Huawei, the Chinese equipment vendor, has outperformed its Nordic competitors, Ericsson and Nokia, in the 5G market, despite facing US sanctions. Huawei has a larger market share and
As quarterly sales drop by around 15%, Nokia is seeking cost savings of approximately 800 million to 1.2 billion euros by 2026. Cost-saving measures are on the horizon,
Ericsson has agreed to pay Nokia about €80M (roughly $97M) in damages to settle its bribery charges following the investigation held by the U.S Department of Justice. The
Most of the smartphones used today are functioning seamlessly because of some patented software or hardware Nokia developed in the past years. Nokia has a pretty large patent
Market research company Gartner posted some new info about the 5G network infrastructure market. Gartner is famous for their Magic Quadrants where they categorize companies in 4 quadrants
The ongoing trade/technology war between China and the US isn’t slowing down and every day Huawei is the company the seems to be losing the most from it.
In January, the UK announced that it would allow the carriers to use Huawei’s networking gear, although in a restricted extent, but they reversed the decision last week
According to Wall Street Journal, China is considering taking action towards restricting or banning exports of China-made goods by Nokia and Ericsson if the EU and ex-EU countries
The Financial Times published an interesting article giving an overview and some insights into the current geopolitical situation around 5G and network companies.
China Telecom, the world’s 4th largest, and China Unicom, the world’s 6th largest telecom operator, jointly announced the equipment suppliers for the 5G standalone (SA) network deployment, establishing
The 5G race continues. While most of it is all about getting commercial 5G contracts from telecommunications companies, the patented technology of every network infrastructure provider also plays