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    What do enterprises need from an IoT partner?

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    Partner video: Nick Earle, CEO of Eseye, talks to Annie Turner about providing global connectivity and other challenges

    In 2010, the industry predicted 50 billion connected devices by 2020, but there were, in fact, only about 11 billion. It turned out that deploying IoT was more complicated than we bargained for, and the business case harder to prove.

    So, what’s different now?

    Mobile Europe’s Annie Turner speaks to Nick Earle, CEO and Chairman of Eseye to explore:

    • What are the top challenges that large enterprises face when designing and deploying IoT globally?
    • Why is the device so important to achieving reliable connectivity?
    • What key attributes and characteristics are large Enterprises looking for when selecting an IoT connectivity partner?
    • How should Enterprises measure return on investment and value from their IoT project?

    To learn more about Eseye, please visit www.eseye.com

    Umniah, Ericsson expand 3G and 4G in Jordan’s cities

    They will extend 4G’s footprint to bring mobile data to more people

    Umniah and Ericsson signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) to expand 3G and 4G networks in cities in the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan. The MoU was signed by Faisal Qamhiyah, CEO of Umniah (pictured above left) and Kevin Murphy, VP and Head of Ericsson Levant Countries and Country Manager of Ericsson Jordan (above right).

    Mobile operator Umniah was launched in Jordan in 2005, has 3 million subscribers and is a subsidiary of Beyon Group. It claims to be the best and fastest network in Jordan, with coverage across all the country’s governates.

    This expansion with Ericsson will extend 4G coverage to where there is no 4G currently to bring mobile data services to more people.

    The vendor says its Ericsson Radio System is energy efficient and compact, with a flexible architecture that relies on software to speed the roll out of new capabilities. The portfolio supports multi-band, multi-layer technologies. The implementation will use 10MHz of spectrum including 5MHz refarmed from 3G to 4G and an additional 5MHz acquired for increased network capacity.

    Tecnotree restructures to boost telco offerings 

    The Finnish-Indian BSS software company sheds staff and non-core businesses as it looks to recruit based on customer need

    Tecnotree has announced it has completed its restructure which saw it lose 116 staff in Finland, India and the Middle East. First announced in March, the company also rationalised its non-telco resources in North America as it seeks to optimise its investments and R&D. 

    In North America, Tecnotree terminated its TrustStar product offering to the American mortgage market resulting in savings of €1.5 million in sales, marketing, and infrastructure expenses. The AI-ML resources working on TrustStar have now been refocused to its core telco BSS AI-ML activities globally.  

    Tecnotree said it is also “actively working” on the in-sourcing of long-term contractors, in low-cost jurisdictions near its customers. While this may result in increased headcount, it will impact opex positively by approximately €200,000 in 2024. The opex impact of these efficiencies will result in cost savings of €4.5 million in the year 2024 and further €7 million in the year 2025. 

    “As our Digital Stack achieves maturity in the market, we have been able optimize our investments in R&D spend,” said Tecnotree CEO Padma Ravichander (above). “As the company seeks to grow in subscription driven economies of Middle East, Europe and North America, the company will look to add opex in those regions, subject to order wins.  For existing markets and customers, the need of the hour is near-shoring for effective agile delivery. This will further align our opex to where our revenues are earned.”  

    Middle East becoming important for the company 

    The rationalisation comes at a time when the company has been looking to drive global sales of its digital platform. Last month it reported Q1 revenues of €16.3 million (up 4.7%). The growth was primarily driven by new wins in the LATAM region, while EMEA and APAC regions remain growing markets for the digital platform. Tecnotree secured Nuh-Digital in Brazil, increasing the number of MVNO wins in a new market. Tecnotree Moments platform was selected by Global Hitss to elevate e-health services across Mexico and Latin America, promising streamlined operations across the healthcare value chain. 

    Tecnotree’s order book grew to €74.8 million, and the growth was supported by LATAM, Middle East, Africa, and APAC. The Middle East is becoming increasingly important for the company where it is expanding its offerings. In February, it secured a new multimillion-dollar deal with Jordan telco Umniah, which has around three million subscribers.  

