During Mobile World Congress (MWC 2024), Toni Eid, Founder of Telecom Review Group and CEO of Trace Media International, engaged in an exclusive discourse with Saleem Alblooshi, CTO of du, and Eric Zhao, Vice President and CMO of Huawei Wireless Solution to share their perspectives on the progress of the 5G industry, particularly the commercial launch of 5G-Advanced (5G-A or 5.5G).

Read more: du and Huawei Collaborate to Advance 5.5G Journey

In an exclusive interview at the Mobile World Congress 2024 in Barcelona, Spain, Tony Eid, CEO of Telecom Review Group conversed with Vikram Sinha, President Director and CEO of Indosat Ooredoo Hutchison (IOH), gathering insights into Indosat's journey towards techco status.

Read more: Indosat Ooredoo Hutchison's Techco Transformation

Iris De Brito, Senior Researcher with the West African Digital Governance Forum, UNU EGOV, gave an exclusive interview with Telecom Review Africa, with a focus on exploring the key challenges that developing countries face in making ICTs accessible in remote rural areas. She detailed the role of ICT in empowering disadvantaged individuals and communities and contributing to their social and economic inclusion. Also, she gave her perspective on the impact of digital technologies on socioeconomic development, particularly for women and girls in remote rural areas of developing countries.

Read more: Personalized Learning with Digital Tools: Beyond Traditional Instruction

Notes from the Chief Editor
Typography

This year, Mobile World Congress (MWC) was dominated by fewer topics compared to previous editions which were much more vast in nature; the focus this year was on 5G, IoT and connected cars.

5G was not a priority last year; while, this year the vendors have been in a race for deadline completion of it and are talking about testing it with operators on many continents, particularly Asian countries like South Korea and Japan, and in North American USA.

As per ITU, the standardization of 5G will not be ready before 2018. Vendors are pushing the industry because 5G technology and capacity will be needed by 2017. Yet, 4G has not yet been deployed everywhere and many countries are in the midst of deploying 3G. Why the rush?

For sure, the increase of data consumption exceeds any forecast, and the forecast for connected devices follows the same trend. With 5G, the cost of MB or GB is less. Also, the trend of video browsing, uploading and downloading, make 5G a requirement and not just a plain old new technology.

At the same time, the internet of things and smart city initiatives demand a huge connection in high speed with no latency. Utilities, transport, health, banking and government services will need more bandwidth as well.

Connected cars

During MWC 2015, the concept of connected cars was very evident. The connected car is not just a concept anymore; MWC attendees had the chance to see numerous cars connected at many stands, highly technological, such as Ericsson’s VOLVO S90 and Qualcomm’s chips for the best connected cars and announced partnership with Mercedes (and other manufacturers).

Connected cars on the streets will be connected to mobile networks, not to satellite, and will be in your office or home. Capacity requirements, speed and lower latency are the key to a moving machine like a car. 5G is the solution, which is why the topic is so hot these days!

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