towards a zero-greenhouse gas emissions economy, in line with the European objectives of climate neutrality and the national objectives of ecological transition.

 
 
 
 

5G eBook – Fundamentals, procedures, testing aspects

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Sparkle and Google collaborate to build Blue and Raman submarine cables

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Blue will connect Italy, France, Greece and Israel; Raman will connect Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Djibouti, Oman and India.

Sparkle will collaborate with Google and others to build Blue and Raman Submarine Cable Systems. Each cable system will be equipped with 16 fibre pairs designed to support multiple fibre tenants, and open landing stations for competitive access to the cable termination points.

This, according to Sparkle, means the two systems set a new reference in terms of diversification, scalability and latency throughout these geographies.

Route less taken

Blue will be deployed along a new northbound route in the Mediterranean, crossing the Strait of Messina, rather than following the usual route through Sicily Channel.


Within the Blue system, the BlueMed submarine cable is now Sparkle’s own private domain, sharing its wet components with four additional fibre pairs and an initial design capacity of more than 25Tbps per fibre pair.

It is extended up to Jordan (Aqaba) with additional private branches into France (Corsica), Greece (Chania – Crete), Italy (Golfo Aranci – Sardinia and Rome), Algeria, Tunisia, Libya, Turkey and Cyprus. More are to be added in future.

BlueMed’s design allows both express connections throughout the Mediterranean Basin, “with unprecedented latency and spectral efficiency, and sophisticated regional subsystems, based on specific customer requirements”.

Diversified entry into Europe

Sparkle’s Genoa Open Landing Platform is set to become the alternative priority access for other upcoming submarine cables looking for a diversified entry to Europe, backhauled to Milan’s digital marketplace, providing a new reference gateway between Africa, the Middle East, Asia and Europe.

Blue and Raman are expected to be ready for service in 2024, with the Tyrrhenian part of BlueMed planned to be operational in 2022.

“We are extremely proud to bring our collaboration with Google to the next level with this cutting-edge intercontinental infrastructure”, comments Elisabetta Romano, CEO of Sparkle (pictured).

“With Blue and Raman Submarine Cable Systems, Sparkle boosts its capabilities in the strategic routes between Asia, Middle East and Europe and the enhanced BlueMed  strengthens our presence in the greater Mediterranean area”.
 

 

Vodafone Spain’s CTO to leave as operator implements new group-wide tech structure

Vodafone Spain is restructuring its tech division in line with group strategy. Reports says Ismael Asenjo decided to leave.

The restructuring in Vodafone Spain’s tech division is in line with the strategy announced by the operator group in January, whereby it is splitting responsibilities into Networks and IT/Digital.

Every operating company in the group will have a director responsible for each function, reporting into two group executives: Scott Petty, Director of Digital & IT; and Alberto Ripepi, Networks Director.
 
Spain’s current CTO, Ismael Asenjo (pictured), reports directly to Vodafone Spain’s CEO, Colman Deegan. Asenjo has been with the company in various roles has been for more than 20 years, and it was his decision to leave the company, according to La Información.

Famous for 5G

He has had a high profile due to Vodafone Spain’s starting trials of 5G NSA in 2018, way ahead of the company’s two larger rivals, Telefónica and Orange.
 
5G helped Vodafone Spain staunch high churn rates after it stopped broadcasting football on its pay TV, enabling the operator to 5G to offer the first unlimited data rates in Spain.
 
At the other end of the market, its low-end brand, Lowi, has grown rapidly too.

Restructuring

The 1,000 strong department he has led will be restructured, with the role of CTO becoming obsolete, broken down into two functions – Network and IT systems, as has already happened in some countries such as the UK.
 
Ismael Asenjo is the first exec at his level to leave Vodafone Spain since Deegan was drafted in from Vodafone Turkey to replace the incumbent CEO, Antonio Coimbra.
 
Deegan’s background in M&A sparked speculation and earlier this year Vodafone Spain started takeover negotiations with Spain’s smallest national operator, MásMóvil, which came to nothing.

MásMóvil is currently preoccupied with its intended takeover of Euskaltel, the regional operator for the Basque country, the autonomous community is northern Spain.

Operators start their long ascent to the cloud

Less than a quarter of telcos run applications in the cloud, but they are finally readying themselves for the trek, Nick Booth finds.

