Month: March 2026
Direct-to-Device (D2D) satellite network comparison: Starlink V2 (Starlink Mobile) vs “Satellite Connect Europe”
Executive Summary:
1. Starlink is preparing a new Direct-to-Device (D2D) constellation to provide satellite fill-in services and has renamed their V2 D2D services as Starlink Mobile. This rebrand coincides with the introduction of their next-generation V2 satellites, which aim to provide 5G-like broadband speeds (up to 150 Mbit/s) directly to unmodified smartphones. With 650 direct-to-cell Starlink satellites active, part of a constellation of almost 10,000 Starlink satellites of various kinds, that roaming service now offers connectivity to 32 countries across six continents. Today, Starlink V1 D2D has 10 million active users a month – and the company expects to top 25 million by the end of 2026.
Where Starlink V1 delivers text and what Nicolls described as “light data,” meaning only for selected apps, Starlink V2 (Starlink Mobile) will deliver what was called “terrestrial-like connectivity.” In good conditions, “it should look and feel like you’re connected to a high-performing 5G terrestrial network.” To make that happen, V2 will need both new frequencies – the same globally-licensed S-band Starlink will use for emergency alerts – and new, much larger satellites.

Image Credit: ZUMA Press Inc/Alamy Stock Photo
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2. European operators have launched “Satellite Connect Europe“ to offer wholesale D2D services to mobile carriers. Satellite Connect Europe is actually a joint venture between AST SpaceMobile and Vodafone. It will primarily use satellites provided by AST SpaceMobile to offer direct-to-device (D2D) services in Europe. The venture is building a dedicated, sovereign European constellation, with plans to establish an operations center in Germany.
Five major mobile network operator groups will deploy D2D satellite mobile broadband services across Europe. The agreements cover CK Hutchison, Orange, Sunrise, Telefonica and Vodafone, with customer trials scheduled to start this summer (2026). The service is expected to launch around the end of 2026, with demonstrations planned in Romania before then.

Role of 3GPP NTN specifications:
Both of these initiatives are dependent on 3GPP-based non‑terrestrial networking (NTN) specs, introduced primarily in Release 17 and enhanced in Release 18 to enable direct satellite-to-device connectivity using 5G NR (new radio) and IoT (NB-IoT/eMTC) protocols. 3GPP detailed NTN specs include TR 38.821 (architecture), TS 38.101-5 (user equipment radio performance), and TS 38.104 (base station requirements), supporting LEO/GEO orbits and S/Ka-band spectrum.
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3GPP Release 17 introduced NR‑NTN and IoT‑NTN profiles, defining waveform adaptations, timing and Doppler compensation, mobility procedures, and MSS band mappings so that satellite and terrestrial RANs interoperate under a single 5G system architecture. These NTN specs will be submitted to ITU-R WP 4B for rubber stamping as ITU-R recommendations (official standards).
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Both the Starlink and Satellite Connect Europe/AST initiatives map their radio interfaces and mobility behavior to these NTN specifications over time, which should let future 5G devices with NTN support hand over natively between cell towers and satellites without custom stacks.
These two D2D initiatives differ in radio design, spectrum, and integration models with mobile operators which provide the actual end point connections as follows:
Starlink D2D technical details:
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Starlink’s Direct‑to‑Cell satellites use software‑defined radios and large phased‑array antennas so each LEO satellite behaves like a moving LTE/NR macro cell in space.
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Unlike standard Starlink Ku/Ka user terminals, the D2D layer transmits and receives in allocated terrestrial/mobile bands (roughly 800–2000 MHz) to talk directly to 3GPP LTE/NR chipsets in unmodified handsets, using TDD LTE initially.
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The payload compensates for fast LEO motion (~550 km altitude, ~7.5 km/s) with Doppler pre‑correction and timing advance logic in the satellite SDR so that ordinary UE modems still see acceptable frequency and timing error.
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Onboard beamforming and beam‑hopping allow very narrow spot beams and dynamic power control, which is critical to protect terrestrial networks sharing IMT spectrum and to deliver enough link budget for small handset antennas at long slant ranges.
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Backhaul from the D2D layer uses Starlink’s existing Ku/Ka links and optical inter‑satellite links into the ground segment, so D2D traffic can be routed either to the MNO’s core via gateways or across the Starlink mesh to another region.
Service model and 3GPP spec alignment:
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Starlink positions Direct‑to‑Cell as a “fill‑in” layer: SMS/low‑rate data first, then higher‑rate NR‑NTN services as 3GPP Release 17+ NTN features become available in commercial chipsets.