    Under this project, Umniah is upgrading its current CRM system with a new CX implementation targeting improvements in NPS, reduction of churn and an increase in ARPU. As part of the agreement, Tecnotree will deploy its Sensa AI-embedded BSS applications, streamlining the AI development lifecycle and driving faster time to value across products. 

    The applications will include a veritable shopping list of product catalogues, digital self-care and customer management, catalogue-driven order management, demand generation through omnichannel campaigns and configurable integration with leading social networks, lead and funnel management, enterprise workforce management with business process orchestration, business intelligence, and analytics capabilities, enterprise and consumer service request management, partner management, E-Shop (marketplace) & B2B self-care portal.   

    AWS partners Mavenir to co-invest in developing telco cloud 

    The companies claim the partnership will “revolutionise” the deployment of telecom workloads running on AWS

    Amazon Web Services (AWS) has signed a five-year strategic collaboration agreement (SCA) with long-time partner Mavenir that will see the companies jointly architect Mavenir’s technology to streamline the development, testing, integration, and application of cloud-native solutions. They said that together they’ll create “a new telco-grade deployment model that is set to transform how operators launch 5G, IMS (IP Multimedia Subsystem), Radio Access Network (RAN) and future network technologies”. 

    As part of the agreement Mavenir and AWS will co-invest in developing functionalities, such as enhanced dynamic autoscaling, automation, and reliability enhancements, for telcos to enable migration to AWS. 

    “Building on our long-term partnership and individual leadership in cloud technology, Mavenir and AWS are now working together to leverage the key attributes of the public cloud to enable unprecedented adaptability of telco workloads,” said Mavenir EVP and chief technology and strategy officer Bejoy Pankajakshan. “As part of this collaboration, we are combining our strengths to support the ambition of operators to migrate into the public cloud, delivering uniquely optimised solutions that ensure fast and efficient deployment – and a dramatic reduction in total cost of ownership.”  

    Beyond technical collaboration and co-development, the two companies will also focus on accelerating market adoption: “with clear targets set to accelerate market adoption, bringing the value and power of cloud-based network solutions to telcos and their customers across the globe”, according to Mavenir EVP of emerging business and partnerships Aniruddho Basu.  

    Not only a private wireless play  

     In a market that is still evolving, it makes sense for Mavenir to gain wider exposure to AWS’s telco channel to offer its cloud-native and containerised approach to software development. In fact, Mavenir has been a bit of a go-to telco vendor for AWS as the cloud giant has been honing its virtualised network offers with the likes of Dell and VMware. 

    One conspicuous partner, Deutsche Telekom, has combined AWS and Mavenir technology in a few proofs of concept. For example, last October, the telco built a private 5G wireless platform featuring AWS services and infrastructure, VMware’s Telco Cloud Platform, Mavenir radio access network (RAN) and core functions – all based on Open Grid Alliance architecture running on Dell Technologies equipment. 

    As part of the demo, DT showed it could link disparate private 5G SA networks using hardware and software all managed from a single interface. It linked networks in Prague with Seattle (T-Mobile US) via Mavenir 5G core function hosted on AWS infrastructure in Bonn, utilising AWS’s Integrated Private Wireless platform.  

    Mavenir has its own track record with DT as well being part of the telco’s multi-vendor cloud Next Generation IP Multimedia Subsystem (NIMS) which now handles billions of voice minutes a year. 

    At MWC, in a demo, enhancing consumer interaction with generative AI leveraging MCE generative AI, from Nvidia, Vodafone, MCE and Mavenir showcased a consumer journey that included device and network support for latency sensitive applications using AWS Wavelength to achieve the required QoE powered device care. For network support they used Nvidia’s DGX platform on AWS and Mavenir to get root cause analysis of network degradation in real time using AWS generative AI service. 

    Unlock new value and innovation with network digital twins

    Partner content: This approach gives network operators the chance to experiment without the risk of disruption to live infrastructure and services

    The innovation gap between leading cloud players and communication service providers (CSPs) just seems to keep growing. Both provide essential infrastructure for our digital world, and both have millions of users and billions of dollars depending on their technology. Yet this hasn’t stopped hyperscalers from experimenting, exploring new ideas, and bringing new features to users at a breakneck pace. Why can’t CSPs do the same?  