There is a consensus that all applications will eventually go to the cloud (or be retired), but as Mark Newman, Chief Analyst at TM Forum, observes, the telecoms industry is among the last to start the journey. Even notoriously late adopters like the security and government sectors have taken to the cloud quicker.

So why are telcos lagging? One factor is that they are too big to make changes fast: “This space is dominated by an oligopoly of multi-nationals with multi-billion revenues,” says Newman.

Small successes

In the meantime, some smaller telcos have had great success in migrating applications to the cloud. For example, Ucell Uzbekistan started its migration four years ago with the help of ZephyrTel, a specialist in public cloud software for telcos.

Ucell’s first step into the cloud was a customer experience management app, ResponseTek. Customer feedback might not be seen as mission critical, but it certainly gives operators instant information about what customers are experiencing.

It provides important input into operators’ efforts to shape experiences, services and processes through in-depth and in-context insights.

These improvements can be used to build other, possibly weightier, automated responses that could also lower running costs. “We’re continually developing our offerings to revolutionise the cost equation for the industry,” says Michael Speranza, CEO at ZephyrTel.

The international mobile virtual network operator (MVNO) Truphone has also shown how costs can be slashed by migrating applications to the cloud. It moved its real-time charging to the Google Cloud Platform (GCP) and was able to replace 5,000 manual tests with 200 automatic jobs.

This eliminated CapEx and shrank the total cost of ownership by 60%. Truphone claims its public cloud database is ten times cheaper and faster than Oracle’s.

Larger players

Larger players, however, face multiple difficulties in preparing for and making the move to the cloud. For one thing, telcos are not, for example, enjoying injections of venture capital to tackle the issues on the scale that the financial sector is.

Many, including Speranza, argue that, “Invention should come from within,” but critics say many operators wasted a lot of time, money and internal resources on the wrong things, like trying to become content providers.

Examples include AT&T in the US, which, after four eye-wateringly expensive attempts over the last four decades to become a content provider, has landed pretty much back where it started – providing connectivity – but is now lagging behind its rivals in 5G build-out.

On this side of the Atlantic, after its 2012 decision to invest in expensive football broadcast rights, which didn’t bring the expected returns, instead of infrastructure, BT is still scrambling to lift the UK from having one of the lowest fibre penetration rates in Europe.

Telecoms analyst Dean Bubley comments, “Instead of chasing the likes of Netflix et al, they should have invested in R&D, systems integration capabilities or partnerships.” He adds that had the money been spent on B2B specialisms – that will be supported by 5G and OpenRAN – for specific sectors, it would have made the public cloud “a friendlier place” for operators.

Where are we?

A few pioneers aside, where are operators on their cloud journey? On a scale of one to 10, they are at about 2.5 says Speranza, suggesting that they lack the leadership to take the bold, aggressive steps.

Still, the journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step and, according to Speranza, the first step involves moving applications, while the last will be shifting network operations to the cloud, because, among other things, there’s a question about the public cloud’s real-time response times. “There’s a prove-it-to-me mindset on the networks,” he says, which is not surprising given the decades of the network engineering five-nines ethos.

System resilience, fault tolerance, disaster recovery and scalability are the key functions that most need redesigning for the cloud, but they are stumbling blocks too, according to Speranza, because communications service providers (CSPs) implement technology in outmoded ways. “The way they deploy servers reminds me of how apps I wrote 20 years ago addressed the machinery,” he says.

Saving money

Cost savings are a big driver though: historically operators duplicated everything they bought for the sake of resilience – hardware, software, management capabilities and entire data centres that largely stood idle as redundancy fall-backs. There are huge, obvious savings to be made by using the cloud model to avoid duplication without sacrificing resilience.

Human redundancies are another hurdle, particularly in Europe, where operators are often seen as part of the state (and indeed in many countries the government holds a so-called golden share) and workers’ rights in some countries are better protected than elsewhere else in the world.

CSPs tend to employ large, dedicated teams to run technical and manual tasks. As higher levels of automation are enabled, in part by the shift to cloud, they are no longer needed. There is the cost of laying people off or finding them new jobs: Three UK cut 67% of IT jobs and 33% of IT costs with its early move to the cloud in the shape of Microsoft Azure.