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The network integrates at the EPC/5GC interface so MNOs can advertise satellite coverage as just another PLMN/RA, letting devices roam seamlessly between terrestrial eNB/gNBs and the Starlink NTN cells, subject to roaming and spectrum agreements.
Satellite Connect Europe D2D technology:
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Satellite Connect Europe is a wholesale platform that exposes AST SpaceMobile’s LEO D2D satellite RAN to European MNOs, with ground stations in multiple EU markets providing regional gateways, traffic anchoring, and regulatory control within European jurisdiction.
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AST’s constellation uses very large phased arrays in LEO to form direct 4G/5G broadband links to standard smartphones, targeting multi‑Mbps throughput per device over IMT and MSS spectrum, again without any handset hardware or software changes.
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The ground segment is designed so that radio resource control, data handling, lawful intercept, and policy enforcement for European traffic all sit under EU‑based operational control, which is a key differentiator versus non‑European satellite operators.
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Integration work with operators such as Telefónica and Orange focuses on core‑network interconnect, mobility management between terrestrial 4G/5G sites and satellite cells, and using D2D mainly for rural coverage and resilience in outages or disasters.
Comparison — Starlink vs Satellite Connect Europe:
References:
https://www.3gpp.org/technologies/ntn-overview
https://itbrief.co.uk/story/satellite-connect-europe-seals-five-mno-trial-deals
Non-Terrestrial Networks (NTNs): market, specifications & standards in 3GPP and ITU-R
ITU-R recommendation IMT-2020-SAT.SPECS from ITU-R WP 5B to be based on 3GPP 5G NR-NTN and IoT-NTN (from Release 17 & 18)
Starlink doubles subscriber base; expands to to 42 new countries, territories & markets
Elon Musk: Starlink could become a global mobile carrier; 2 year timeframe for new smartphones
Amazon Leo (formerly Project Kuiper) unveils satellite broadband for enterprises; Competitive analysis with Starlink
Blue Origin announces TeraWave – satellite internet rival for Starlink and Amazon Leo
From LPWAN to Hybrid Networks: Satellite and NTN as Enablers of Enterprise IoT – Part 2
Keysight Technologies Demonstrates 3GPP Rel-19 NR-NTN Connectivity in Band n252
Telecoms.com’s survey: 5G NTNs to highlight service reliability and network redundancy
China ITU filing to put ~200K satellites in low earth orbit while FCC authorizes 7.5K additional Starlink LEO satellites
NBN selects Amazon Project Kuiper over Starlink for LEO satellite internet service in Australia
GEO satellite internet from HughesNet and Viasat can’t compete with LEO Starlink in speed or latency
Huawei unveils AI Centric Network roadmap, U6 GHz products, 5G Advanced strategy and SuperPoD cluster computing platforms
Missing from all the MWC 2026 6G AI alliance announcements, Huawei released a series of all-scenario U6 GHz products to help carriers unlock the full potential of 5G Advanced (5G-A) and set the stage for a seamless transition to 6G. Huawei also showcased its SuperPoD cluster for the first time outside China, which they have created to offer “a new option for the intelligent world.”
- The all-scenario U6 GHz products and solutions Huawei released today use innovative technologies to create a high-capacity, low-latency, optimal-experience backbone designed for mobile AI applications.
- There are already 70 million 5G-A users globally, and 5G-A is increasingly being adopted by carriers at scale. In China, Huawei has helped carriers deliver contiguous 5G-A coverage across 270 cities and launch 5G-A packages that monetize experience in over 30 provinces.
The company also launched enhanced AI-Centric Network solutions [1.] that will help carriers prepare for the agentic era by enabling intelligent services, networks, and network elements (NEs). The company’s plans to build more AI-centric networks and computing backbones that will help carriers and industry customers seize opportunities from the AI era.
Note 1. Huawei’s AI-Centric Network roadmap is designed to integrate intelligence directly into 5G-Advanced (5G-A) infrastructure and accelerate the transition toward Level-4 Autonomous Networks. The company plans to work with global carriers (where its not blacklisted) on the large-scale 5G-A deployment, use high uplink to address surging consumer and industry demand for mobile AI applications, and use the U6 GHz band to unlock the full value of spectrum and pave the way for smooth evolution to 6G.

Photo Credit: Huawei
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Three-Layer Intelligence in AI-Centric Networks: Accelerating the Agentic Era:
As mobile network operators transition toward AI-native 5G-Advanced and early 6G architectures, Huawei is positioning its AI-Centric Network portfolio as the blueprint for next-generation intelligent networks. By embedding intelligence across service, network, and network element (NE) layers, Huawei aims to establish the foundation for fully agentic, autonomously managed infrastructures.
