Artificial intelligence (AI) at the edge is changing healthcare, retail and Audi cars, as Intel’s IoT Group vice president, John Healy tells Jeremy Cowan and George Malim. It’s cutting auto safety inspection costs in half, speeding life-saving cancer diagnoses, and creating Covid-safe shopping in Latin America. Plus we learn how chipmakers globally are tackling supply problems that have halted vehicle production. The semiconductor industry is facing an “awakening”, says Healy, as it shape-shifts to meet “insatiable demand” for silicone. Finally, we hear which African country is a leader in satellite cartography, and how Amazon is playing games with its warehouse staff.
With the ongoing pandemic and the continuing demand to upgrade networks to accommodate new technologies around 5th Generation mobile communications (5G), the Internet of Things (IoT) and artificial intelligence (AI), for instance, network performance management has never been more important.
In the traditional supply-demand sense, communications service providers (CSPs) should be rubbing their hands together with glee. After all, they sell access to what’s now considered by most a basic human need. The reality, however, is pretty much the opposite. It’s make or break time, writes Marina Cheal, the chief marketing officer of Reevoo.
We’re undoubtedly in a time of change for communications service providers (CSPs). Many have started to make big strides to invest in new technology. Mobile World Congress 2018 will provide the opportunity for discussions about the investments they must make and how to prepare their future workforce to reap the benefits of their chosen model, enabled by seamless connectivity, writes Francesco Venturini, the global industry managing director for Communications & Media at Accenture.
Artificial Intelligence (AI) is being groomed, says Rethink Technology Research to partner with self-optimising networks (SON) to create cellular networks that know the user, perform brilliantly and defy complexity. But 50% of network providers worry they will not be able to attract sufficient AI skills. “AI, SON and the self-driving cellular network”
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