    One big reason is that they’re playing by a different set of rules. Telco networks are highly regulated, often designated as critical infrastructure. In many markets, CSPs are legally barred from experimenting in the live network. Even when they’re not, any network change that impacts services can lead to loss of revenue, hefty fines, regulatory scrutiny, even lawsuits.

    Today, there’s a way for CSPs to expand their ability to innovate without the risk of disrupting live services: digital twins. By maintaining highly accurate virtual models of the network, CSPs can realize a long list of operational benefits. They gain the freedom to experiment in new ways, especially in radio access networks (RANs), the most complex and hard-to-emulate part of the network.

    Most critically for the future, digital twins provide a platform for training a new generation of artificial intelligence and machine learning (AI/ML) algorithms that can empower telco networks to self-optimize – for performance, spectral efficiency, power consumption, and more.

    These changes have the potential to transform telecom, accelerating the cloudification of telco environments and enabling CSPs to tap into groundbreaking innovations from third-party software developers. For CSPs hoping to take advantage of digital twins, however, it’s essential to understand the full value of telco network data—and of maintaining an open network.

    What Is a digital twin?

    Digital twins provide highly accurate virtual models of CSP networks for the lab. Using advanced simulation and emulation tooling, they create a carbon copy of the production network, including real subscriber data that’s been sanitized to remove personally identifying information. As a result, digital twins allow network engineers to validate new applications and changes, and more thoroughly understand how they will behave before pushing them into production.

    Network digital twins are not static; they continually ingest new data to maintain the most accurate possible model, creating a positive feedback loop. As changes occur in the network and CSPs continue feeding more data into digital twins, they develop increasingly higher-resolution models and increasingly accurate predictions. This enables operators to:

    • Accelerate onboarding of new technologies – CSPs can onboard new network functions and applications more quickly and confidently. Engineers can validate that changes will function as expected—and identify when they won’t—before they go live.
    • Improve network performance and security – Digital twins can help CSPs identify emergent issues impacting performance and continually optimize the network. For example, operators can run congestion scenarios to see how cells behave when many subscribers make video calls at once, and take proactive actions to improve performance and resiliency.  Digital twins can also provide a sandbox to simulate network attacks, so operators can understand how compromises would affect the network.
    • Gain a competitive edge – To help show customers that they have the fastest, most reliable network, operators can capture analytical data in digital twins and use speed tests like Ookla to measure their performance versus competitors.

    Digital twins can also reduce reliance on expensive manual operations like drive testing. Today, operators send teams of technicians thousands of kilometers across their markets to directly measure network performance. The cost of these efforts is substantial, but they’re the only way to identify if, for example, a recently erected building is now blocking a cell and impacting performance. With digital twins, engineers can explore how changing morphology and environmental factors affect RF dynamics virtually. They can measure how changes—like moving a cell two degrees in one direction or another—will affect performance, without leaving the lab.

    Why now?

    The concept of digital twins for telecom isn’t new. The ability to test via realistic simulation has been something of a holy grail for the industry for years. Until recently though, it wasn’t viable, simply due to the computational resources needed to construct realistic models. RAN environments in particular are so dynamic and complex, the cost of compute needed to perform accurate simulations of dynamic subscriber mobility use cases and their associated impact on network performance at real-world scale was astronomical.

    Today, declining compute costs, along with advances in network emulation, have made digital twins both practical and economical. These changes couldn’t have come at a better time. As telco environments grow more digitalized and virtualized, even minor fluctuations in the network environment can have a major impact. Overloaded data centers, unexpected congestion, and changing application mix can all affect performance. This makes traditional lab testing, which typically reflects ideal conditions, far less reliable.

    Additionally, as CSPs adopt software-driven architectures, faster testing becomes essential. Instead of processing network updates two or three times per year, updates now come in constantly, some of which (like security patches) must be pushed into production within hours. Without continuous testing under realistic conditions, modern network operations simply won’t work.

    Unleashing AI innovation

    Perhaps the biggest driver for telco digital twins is the exploding use of AI/ML—for service assurance, capacity planning, and most importantly, to automate complex network operations. And the RAN is ground zero for applying AI/ML algorithms to react to changing real-time conditions via automated closed-loop actions.

