Tech News & Insights for November 11-17
— Paul Schell, Industry Analyst
Arm’s US$5 billion injection provides capital to invest in its Artificial Intelligence (AI) strategy and transition to a company targeting AI and High-Performance Compute (HPC) workloads via heterogenous compute. However, here and elsewhere, it faces competition from legacy architectures like x86, and the open-source RISC-V architecture.
— Sarah Yong, Research Analyst
China has displayed considerable success with its 5G network deployment and adoption, both in commercial and enterprise applications. With new revenue generating opportunities on the rise such as 5G-Advanced and 5G Reduced Capability (RedCap), this ABI Insight discusses the current landscape of 5G in China and what the future may hold for the next generation of 5G in China.
— Jake Saunders, Vice President, Asia-Pacific & Advisory Services
Mobile data, voice, and video traffic continues to ramp up. Mobile customers, enterprises, and consumers, are embracing their 4G and, increasingly, 5G subscriptions. Communications Service Providers (CSPs) are investing in their networks across the whole range of network assets, but often it is their base station antennas that have a very material impact on the end-user experience and the amount of traffic the network can handle. This ABI Insight highlights some of the latest antenna innovations that have been developed.
领英推荐
— Tancred Taylor, Senior Analyst
CoreTigo’s bridge devices show one way in which edge networking hardware is evolving for industrial automation and remote monitoring markets, highlighting how much space for innovation there is for Internet of Things (IoT) hardware.
— Annemarie Horn, Research Analyst
This ABI Insight examines the evolving Ultra-Wideband (UWB) ecosystem, including new entrants and acquisitions, as well as competing technologies that could threaten expected growth in the UWB market.
— Kevin Jennings, Senior Analyst
The University of California (UC) San Diego has been awarded a Department of Energy (DOE) grant through the Building Energy Efficiency Frontiers & Innovation Technologies (BENEFIT) program to develop Optimized Commercial Control Technology of Plug-Loads and Lighting (OCCTOPI), an open-source plug load and lighting control technology for commercial buildings. OCCTOPI optimizes energy use through demand response, occupancy sensing, and time-of-use pricing, potentially saving up to 25% on energy costs.