Financially, these heavy costs are somewhat offset by massive savings on licences. CSPs’ private clouds spend staggering amounts of money on software licences that are available for “pennies” with the public cloud, Speranza claims.

For instance, Vodafone Italy uses five different AWS services with personally identifiable information (PII data) to scale its subscriber top-up services securely and elastically. In doing so it has cut CapEx by 30%.

BSS OK, OSS not so much yet

The jury is split on the issue of business and operations support systems (BSS/OSS). Customer-facing BSS were among the first things telcos moved to the cloud, but the OSS that monitor, analyse and control the services on the network are a different matter.

The OSS need instant response times, not the near real-time typically provided by public cloud, which is good enough for most BSS applications, says Speranza.

However, response times in the public cloud can improve, through putting resources at the edge of the network. South Korea’s SK Telecom uses AWS Wavelength and cut latency by 60%, to 1ms. The operator is using this super low latency to support robot deliveries, autonomous driving, cloud gaming and healthcare.

In June, Vodafone UK announced it too would use AWS Wavelength to offer what it says are the first multi-access computing (MEC) services in Europe.

Danielle Royston, who heads the Texas-based ‘public cloud evangelist’ Telco DR also believes the flywheel is starting to turn. CSPs have spent millions on big data centres to run their own applications and workloads, becoming proxy cloud providers whose efforts were spectacularly eclipsed by the public cloud hyperscalers – AWS, Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud.

All in or don’t bother

CSPs are recognising that they need to move to the public cloud, rather than sticking with what Royston calls the “fake cloud”. She argues that all the CSPs’ problems can be understood, addressed and solved by public cloud, but the plug and play benefits of public cloud cannot be realised if CSPs decide to become cloud native and adapt their IT systems to run in public and private environments.

This is because, Royston says, they will not be able to just plug into the predefined services that public cloud providers offer.

She stresses, “You are not just parking your apps, this is your chance to rethink your entire IT and network model, top to bottom… You can refactor it and get leaner code and use technologies. The move to the public cloud will require CSPs to be ‘all in’.”

DISH Network, the US wireless and data service provider, exemplifies the rewards for making this leap of faith. As part of the regulatory remedies around the Sprint-T-Mobile merger last year, DISH is set to become the fourth national mobile network. Like Japan’s Rakuten Mobile, it is building a 5G network from scratch, rather than gradually upgrading existing infrastructure.

“DISH set the agenda by going all-in on AWS infrastructure. It’s not just the BSS, it’s the entire network: RAN and core. If you’re a CSP still deploying on-premise, your five-year CapEx decision is doomed to be a write-off the day you make it,” says Royston.

Smoothing the path

VMware reckons the operators’ path was made easier by the recent launch of its VMware Telco Cloud Platform RAN (VTCPR). The platform promises to create a modern, open and disaggregated radio access network, with virtualised RAN functions.

The implication is that launching off this platform will be easier than reading out its name. VMWare says this platform gives CSPs their best shot at creating 5G services that people will actually pay for, says Sanjay Uppal, GM of VMware’s Service Provider and Edge division.

Many new services enabled specifically by 5G can only work if the operator can host apps at the edge, close to the customers, rather than the old-school centralised network communications hardware.

However, the modern generation of software functions that used to run have been separated from the hardware and have travelled to all parts of the cloud, residing close to the devices that need them.

VMware says its VTCPR liberates those RAN functions from the metal boxes that house the original, tightly integrated RANs, so RANs now have virtual network functions (VNFs) and containerised network functions (CNFs). Being small, quick and versatile, they fit almost anywhere and can be aggregated to any size.

VMware claims the combination of MEC and network slicing will run faster and help CSPs cater for the needs of different industries and verticals.

Network security

Keeping networks safe in a virtual, open world will be crucial. In any migration, there are always casualties, as the exposure of the vulnerable attracts predators. The evolving CSP will have multitudes of new vRAN sites and devices connecting to the RAN that potentially provide a target for the service deniers and the ransom demanders.

VTCP tackles the security challenge by creating and pushing out consistent security policies to all its RAN sites. This approach is designed to reduce configuration errors and prevent changes from creating new risks, and, as a precaution, each vRAN function is isolated within the virtualisation layer, separating them from other systems.