    Modern Open RAN architectures feature a RAN intelligent controller (RIC), an open platform to run applications in the most dynamic and demanding part of the network, closest to subscribers. We’re already seeing an ecosystem of groundbreaking third-party RIC apps that use algorithmic analysis to optimize spectral efficiency, reduce power consumption, and more. The AI-driven RIC apps of the future will be even more transformative—but only if their algorithms have realistic data to train on.

    It’s one thing to emulate a network. It’s quite another to emulate accurately enough to train algorithms—at least, algorithms that CSPs would trust to take autonomous actions in their networks. In fact, developers working in this space invariably say that their biggest barrier is the ability to test new applications under lifelike network conditions. The second-biggest barrier: lack of telco data sets to train against.

    Looking ahead

    Most CSPs are still in the early stages of developing digital twins. In the future though, they will almost certainly be used across the telco ecosystem for certification and standardized testing. The ability to capture more network data, and provide a means to train algorithms and validate new technology via realistic emulation, will become a foundational CSP requirement.

    At the same time, CSPs shouldn’t view these changes as merely requirements. They also hold enormous potential to unlock new value. If anything, explosive growth in AI/ML training in every industry should underscore just how valuable CSP network data truly is. This assumes, of course, that CSPs maintain an open network, where they can actually access their massively valuable data in the RAN. If CSPs can’t access fine-grained network data, they can’t use or monetize it. And they’ll continue to struggle to optimize their network operations—much less close the innovation gap.

    About the author

    Johannes (Janco) Terblanche is Business Development – OpenRAN/vRAN at VMware by Broadcom

    Telefónica Germany launches first commercial vRAN and Open RAN site

    The site uses Samsung’s kit and is part of the joint development announced with the operator last year – more sites and network automation to follow

    Telefónica Germany and Samsung Electronics have launched their first commercial virtualised RAN (vRAN) and Open RAN after “extensive trials”.

    The site, at Landsberg am Lech in Bavaria, is the first deployment of Samsung’s 5G vRAN in a commercial network in Germany. It will provide 4G and 5G services. The companies say they will expand the vRAN and Open RAN network to seven more sites in the region “in the coming months”.

    For the initial deployments, Samsung’s solution includes its 4G and 5G vRAN 3.0 and O-RAN compliant radios. They support low- and mid-bands (700MHz, 800MHz, 1.8GHz 2.1GHz, 2.6GHz and 3.6GHz), including 64T64R Massive MIMO.

    Next, the companies will introduce Samsung’s intelligent network automation solutions to control life cycle management, from deployment and operation to maintenance.

    The automation solution is O-RAN compliant and is designed to accelerate the roll out of software-based network by enabling the automated deployment of thousands of network sites simultaneously.

    Joint initiative

    The companies announced a joint initiative, announced in October 2023, when they agreed to develop a roadmap for several tests of vRAN and Open RAN technologies. 

    They say this is just three months after the initial shipment of 4G and 5G solutions, “leveraging Samsung’s expertise and pre-validated ecosystem proven from large-scale commercial vRAN and Open RAN deployments across the globe,” according to the press statement.

    Mallik Rao, CTIO at O2 Telefónica Germany said, “On the way to the network of the future, we are integrating new network solutions to provide our customers with outstanding connectivity. Open RAN is a building block that can help us to automate our network, deploy new updates faster and use network components more flexibly.” 

    In February 2023, Samsung also announced plans with Vodafone to launch Open RAN in European markets including Germany. 

    Fibreco öGIG expands Austrian network footprint 

    The Graz-Waltendorf groundbreaking sets the race to connect 150,000 homes and businesses by the end of the year

    Around 4,800 households and companies in Graz-Waltendorf will now be connected to the high-performance öFIBER fibre optic network of the Austrian Fibre Optic Infrastructure Company (öGIG). The ceremonial groundbreaking marks the start of an expansion that will see around 30 Styrian communities connect to the öFIBER network – the high-speed Internet connection from öGIG – representing around 50,000 households and businesses  

    To this end, öGIG will invest around €70m in the Styrian fiber optic expansion in 2024 alone – €10.5m of which will be for Graz-Waltendorf.  