- Service Layer: Focuses on multi-agent collaboration platforms to transform core carrier services—such as voice and home broadband—into intelligent service platforms.
- Network Layer: Aims to evolve from single-scenario automation to end-to-end single-domain network autonomy. Huawei officially launched AUTINOps, an AI-native intelligent operations solution designed to replace traditional manual O&M with predictive, preventive “digital employees”.
- Network Element (NE) Layer: Utilizes AI to optimize algorithms for RANs (Radio Access Networks) and core networks, improving spectral efficiency and service awareness.
At the Service layer, Huawei is enabling carriers to operationalize multi-agent collaboration frameworks that embed domain-specific intelligence into key service categories: voice, broadband, and digital experience monetization. These AI agents dynamically manage customer experience and lifecycle value, supporting the transformation of core connectivity services into intelligent, context-aware digital offerings.
At the Network layer, the company’s Autonomous Driving Network Level 4 (ADN L4) initiative focuses on single-scenario automation, delivering measurable improvements in O&M efficiency, service quality, and monetization agility. By the close of 2025, ADN single-scenario deployments were active across more than 130 commercial telecom networks. The next phase targets end-to-end, single-domain autonomy across transport, access, and core networks—an essential step toward zero-touch O&M and intent-driven orchestration in 5G-A and 6G environments.
At the Network Element layer, Huawei is jointly advancing AI-driven innovation across RAN, WAN, and core domains. This includes algorithmic optimization for intelligent RAN scheduling, service-aware traffic identification in WANs, and unified intent modeling across B2C and B2H use cases. Such capabilities enhance spectral and energy efficiency, enable predictive resilience, and provide fine-grained service awareness—all foundational for AI-native air interface and network control in 6G.
Computing Backbone with SuperPoD Clusters:
Supporting this vision, Huawei is introducing its next-generation SuperPoD and cluster computing platforms, designed as high-performance compute backbones for distributed AI model training and inference within telecom and enterprise domains. Featuring the proprietary UnifiedBus interconnect and system-level architecture innovations, the Atlas 950, TaiShan 950, and Atlas 850E SuperPoDs, along with the TaiShan 200–500 servers, deliver ultra-low latency and high throughput optimized for trillion-parameter AI models and real-time agentic operations.
Aligned with its open innovation strategy, Huawei continues to expand an open, collaborative computing ecosystem, supporting open-source frameworks and open-access platforms to accelerate the deployment of intelligent, AI-driven digital infrastructure worldwide.
Intelligent Transformation Across Industry Domains:
At MWC Barcelona 2026, Huawei is highlighting 115 end-to-end industrial intelligence showcases across verticals, underscoring its role in helping enterprises adopt AI-centric operational models. Through the SHAPE 2.0 Partner Framework, 22 co-developed AI and digital infrastructure solutions will demonstrate how vertical industries—from manufacturing and energy to transportation and healthcare—can harness 5G-A and AI integration to deliver measurable business outcomes.
Toward 5G-A Commercialization and 6G Evolution:
With large-scale 5G-Advanced rollouts accelerating, Huawei is collaborating with global carriers and ecosystem partners to realize level-4 autonomous networks and establish the architectural bridge to 6G. Central to this evolution is the convergence of AI, connectivity, and computing—enabling networks that can self-learn, self-optimize, and autonomously orchestrate service intent. These AI-Centric Network initiatives and SuperPoD-based computing backbones form the foundation for value-driven, intelligent networks built for the agentic era.
5G-Advanced and Infrastructure Innovations:
Huawei’s 5G-A strategy, branded as GigaUplink, focuses on delivering the high-uplink capacity and low latency required for mobile AI applications:
- U6 GHz Spectrum: Launched a comprehensive portfolio of all-scenario U6 GHz products to unlock 5G-A’s full potential and provide a smooth evolution path to 6G.
- Agentic Core: Introduced the Agentic Core solution, which integrates intelligence natively into the core network to support ubiquitous AI agent access across devices.
- All-Optical Target Network: Proposed an AI-centric optical roadmap featuring dual strategies: “AI for networks” (optimizing operations) and “networks for AI” (supporting AI workloads with ultra-low latency benchmarks of 1-5ms).
