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S. J. Schuchart Jr.
The networking journey is always one of change. Yet there are some technologies that we’ve used for literally decades that are showing signs of being less than up to the challenges of growing bandwidth and device density. Indeed, new services such as Wi-Fi 6 are driving the need for more bandwidth, especially on the backhaul. Copper Ethernet cables are a great example of where a great technology is beginning to run into the harsh limits of physics. To achieve even 10 Gigabit speeds excessive care has to be taken with thick, less flexible cables and distance limits of 100 meters for properly installed cabling systems (Cat6a or Cat7). With bandwidth rising to 40Gbps and 100Gbps and beyond, it becomes a matter of much discussion on how we support networks going forward, especially in new construction. Nobody wants the expense of upgrading a building’s network cabling within a few years of finishing it.
Medhat Mahmoud
zhangsu
Only through the convergence of IoT devices and Wi-Fi networks can ICT infrastructure meet increasingly data-rich requirements across industries.
Lu Xin
The first step in an enterprise's digital transformation is to build a bottom-layer data integration platform, and it is with this in mind that ROMA was developed.
Liu Qianghua
ROMA is a unified data integration platform that forms the basis of the Huawei Horizon Digital Platform. It integrates different systems' data so it can be shared and applied.
Building an Intelligent IP Network with Innovative Three-Layer AI Architecture
David Soldani
Operators shouldn’t view, or raise, cyber-risk as a reason to delay digitisation but must view it as a strong motivation to continuously improve the integrity and robustness of their networks.
Jason Leung
Individually, siloed systems provide some value to operators; when integrated into a single view of operations, they create immensely greater opportunities for optimisation and real-time responsiveness to even the most complex situations or hidden performance trends.