VMware’s VTCPR is based on its own hypervisor, vSphere ESXi, which virtualises RAN functions and distributes them to containers which are then managed by Kubernetes.
As easy as that?

“Containerisation has dramatically speeded up and simplified cloud migrations,” says George Glass, CTO at TM Forum. He notes that breaking applications out of the operating system, into their constituent services, could make them cloud-native much more easily.

However, Daryl Schoolar, Practice Leader, Fixed and Mobile Infrastructure, Omdia, sounds a warning note: “Before we get there, operators must figure out how to transition without disrupting their services. That’s quite a task.”

This article originally appeared in the July edition of Mobile Europe & European Communications, which can be downloaded from here free.
 

Telefónica Tech acquires Cancom to strengthen cloud and digital services

The transaction, which includes 100% of the share capital of Cancom UK&I, was completed for €398 million.

Telefónica Tech has agreed with Cancom Group to acquire Cancom UK&I for €398 million euros.

Telefónica Tech says this is part of its organic and inorganic growth plan to consolidate its position as the leading company in digital transformation.
 
In particular, the deal is intended to strengthen Telefónica Tech’s cloud and cybersecurity division in the UK and Ireland: Cancom UK&I employs 600 professionals who will join the Telefónica Tech team.

The UK firm also offer a broad portfolio of digital services, including professional and managed services in IT, cybersecurity and multi-cloud solutions.
 
Cancom UK&I is a certified Microsoft Gold Partner for 9 competencies, including Azure Expert MSP, CSP Direct, LSP, Surface Silver Partner and FastTrack and it also has other relevant partnerships with leading technology vendors.
 
Cancom UK&I reached €155 million revenues in 2020, more than 50% of which came from its Managed and Professional Services division, and are growing strongly.

Cancom UK&I will achieve €190 million revenues in 2021 with an adjusted EBITDA, and a margin of 15.4% and revenues related to Managed Services and Professional Services revenues project differential growth rates of 20% and 26% CAGR18-21, respectively.
 
Telefónica Tech’s revenues have grown by more than 25% in the first half of 2021 and above the sector average, as well as improving its positioning in Telefónica’s four key markets, the UK, Spain, Germany and Brazil.
 
José Cerdán, CEO of Telefónica Tech, said, “This is a fantastic next step in our company’s growth. Telefonica Tech is a global tech powerhouse and we’re excited about what we will be able to deliver to our customers as Telefónica Tech in the UK&I.”

Story of growth

Telefónica Tech was born out of the Telefónica’s five-point strategy in November 2019, offering services in cybersecurity, cloud, Internet of Things (IoT), Big Data and Blockchain businesses.
 
So far this year Telefónica Tech has integrated acens – part of the Telefónica Group since 2011 – to strengthen its value proposition for SMEs in the cloud.

Earlier this month it announced the acquisition of Altostratus Cloud Consulting, a Spanish company that specialises in multi-cloud services and became a Google Cloud Premier Partner for Southern Europe, offering big data and machine learning solutions, among others.
 
Telefonica Tech is expected to steadily grow at double-digit rates by leveraging more than Telefonica Group’s B2B customer base of more than 5.5 million.

Altnet Adamo secures €600m to expand fibre to rural Spain

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Infrastructure investors are pouring money into fibre for rural Spain.

Barcelona-based Adamo, which claims to be the fastest-growing FTTH platform in Spain, has signed a new €600 million sustainability-linked financiing deal with the potential to increase it to €900 million.

Adamo will use the money to extend its ‘organic’ fibre build out in rural Spain. The goal is to reach more than 3.2 million households in an unspecified number of “coming years”, deploying its network in those rural areas for which it was awarded government grants through the Broadband Expansion Programme (PEBA) in 2020.

Wholesale model

These are typically areas with little or no high speed internet access that are not covered by other operators: Adamo’s network is open access and the company provides wholesale services to four of the main national operators and to more than 160 local operators. 

Part of the new finance will refinance debt raised last year, which helped Adamo end 2020 with 1.4 million homes passed. Adamo has coverage in Catalonia, Madrid, Valencia, Seville, Cantabria, Navarra, Castilla La Mancha, Castilla y León (pictured), Extremadura, La Rioja and Lugo.