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References:
https://www.huawei.com/en/news/2026/3/mwc-ai-centric-network
https://carrier.huawei.com/en/minisite/events/mwc2026/
NVIDIA and global telecom leaders to build 6G on open and secure AI-native platforms + Linux Foundation launches OCUDU
Omdia on resurgence of Huawei: #1 RAN vendor in 3 out of 5 regions; RAN market has bottomed
Huawei, Qualcomm, Samsung, and Ericsson Leading Patent Race in $15 Billion 5G Licensing Market
Huawei Cloud Review and Global Sales Partner Policies for 2026
Huawei’s Electric Vehicle Charging Technology & Top 10 Charging Trends
Huawei to Double Output of Ascend AI chips in 2026; OpenAI orders HBM chips from SK Hynix & Samsung for Stargate UAE project
Huawei launches CloudMatrix 384 AI System to rival Nvidia’s most advanced AI system
U.S. export controls on Nvidia H20 AI chips enables Huawei’s 910C GPU to be favored by AI tech giants in China
AT&T and Ericsson boost Cloud RAN performance with AI-native software running on Intel Xeon 6 SoC
AT&T and Ericsson boost Cloud RAN performance with AI-native software running on Intel Xeon 6 SoC
Overview:
AT&T and Ericsson have completed a milestone Cloud RAN test by successfully demonstrating Ericsson’s AI-native Link Adaptation [1.] on a Cloud RAN stack powered by Intel Xeon 6 SoC. The test showed how artificial intelligence (AI) can improve spectral efficiency and network responsiveness in real-world conditions. Conducted over AT&T’s licensed frequency bands, the experiment was the first to use portable Ericsson RAN software running on Intel’s new Xeon 6 system-on-chip (SoC) platform—an architecture designed for high-performance, cloud-native processing of RAN workloads. Engineered specifically for network and edge deployments, Intel Xeon 6 SoC delivers breakthrough AI RAN performance with built-in acceleration. Integrated Intel Advanced Vector Extensions (AVX) and Intel Advanced Matrix Extension (AMX) technologies eliminate the need for discrete accelerators while maximizing capacity, efficiency, and TCO optimization.
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Note 1. AI-native Link Adaptation dynamically adjusts to changes in signal quality and interference, boosting RAN performance on purpose-built and cloud-based infrastructure alike.
Other Notes:
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vRAN: A radio access network (RAN) in which the baseband processing functions run as software on general-purpose processors (mostly from Intel) instead of on dedicated hardware at the cell site. In vRAN, the functional split defines how baseband processing is divided between centralized processors and the radio unit at the site, and that split drives fronthaul bandwidth, latency, and cost.
- Cloud RAN: An evolution of vRAN where those same RAN functions are re-architected as cloud‑native microservices/containers with CI/CD (Continuous Integration and either Continuous Delivery or Continuous Deployment), automation, and orchestrators, optimized for elastic scaling across distributed cloud infrastructure.
- Ericsson Cloud RAN is a cloud native software solution that handles compute functionality in the RAN. It virtualizes RAN functions on Commercial Off The Shelf (COTS) hardware, decoupling software from hardware to enable more flexible, scalable, and efficient network deployments.
- According to Dell’Oro Group, Cloud RAN (often encompassing vRAN) accounted for approximately 5% to 10% of the total global Radio Access Network (RAN) market revenues in 2025. In early 2026, Dell’Oro revised Cloud RAN projections downward. While virtualization remains a “key pillar” for the long term, short-term adoption is being slowed by performance, power, and cost-parity challenges when compared to purpose-built hardware.
- The total RAN market stabilized in late 2025 after losing approximately 20% of its value between 2022 and 2024. Market concentration reached a 10-year high in 2025, with the top five vendors (Huawei, Ericsson, Nokia, ZTE, and Samsung) capturing 96% of the revenue.
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Image Credit: Ericsson
In this proof-of-concept setup, Ericsson’s disaggregated and containerized RAN software operated within AT&T’s target Cloud RAN configuration, built on open, commercial off-the-shelf hardware. The test advanced from basic call functionality to validation of feature-rich network behavior in a cloud computing environment. Ericsson’s AI-native Link Adaptation is a learning algorithm that continuously assesses channel state and interference to determine the optimal modulation and coding scheme for each transmission interval. By generating real-time predictions of link quality, the AI model dynamically adjusts data rates to maximize throughput and spectral efficiency.
Early results were promising. Throughput gains reached up to 20% compared with conventional rule-based link adaptation approaches, alongside measurable improvements in spectral efficiency. Ericsson and Intel also used the trial to benchmark various AI inference models, demonstrating performance scalability and energy efficiency on general-purpose compute nodes rather than proprietary hardware accelerators. This suggests a more pragmatic path for deploying AI workloads across distributed RAN architectures.