    “The biggest advantage of our open platform is that customers can choose from a wide range of providers and offers when it comes to their internet tariff,” said öGIG CCO Christian Nemeth. “Future-proof open networks and an attractive price-performance ratio guarantee fair competition and are cornerstones of our corporate strategy, which are perceived very positively from the customer’s perspective.” 

    Allianz subsidiary 

    In 2021, Allianz invested around €1bn for the deployment of fibre so öGIG could connect to one million households by 2030, making it one of the largest fibre network providers in Austria. The expansion of the Lower Austrian communities is mainly carried out through the partnership with the Lower Austrian Fiber Optic Infrastructure Company (nöGIG). The federal states of Upper Austria, Styria, Burgenland, Carinthia and soon Vorarlberg are the focus of the öGIG. 

    With currently over 20 Internet providers on the network, öGIG and nöGIG have the largest open access platform in the country. In addition, with investments of over €600 million by öGIG and nöGIG to date, its fibre footprint has reached more than 210 communities.  The focus is on the federal states of Lower Austria, Upper Austria, Styria, Burgenland and Carinthia.  

    In total, 150,000 households and companies will be connected to the open fibre optic network by the end of the year. More than 50,000 customers will then actively use their FTTH connection immediately. In addition to private-sector infrastructure investments, federal funding is also combined to expand the network as comprehensively as possible in the more rural – and more expensive – areas.  

    The project details 

    The laying of the öFIBER network in Graz-Waltendorf is being carried out by REELA Projektentwicklungs- und Bau GmbH, which is already carrying out the fibre optic expansion in Wildon. REELA uses the so-called HDD (Horizontal Directional Drilling) directional drilling method – a very environmentally friendly alternative to conventional civil engineering methods. The process enables the underground laying of lines, pipes and cables to protect the landscape and the soil and reduces soil erosion. The first households will be connected as early as July and August. Completion of the entire project is scheduled for summer 2026.  

    Photo reference (from left): Holger Geserick (managing director REELA), Christian Nemeth (CCO öGIG), Kurt Hohensinner (Graz City Council) and Peter Mayr (district manager Graz-Waltendorf) on 30 April 2024 at the groundbreaking ceremony in Graz-Waltendorf, where the öFIBER fibre optic expansion officially kicked off. 

    Infobip and Nokia partner to help developers build telco applications faster 

    2024 is turning out to be the year CPaaS and network APIs finally tie the knot

    Global cloud-based Communications Platform as a Service (CPaaS) provider Infobip and Nokia are partnering up to enable the global developer community to leverage both companies’ Application Programmable Interface (API) platforms to build a wider array of telco network powered applications faster for consumer, wholesale and enterprise customers. 

    The move, which mirrors Ericsson’s Vonage deal but without an acquisition, will provide developers with APIs for integrating Infobip’s real-time omnichannel communications features such as SMS, voice, video, chat apps, and network APIs into their applications. This will now be aligned with Nokia’s Network as Code platform with developer portal which offers developers APIs for tapping into 5G network capabilities like quality of service (QoS) on demand, device location precision and network slicing, as well as 4G capabilities. 

    Infobip has already been pushing the GSMA Open Gateway initiative as a way to offer a unified network API framework for developers to easily access mobile operator networks, aiming to enhance global connectivity and innovation. “Telecom companies can leverage this initiative by collaborating strategically, nurturing strong developer relationships, and utilising comprehensive CPaaS knowledge,” said Infobip chief business officer Ivan Ostojic earlier this year.  

    “The initiative enables the development of APIs for various purposes, such as device location and number verification, to foster digital services growth and address challenges like fraud,” he added. 

    Earlier this year Infobip partnered with three mobile network operators to launch the first CAMARA-compliant network APIs in Brazil – under the GSMA Open Gateway initiative and the company believes its approach enables telcos to easily launch and monetise their emerging services, such as their core network capabilities being exposed through CAMARA APIs. 

    Veon Gateway deployment 

    Nokia noticed this too and engaged with Infobip early on to bring its own network API platform to a wider telco audience. In February, Veon announced it was working with Nokia and Infobip to launch its Geolocation Gateway, initially in Uzbekistan, built using the GSMA Open Gateway framework.  