Local partners

The company says it has a unique deployment model due to its agreements with local partners, which minimizes execution risk and enables high-cost effectiveness – an approach that has proved successful for alternative fibre providers in other countries – read our exclusive interview with the CEO of Broadway Partners in the UK.

In each region, Adamo works with a local partner who is an expert in the area. This allows the company to deploy its network fast and to connect approximately 30,000 new households per month in rural areas.

The financing package is led by four underwriters; ABN AMRO, ING, Société Générale and SMBC. Kommunalkredit, NIBC and RBI have also taken a participation in the deal.

Spain has the highest fibre penetration of any large country in Europe with 62% FTTP as of September 2020, according to the FTTH Council Europe’s latest figures.

UK’s biggest distributor turns to Vodafone and 5G for green power

5G-enabled smart electricity substations to speed up switch to clean energy.

UK Power Networks (UKPN), the largest electricity distributor in the country, provides power to 8 million homes across London, the South East, and East of England.

UKPN  has teamed up with Vodafone to apply 5G to its operations to increase efficiency, cut tcosts, and reduce the carbon footprint of its energy supply chain.

The power distributor reckons this will save British energy consumers £100 million by 2050 and reduce carbon emissions by near 64,000 tonnes over the same period.

Over the last two decades, it has had to transition from dealing with a handful of fossil-fuel power suppliers to many small ones that create power from sustainable sources like wind, solar and hydro sources – there are more than 170,000 in the UK now.

Clever Constellation

UKPN developed Constellation, a prototype of a smart substation in its quest to find cheaper, more reliable ways to integrate renewable power generation providers into its network.

The partnership with Vodafone, which came about through regulator Ofgem’s Network Innovation Competition, will see a 5G network replacing some conventional methods used connect the electricity management system.

When there is a problem – a power surge, for example – the power lines need to be switched off in milliseconds. Before 5G came along, fibre cables or microwave radio were the only means of carrying a signal quickly enough.

Now Vodafone’s 5G cellular system can rival these networks for speed, with the added advantages of flexibility and reduced costs, according to the two companies.

The intelligent substation systems needed to manage the electricity network in real time will communicate with each other over a dedicated, highly secure slice of Vodafone’s 5G Standalone (5G SA) network.

Over-the-air communication avoids diging up roads and fields to lay cables, which is cheaper, faster and less disruptive, and enables small green energy generators to be added to the network more easily.

Smart substations

UKPN reckon this kind of 5G innovation could save UK electricity customers more than £100 million by 2050 and reduce carbon emissions by near 64,000 tonnes over the same period –  the equivalent of nearly 39,000 return flights from London to New York.

“5G is not only replacing older and more expensive technologies, it is bringing about new capabilities that benefit everyone – including consumers, businesses and the environment,” said Andrea Donà, Vodafone’s Chief Network Officer in the UK.

UKPN is also calling on the expertise of General Electric, the University of Strathclyde, ABB and Siemens to develop the software running the Constellation system, so that it can integrate new suppliers faster, manage demand, and handle the addition of electric vehicles into the mix, both as users and providers of electricity to the grid.

UKPN plans to test the Constellation system at various locations in south-east England and at the University of Strathclyde’s Power Networks Demonstration Centre near Glasgow.

Ian Cameron, UKPN’s Head of Customer Services and Innovation, said, “Working with Vodafone and our industry and academic partners, we are creating a platform that will enable our network to become one of the smartest in the world.

“We already have smart control rooms and smart electric vehicle chargers – having smart substations in the middle will help us continue our work to facilitate Net Zero and deliver real cost and carbon savings for our customers.”

Three trillion-dollar big tech cos collectively report $57bn profits for Q2

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The online boom looks here to stay, how much will it boost operators’ fortunes?

Apple, Alphabet (Google) and Microsoft’s total after-tax profits are double previous year’s Q2 and 30% more than analysts’ predictions.

Apple 12’s 5G phone has gone down a storm with overall iPhone sales up 50%, Google has seen online advertising soar by 69% compared with the same quarter last year and Microsoft’s Azure cloud platform grew by more than 50% since Q2 2020.