AI-native Link Adaptation dynamically adjusts to changes in signal quality and interference, boosting RAN performance on purpose-built and cloud-based infrastructure alike.
Ericsson Cloud RAN is a cloud native software solution that handles compute functionality in the RAN. It virtualizes RAN functions on Commercial Off The Shelf (COTS) hardware, decoupling software from hardware to enable more flexible, scalable, and efficient network deployments.
Engineered specifically for network and edge deployments, Intel Xeon 6 SoC delivers breakthrough AI RAN performance with built-in acceleration. Integrated Intel Advanced Vector Extensions (AVX) and Intel Advanced Matrix Extension (AMX) technologies eliminate the need for discrete accelerators while maximizing capacity, efficiency, and TCO optimization.
Beyond the immediate performance improvements, the trial illustrates how open RAN architectures can accelerate innovation. By decoupling RAN software from vendor-specific hardware, AT&T can integrate AI capabilities and update network functions more quickly, avoiding the constraints of lock-in. The portability demonstrated here—running production-grade Ericsson RAN software on Intel Xeon 6 silicon—marks an industry first.
For AT&T, the achievement represents more than a lab milestone. It provides a technical template for scaling AI-native RAN functions into its cloud infrastructure, pointing to a future where machine learning operates natively within radio environments to fine-tune performance in real time. As operators continue balancing cost, flexibility, and efficiency, AI-optimized Cloud RAN deployments could become the next competitive frontier in 5G—and eventually, 6G—network evolution.
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Quotes:
Rob Soni, Vice President, RAN Technology at AT&T, says: “AT&T is leading the charge toward an open, intelligent, and scalable network future by advancing Open RAN and Cloud RAN with AI-native capabilities at their core. This demo highlights how AI capabilities, powered by our next-generation Cloud RAN platform, can be deployed seamlessly to drive innovation and deliver superior customer experiences.”
Mårten Lerner, Head of Networks Strategy and Product Management, Business Area Networks at Ericsson, says: “Together with AT&T and Intel, Ericsson is demonstrating how our domain expertise combined with AI-native RAN software can drive transformative advancements in both Cloud RAN and purpose-built deployments. Our industry-leading AI-native Link Adaptation serves as the first proof point on this journey. With a hardware-agnostic RAN software stack, Ericsson is committed to offering maximum flexibility and enabling all our customers to benefit from future innovations – regardless of their chosen underlying hardware. This milestone underscores Ericsson’s commitment to helping operators advance their networks by deploying AI functionality across the RAN stack.”
Cristina Rodriguez, VP and GM, Network and Edge at Intel, says: “This successful collaboration with AT&T and Ericsson showcases the power of Intel Xeon 6 SoC to enable and accelerate AI workloads in Cloud RAN environments. Xeon 6 SoC is architected to handle the demanding compute requirements of AI-native network functions, delivering the performance and efficiency operators need to unlock the full potential of intelligent networks. By providing a flexible, standards-based platform, Intel Xeon 6 enables service providers like AT&T to deploy innovative AI capabilities while maintaining the openness and choice that drive industry innovation.”
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AI-Native Link Adaptation vs. Traditional Methods:
Traditional link adaptation in RAN relies on deterministic, rule-based algorithms that select the Modulation and Coding Scheme (MCS) from predefined lookup tables. These methods primarily use instantaneous Channel Quality Indicator (CQI) reports or estimated Signal-to-Interference-plus-Noise Ratio (SINR) thresholds, often adjusted via Outer Loop Link Adaptation (OLLA) based on ACK/NACK feedback from the UE. This reactive approach applies conservative margins to account for channel estimation errors, prediction lag, and varying interference, which can lead to suboptimal throughput—either underutilizing the link with low MCS or triggering excess HARQ retransmissions with overly aggressive selections.
AI-native Link Adaptation shifts to a predictive, model-driven paradigm using machine learning (typically lightweight neural networks or time-series models) trained on historical channel data. Rather than static thresholds, the AI processes sequences of CQI, beam metrics, mobility patterns, and interference traces to forecast the probable channel state for the next transmission time interval (TTI). This enables precise MCS selection that hugs the Shannon capacity limit more closely, minimizing BLER while maximizing spectral efficiency in dynamic scenarios like high-mobility NLOS or bursty interference.