     Veon’s Gateway allows applications to determine the location of devices. For financial institutions, the Geolocation Gateway will enable them to determine if an individual is actually present during a transaction such as an ATM withdrawal or a credit card payment.  For commercial companies, it can create growth opportunities by enabling targeted communications to be sent to participating customers, with their consent, based on proximity to an event, restaurant or shop. Most importantly, for emergency services, the Geolocation Gateway will provide authorities the ability to warn individuals in specific locations about impending natural disasters such as floods, earthquakes or cyclones.  

    The first implementation of Geolocation Gateway was a commercial use case where an Uzbekistan-based country-wide pizza restaurant chain worked with Beeline Uzbekistan and Veon Adtech, both wholly owned subsidiaries of the V Group, to grow its business through precision-marketing based on the Geolocation Gateway APIs. The solution will be scaled to other digital operators of the Veon Group and is also available for licensing by other mobile operators.  

     Smoothing the path 

    The joint work between Infobip and Nokia will offer a simplified developer experience without the burden of navigating the complex underlying network technologies, allowing developers to integrate capabilities into their applications faster, relative to working separately with the two companies’ platforms. 

    Nokia’s Network as Code platform with developer portal brings together networks from around the world, along with systems integrators and software developers, into a unified ecosystem; using technical standards produced through industry initiatives such as the GSMA Open Gateway initiative and the Linux Foundation CAMARA. Nokia and Infobip contribute to both initiatives. 

     Infobip’s customer engagement use cases include CAMARA-compliant Number Verify and SIM Swap APIs, which are already live. The firm is also working to bring further use cases to market including Device Location and Quality on Demand APIs, having now signed 12 API collaboration agreements.  

    Nokia has signed collaboration agreements with 11 network operators and ecosystem partners to use the Network as Code platform with developer portal since its launch in September 2023. 

    “This agreement with Nokia further demonstrates how Infobip is helping telcos deliver new services and gain new revenue,” said Infobip VP of business development Matija Ražem. “We will continue to build and offer additional CAMARA-compliant APIs worldwide, working closely with our telco partners to expose customer experience friendly APIs to developers It is testament to our global market-leading CPaaS position, strong developer relations and history of strategic telco collaborations.”  

    “This partnering agreement reflects our ongoing commitment to work closely with the developer community. It is about expanding choice and scale and giving developers a one-stop shop for extracting value from Infobip’s and Nokia’s platforms,” said Nokia head of network monetisation platform, cloud and network services Shkumbin Hamiti.  

    Broadband Forum extends 5G convergence standards

    Industry body says they include “major enhancements” to resilience and support for residential customers

    The latest development in the Broadband Forum’s ongoing efforts to integrate wireless and fixed networks is to produce converged standards for 5G. They are intended to improve resilience and support of residential consumers.

    The Forum’s Phase 18.1 specifications build on 3GPP’s Release 18 in its Wireless-Wireline Convergence (WWC) Work Area. The specifications have two main aims. Firstly to extend the “common value-adding capabilities” so operators can deliver customised Quality of Service. Secondly to offer a flexible, smoothly migration path to using a single converged 5G Core with a multi-vendor broadband network.

    The organisation claims this latest work “drives greater value and better Quality of Experience to the customer and allows operators to consolidate their IT systems for more efficient operations and lowers their total cost of ownership”.

    Latest efforts

    The Forum is developing five new specifications as part of its Phase 18.1 work. Use cases include business services support, hybrid access, network data analytics and support for devices behind a 5G Residential Gateway (5G-RG). Different groups of subscribers, such as home workers or gamers, can also be given priority using network slicing, a key component in this phase of work.

    Documents are set to expand the deployment options for operators, including:

    • WT-456 Issue 3 – Access Gateway Function (AGF) Functional Requirements

    • WT-458 Issue 2 – Control-User Plane Separation (CUPS) for 5G Wireless Wireline Convergence

    • WT-470 Issue 3 – 5G Wireless-Wireline Convergence Architecture) and

    • related extensions to device requirements located at the customers’ premises and device data models.

    Previous work

    The previous phase of work covered CUPS for multi-vendor support (TR-458) and specified the combined AGF and 5G User Plane (referred to as Broadband-UPF, that is, user plane functions).  They allow operators to combine use of the Broadband User Plane and the 5G Control Plane cost effectively.

