AI strategies for wholesale telecom profit growth
VanillaPlus
World-leading and in-depth analysis, global news, interviews and case studies covering telecoms digital transformation
Discover how to transform overwhelming data into profitable decisions with AI technology. AI-powered predictive forecasting gives telecoms a competitive edge, enabling faster responses to market changes, smarter decision-making, improved pricing strategies, and margin protection. With the constant influx of data, telecoms can either find themselves paralyzed or empowered in their decision-making.
In this webinar, ZIRA Product Manager Harun Hasi? and AI/ML consultant Haris Hasi? will demonstrate how to practically implement AI in wholesale telecom.
Who Should Attend: Ideal for wholesale telecom executives, data analysts, and decision-makers looking to leverage AI and gain insights into AI forecasting for better business outcomes.
Key Takeaways:
Learn actionable strategies to implement AI for forecasting and pricing in wholesale telecom.
Internet access in least developed countries stuck at 35% in 2024
An estimated 5.5 billion people are online in 2024, an increase of 227 million individuals based on revised estimates for 2023, according to new figures from the International Telecommunication Union (ITU).The estimates featured in ITU’s?Facts and Figures 2024?show that connectivity continues to increase worldwide but reveal the complexities of reaching communities in low-income countries.
While an estimated 68% of the global population is now online and all indicators tracked in the report show improvement, stubborn digital divides persist and about one-third of the world’s people remain offline.
VanillaPlus Issue 4: Nokia’s Vishal Singh explains how CSPs will Sense, Think, Act as autonomous networks become reality
A bleak dystopian future of automated, autonomous machines has been trailed by sci-fi authors for the last couple of centuries but now autonomy is here, it doesn’t seem such a bad thing – at least in the case of autonomous networks.
IN THIS ISSUE:
领英推荐
CelcomDigi strengthens towerco partnerships for Malaysia’s digital future
CelcomDigi Berhad (CelcomDigi) has underscored its commitment to building the country’s new digital network for the benefit of Malaysian consumers and enterprises through strengthened collaborations with its infrastructure partners. These partnerships are key in delivering a modern and future-ready digital network by enabling fast rollout, wide coverage and growth opportunities to meet Malaysia’s growing digital demands.
CelcomDigi renewed its partnerships with Edotco Group Sdn Bhd, Edgepoint Infrastructure Sdn Bhd, D’Harmoni Telco Infra Sdn Bhd and PDC Telecommunication Services Sdn Bhd reshaping key terms to future-proof its infrastructure as part of its ongoing nationwide network integration and modernisation exercise.
Why precise timing is the backbone of resilient 5G networks
5G technology is already revealing its transformative potential. Advanced 5G features like network slicing, which supports mission-critical applications for first responders, secure communication for emergency services and connected infrastructure for smart factories are just a few of the use cases we are seeing. As these uses grow, there is more reliance on 5G networks to function as reliable and secure infrastructure — where failure is not an option. A critical aspect of this robustness is time synchronisation: the ability of network nodes to share the exact same time, down to the microsecond.
So far, mobile networks have normally been relying on the Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) — primarily the Global Positioning System (GPS). This presents inherent vulnerabilities; GNSS is increasingly susceptible to disruption via jamming, spoofing and outages. Operators need alternative time synchronisation technology to safeguard their 5G networks against such threats.
5G networks to carry 80% of global mobile traffic by 2030
5G Standalone (5G SA) and 5G Advanced are expected to be key focus for communications service providers (CSPs) for the remainder of the decade as they deploy new capabilities to create offerings centered on value delivery rather than data volume. The analysis is included among a wealth of statistical network insights in the November 2024 edition of the Ericsson Mobility Report, which extends the forecast period until the end of 2030.
While the rate of mobile network traffic data growth is declining – estimated at 21% year-on year for 2024 – it is still expected to grow almost three-fold by the end of 2030 from present day numbers.
Globally, 5G networks are expected to carry about 80% of total mobile data traffic by the end of 2030 – compared to 34% by the end of 2024. The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries are set to have 47% 5G subscription penetration by 2024.
That is all! Make sure to subscribe to our newsletter to stay updated with the latest articles, news and reports from the realm of telco.