Key differences include:
| Aspect | Traditional (Rule-Based) | AI-Native (ML-Based) |
|---|---|---|
| Decision Mechanism | Lookup tables, SINR thresholds, OLLA offsets | Real-time inference from ML models |
| Channel Handling | Reactive (past CQI/SINR) | Predictive (time-series forecasting) |
| Adaptation Speed | Step-wise, with feedback lag | Continuous, sub-TTI granularity |
| Performance Gains | Baseline (0% reference) | Up to 20% throughput, 10% spectral efficiency |
| Compute Needs | Low (fixed arithmetic) | Moderate (edge inference on COTS like Xeon 6) |
| Limitations | Struggles with non-stationary channels | Requires training data, retraining overhead |
Analysis: Rakuten Mobile and Intel partnership to embed AI directly into vRAN
RAN silicon rethink – from purpose built products & ASICs to general purpose processors or GPUs for vRAN & AI RAN
vRAN market disappoints – just like OpenRAN and mobile 5G
Nokia and Eolo deploy 5G SA mmWave “Cloud RAN” network
Ericsson and Google Cloud expand partnership with Cloud RAN solution
Ericsson and O2 Telefónica demo Europe’s 1st Cloud RAN 5G mmWave FWA use case
Cloud RAN with Google Distributed Cloud Edge; Strategy: host network functions of other vendors on Google Cloud
vRAN market disappoints – just like OpenRAN and mobile 5G
Ericsson and Intel collaborate to accelerate AI-Native 6G; other AI-Native 6G advancements at MWC 2026
Ericsson and Intel at MWC 2026:
Building on milestones in Cloud RAN, 5G Core, and open network innovation, Ericsson and Intel are showcasing joint technology advancements at the Mobile World Congress (MWC) 2026 in Barcelona this week. Demonstrations can be experienced at the Ericsson Pavilion (Hall 2), Intel Booth (Hall 3, Stand 3E31), and across partner event spaces, highlighting the companies’ shared progress in enabling the next era of AI-driven networks.
The two companies are strengthening their long-standing technology partnership to accelerate ecosystem readiness for AI-native 6G networks and use cases. The expanded collaboration spans next-generation mobile connectivity, cloud infrastructure, and compute acceleration — with a focus on AI-driven RAN and packet core evolution, platform-level security, and scalable cloud-native architectures designed to shorten time-to-market for advanced network solutions.
“6G is not merely an iteration of mobile technology; it will serve as the foundational infrastructure distributing AI across devices, the edge, and the cloud,” said Börje Ekholm, President and CEO of Ericsson. “With our deep history in network innovation and global-scale operator deployments, Ericsson is uniquely positioned to drive practical 6G integration from research to commercialization.”
Lip-Bu Tan, CEO of Intel, added: “Intel’s vision is to lead the industry in unifying RAN, Core, and edge AI to enable seamless deployment of AI-native 6G environments. Together with Ericsson, we are proving that next-generation connectivity can be open, energy-efficient, secure, and intelligent. With future Ericsson Silicon built on Intel’s most advanced process technologies, coupled with Intel Xeon-powered AI-RAN ready Cloud RAN and collaborative multi-year research efforts, we are delivering the performance, efficiency, and supply assurance demanded by leading operators worldwide.”
As 6G transitions from research to commercialization, the industry must align around a mature, standards-based ecosystem. The Ericsson–Intel collaboration aims to accelerate development of high-performance, energy-efficient compute architectures optimized for both AI for Networks and Networks for AI.
AI-native 6G will fuse intelligent, programmable network functions with distributed compute and real-time sensing, bringing processing power closer to the network edge and enabling ultra-responsive, adaptive services. This convergence will enhance network efficiency, agility, and service intelligence across future deployments.
About Ericsson:
Ericsson‘s high-performing networks provide connectivity for billions of people every day. For 150 years, we’ve been pioneers in creating technology for communication. We offer mobile communication and connectivity solutions for service providers and enterprises. Together with our customers and partners, we make the digital world of tomorrow a reality.
About Intel:
Intel is an industry leader, creating world-changing technology that enables global progress and enriches lives. Inspired by Moore’s Law, we continuously work to advance the design and manufacturing of semiconductors to help address our customers’ greatest challenges. By embedding intelligence in the cloud, network, edge and every kind of computing device, we unleash the potential of data to transform business and society for the better.
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Related AI-Native 6G Announcements at MWC 2026:
In addition to the Ericsson-Intel collaboration, several vendors and operators announced AI-native 6G advancements or related demos at MWC Barcelona 2026. These initiatives emphasize AI-RAN integration, software-defined architectures, and ecosystem partnerships to bridge 5G-A to 6G.