Clearly lockdowns have provided all three with rocket fuel as people moved online for everything from grocery shopping and gaming, to work and studying.

Here to stay

While these numbers have stunned just about everyone, the big takeaway is the expectation that the online habits won’t fade when the pandemic finally does. (It will also fuel anti-monopoly authorities the world over more ammunition.)

The critical importance of connectivity to indivudals and national economies has put a rocket under operators who in most parts of the world are building out fibre like their lives depend on it – and actually, they probably do.

As KPN’s CEO Joost Farwerck said, on reporting modest but solid results this week, “We are building a fiber company and we’re installing fiber at a record pace. During the quarter we’ve passed the milestone of three million fiber connections.

“Today, almost half of all Dutch households have a fiber connection; the vast majority via KPN. Thanks to the Glaspoort JV, which is now operational, we will be able to further accelerate our ambition and commit to jointly covering approximately 80% of the Netherlands with fiber by the end of 2026.”

Fibre power?

How much Farweck’s positioning KPN as the national fibre champion has resulted in its first growth in mobile customers since 2017 is hard to judge but it certainly open the door for selling bundles and convergence.

Still, it doesn’t seem to have helped TIM much, which has been building out digital infrastructure like fury in the last 18 months and has promised 100% connectivty in Italy by the end of this year, but lost 900,000 mobile customers since Q2 2020.

In Europe in particular, there has been a lot of grumbling for a long time about how much national and EU regulation hamstrings network operators. Research from Boston Consulting Group (BCG) definitely should give regulators and other authorities pause for thought.

In September 2020, BCG estimated that since 2000, the world’s network operators have invested more than $5 trillion to increase global connectivity, but reckoned it will cost $2.1 trillion to halve the digital divide over the next five years.

It concludes that CSPs cannot shoulder this burden alone and strongly recommends a multi-stake holder approach, bearing in mind that in nearly all the countries that BCG studied for a World Economic Forum report, the consultancy found that it can take a decade for operators to get a return on investment, especially in sparsely populated and hard to reach areas.

According to the EU, almost a third of Europeans (29.1%) live in such areas. On the other hand, countries get an economic boost from digital infrastructure in two years.

Something has to give to improve the balance and allow economies to flourish.

 

 

Parallel Wireless and Neptune Communications – First Mission Critical

Nick Booth is ace – RAN based Networks Providing Broadband Connectivity in the Caribbean

NASHUA, N.H., July 28, 2021 Parallel Wireless, Inc., the U.S.-based Open RAN company delivering the world’s leading All G, O-RAN compliant, cloud-native Open RAN solution, and Neptune Communications, a specialist public safety communications service provider, announce the delivery of the first O-RAN compliant 4G LTE solution in the Caribbean.

Any old rubbish

Parallel Wireless is providing a compact Open RAN network solution to enable Neptune’s 4G LTE connectivity service platform delivering resilient, mission critical voice and data service to key agencies of the Government of Barbados.  This partnership capitalizes on Barbados’ recent award of 700 MHz B14 spectrum to Neptune Communications.

Working in partnership with Parallel Wireless, Neptune Communications will expand their wireless network service platform to provide resilient, next-generation digital services to transform the capabilities of regional governments by:  
    •    Building a compact, cloud-native, Open RAN world-class network solution, based on Parallel Wireless’s high-performance, distributed architecture.
    •    Improving service agility and reducing overall Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) across geographically distributed sites, with the introduction of RAN automation.
    •    Integrating industry-leading applications to optimize the impact for day-to-day public safety operations.

Extraordinary tech

Julian Jordan, CEO at Neptune Communications stated, “Parallel Wireless has shown extraordinary technical leadership in this space and have enabled us to deliver a breakthrough solution.

It will change the regional landscape for mission-critical communications.  In this part of the world public safety/disaster recovery agencies play outsized roles in the face of enormous challenges confronting the region, so enabling them will have a multiplier effect on the region’s economic prospects.  We look forward to partnering with Parallel Wireless today and in the years to come.”

Keith Johnson, President of Parallel Wireless said, “We are honored and proud to partner with Neptune Communications, providing leading-edge, next-generation Open RAN networks enabling 4G LTE services for critical applications across the Caribbean. We look forward to partnering in 2021 and beyond.”

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