    Broadband Forum’s Technical Reports TR-493 and TR-494 have been published, converging support for residential voice services onto today’s 5G networks.

    Christele Bouchat, Nokia and Broadband Forum WWC Work Area Co-Director, comments, “Our Phase 18.1 work is driven by industry demand and the priorities of operators, as we focus on providing them with increased flexibility, revenue potential, and deployment options.

    “By working in close alignment with 3GPP, we are ensuring synergy for the broadband industry. By leveraging convergence, operators can cost-effectively deliver broadband in the home and office.”

    Manuel Paul, Deutsche Telekom and Broadband Forum WWC Work Area Co-Director, adds, “…the Forum’s] work addresses the needs of both fixed and mobile operators. They can combine offerings and provide a uniform experience to subscribers irrespective of the access in use, supported by a common control plane and streamlined back office.

    “As standards mature, the industry has the foundations available for mass deployments in the residential and enterprise markets to start.”

    Visit the Broadband Forum YouTube page for background on the WWC Work Area here.

    Vodafone launches InstantX edge project with Linux Foundation 

    Signs strategic partnership with LF Edge to extend community’s reach to address instant data exchange at the far edge

    Vodafone has kicked off a project with Linux Foundation subsidiary LF Edge which is a new cloud and edge cloud platform to exchange and distribute data in real-time between users in a certain geography through “far-edge” computing power. The project, dubbed InstantX short for Instant EXchange, is aiming to solve the problem of asynchronous and instant data exchange across clients in the same region while offering that data for off-line processing and self-learning to derive further usefulness. 

    While thankfully not branded as Industrial 4.0, Vodafone believes InstantX will offer many potential applications that utilise low latency and highly responsive technologies to drive forward the industrial internet. This they say is where programmable 5G standalone networks, edge computing and open APIs will finally come into their own. Connecting machines and applications with cloud-based AI powered services will become as commonplace as communicating via social media platforms – and probably less toxic.  

    InstantX is designed to ensure the secure and reliable exchange and distribution of data in real-time between users in certain locations. It uses ‘far-edge’ or ‘industrial-edge’ computing power which works by locating smaller, industrial servers outside a main data centre but closer to users. 

    Road safety applications 

    Vodafone said it has already developed several applications under InstantX. For example, the telco has already successfully tested improved road safety systems in several European countries. This allows pedestrians, cyclists and motorists plus their vehicles to share information with each other such as hazard warnings and difficult road conditions.  

    Other potential uses it sees include the coordination and control of autonomous robots in smart factories to avoid collisions with other machines, and more importantly, people. It can also help to track, monitor and control beyond-the-line-of-sight drones. 

    One of the gang 

    To push InstantX, Vodafone has also announced it has become a premium member of LF Edge, the umbrella organisation within the Linux Foundation dedicated to creating global collaboration on edge computing. The telco will participate actively in the governance of LF Edge, with Sampada Basarkar, product & platform engineering director at Vodafone, gaining a seat on the project’s governing board, technical advisory council and other committees. 

    The membership enables Vodafone – which is also an active member of the Linux Foundation – to leverage the collective capabilities of open-source edge computing to develop advanced networks for customers of Vodafone Business. Other premium members already include: AMD, American Tower, Arm, AT&T, AVEVA, Baidu, Charter Communications, Dell Technologies, Dianomic, Equinix, F5, Fujitsu, Futurewei, HP, Huawei, Intel, IBM, NTT, Radisys, RedHat, Samsung, Tencent, VMware, Western Digital and ZEDEDA. 

    “I’m delighted that Sampada has been invited to join the board of LF Edge,” said Vodafone Business CTO Justin Shields. “As a premier member of LF Edge, Vodafone can bring its own source coding credentials in edge computing to a leading developer community so that it can benefit many more organisations and individuals. Partnering with other companies and developers is the key to unlocking opportunities in edge computing to support ultra-low latency applications that will drive forward the industrial internet.” 

    “Vodafone’s active participation will propel our efforts to develop more robust and interoperable edge computing frameworks, particularly enhancing 5G and mobile private network connectivity,” said Linux Foundation GM networking, edge, and IoT Arpit Joshipura.  

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