NVIDIA Multi-Partner Commitment: NVIDIA rallied operators and vendors including Booz Allen, BT Group, Cisco, Deutsche Telekom, Ericsson, Nokia, SK Telecom, SoftBank, and T-Mobile to build open, secure AI-native 6G platforms. The focus is on software-defined wireless with AI embedded in RAN, edge, and core for integrated sensing, communications, and interoperability.
Nokia AI-RAN: Nokia highlighted new partnerships with Dell, Quanta, Red Hat, SuperMicro, NVIDIA, and operators like T-Mobile, Indosat Ooredoo Hutchison, BT, Elisa, NTT DOCOMO, and Vodafone for AI-RAN trials paving the way to cognitive 6G networks. Live demos at Nokia’s Hall 3 Booth 3B20 included Southeast Asia’s first AI-RAN Layer 3 5G call on shared GPU infrastructure and vision AI for immersive services.
T-Mobile & Deutsche Telekom Hub: T-Mobile US and (major shareholder) Deutsche Telekom launched a joint 6G Innovation Hub targeting AI-native autonomous networks, secure sensing/positioning, and connectivity-compute convergence for Physical AI. It builds on agentic AI proofs like network-integrated translation, emphasizing “kinetic tokens” for real-time physical world control.
ZTE GigaMIMO 6G Prototype: ZTE unveiled the world’s first 6G prototype with 2000+ U6G-band antenna elements (GigaMIMO), powered by AI algorithms for 10x capacity over 5G-A, 30% spectral efficiency gains, and AI-driven immersive services. Booth 3F30 demos integrate AI across connectivity, computing, and devices for “AI serves AI” networks.
Qualcomm Agentic AI RAN: Qualcomm announced AI-native RAN management services in its Dragonwing suite for autonomous 6G-grade networks, plus new Open RAN AI features for performance optimization. CEO Cristiano Amon’s keynote focused on “Architecting 6G for the AI Era,” with device-to-data-center transformations.
Huawei U6GHz for 6G Path:
Huawei released all-scenario U6GHz products (macro/micro sites, microwave) with AI-centric solutions for 5G-A capacity (100 Gbps downlink) and low-latency AI apps, enabling smooth 6G evolution. Emphasizes hyper-resolution MU-MIMO and multi-band coordination for indoor/outdoor AI experiences.
Summary Chart:
| Vendor/Operator | Key Focus | Partners/Demos | Booth/Location |
|---|---|---|---|
| NVIDIA | Open AI-native platforms | Multiple operators/vendors | MWC general |
| Nokia | AI-RAN trials & cognitive networks | NVIDIA, T-Mobile, IOH et al. | Hall 3, 3B20 |
| T-Mobile/DT | Physical AI hub | Joint R&D | Announced pre-MWC |
| ZTE | GigaMIMO 6G prototype | China Mobile, Qualcomm | Hall 3, 3F30 |
| Qualcomm | Agentic RAN automation | Open RAN ecosystem | Keynote & demos |
| Huawei | U6GHz AI-centric evolution | Carrier-focused | MWC showcase |
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References:
NVIDIA and global telecom leaders to build 6G on open and secure AI-native platforms + Linux Foundation launches OCUDU
Comparing AI Native mode in 6G (IMT 2030) vs AI Overlay/Add-On status in 5G (IMT 2020)
SKT 6G ATHENA White Paper: a mid-to-long term network evolution strategy for the AI era
Dell’Oro: RAN Market Stabilized in 2025 with 1% CAG forecast over next 5 years; Opinion on AI RAN, 5G Advanced, 6G RAN/Core risks
Nokia and Rohde & Schwarz collaborate on AI-powered 6G receiver years before IMT 2030 RIT submissions to ITU-R WP5D
SK Telecom, DOCOMO, NTT and Nokia develop 6G AI-native air interface
Market research firms Omdia and Dell’Oro: impact of 6G and AI investments on telcos
Ericsson goes with custom silicon (rather than Nvidia GPUs) for AI RAN
Dell’Oro: Analysis of the Nokia-NVIDIA-partnership on AI RAN
RAN silicon rethink – from purpose built products & ASICs to general purpose processors or GPUs for vRAN & AI RAN
NVIDIA and global telecom leaders to build 6G on open and secure AI-native platforms + Linux Foundation launches OCUDU
- AI-RAN Integration: Shifting from fixed-function hardware to AI-RAN architecture to turn networks into programmable AI infrastructure.
- Architectural Resilience: Implementing open and trusted principles to ensure interoperability, supply-chain security, and rapid innovation cycles.
- Integrated Sensing & Communication: Leveraging AI-native platforms to enable real-time intelligence and decision-making at the network edge.
- Scalability: Addressing the complexity of 6G to support billions of autonomous endpoints that demand higher security and lower latency than current architectures can provide.
The NVIDIA AI Aerial platform is a software-defined, cloud-native framework for building, training, and deploying AI-native 5G and 6G wireless networks. It transitions traditional fixed-function hardware to a programmable, multi-tenant infrastructure that runs both Radio Access Network (RAN) and AI workloads simultaneously on NVIDIA-accelerated computing.

Image Credit: NVIDIA
Quotes:
“AI is driving the largest infrastructure buildout in history, and telecommunications is the next frontier,” stated Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of NVIDIA. “By building AI-RAN, we are transforming global telecom networks into a ubiquitous AI fabric.”
Allison Kirkby, chief executive of BT Group, said: “Connectivity is the backbone of economic growth, and with this collaboration, we’re helping lay the foundations for a future ecosystem that is intelligent, sustainable and secure. By building on open and trustworthy AI native platforms, we can simplify future technologies like 6G, ensuring they build upon the strengths of today’s 5G networks while still unlocking powerful new capabilities at scale.”
Tim Höttges, CEO of Deutsche Telekom AG, said: “Best network, best customer experience — that remains our promise. With an open, intelligent and trusted 6G infrastructure, we are laying the foundation for the era of physical AI and unlocking new value for our customers, for industry and for society.”
Arielle Roth, Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Communications and Information, and Administrator at the National Telecommunications and Information Administration, said: “America’s 6G leadership will be critical to our nation’s economic prosperity, national security and global competitiveness. Today’s announcement demonstrates that the United States and our allies and partners around the world are leading in this next-generation technology. We look forward to the next steps from this international industry coalition as they advance and implement their shared 6G vision.”
Jung Jai-hun, president and CEO of SK Telecom, said: “SKT is evolving telco infrastructure to serve as the foundation for the AI era, where connectivity serves as a platform for intelligence and innovation. Together, we can build open, trusted infrastructure that drives a global ecosystem of AI innovation.”
Hideyuki Tsukuda, executive vice president and chief technology officer of SoftBank Corp., said: “Al-native 6G will transform wireless networks into secure, software-defined infrastructure that supports the next wave of global innovation. SoftBank Corp. is driving this innovation with NVIDIA by advancing open and trusted platforms that enable interoperability, resilience and continuous evolution at scale.”
Srini Gopalan, CEO of T-Mobile, said: “We’re at a pivotal moment. In the U.S., we’ve laid the foundation with 5G Advanced and AI-native networks where intelligence lives inside the network. As 6G becomes the backbone of the AI era, telecom will serve as the nervous system of the digital economy, enabling autonomous systems and intelligent industries at scale and unlocking new value for customers and businesses alike. T-Mobile is proud to help define what’s next through deep ecosystem collaboration and sustained innovation.”
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Linux Foundation launches OCUDU:
Separately, the Linux Foundation (LF) today announced the formation of the Open Centralized Unit Distributed Unit (OCUDU) Ecosystem Foundation, an open collaboration hub dedicated to building, scaling, and sustaining the OCUDU technical project assets and leveraging them to establish a foundational reference platform for RAN including AI based algorithms and solutions. The OCUDU Ecosystem Foundation provides a critical mechanism for industry vendors to optimally guide OCUDU development to support 5G and early AI Native 6G services.
The OCUDU Ecosystem Foundation brings together an ecosystem across enterprise, telecom operators, cloud providers, equipment vendors, and research institutions to co-develop and integrate critical components required for 5G and early 6G deployments. This community-driven model complements global standards from 3GPP and O-RAN alliance and industry alliances like AI-RAN alliance. This global effort ensures that innovation, transparency, and interoperability remain at the core of global software-defined RAN evolution.
“By aligning global efforts under the Linux Foundation, we’re building an open, trusted, and secure open source platform to power the next decade of wireless innovation,” said Arpit Joshipura, general manager, Networking, Edge and IoT, at the Linux Foundation. “The OCUDU Ecosystem Foundation represents a key step forward in open source RAN, specifically for CU and DU.”
“This initiative brings the best of the open source model to one of the most critical layers of future wireless: the foundation for an interoperable, software-defined radio access network,” said Dr. Tom Rondeau, principal director for FutureG. “By shifting the maintenance of these common components to a collaborative, open-source project, under neutral governance at the Linux Foundation, we enable our industry partners to focus their resources on the innovative and monetizable technologies that are most effective for the nation. We are building a foundation that enables shared success and accelerates progress for the entire ecosystem. We are looking forward to seeing this approach provide a vital platform for strengthening our relationships and collaboration with our allies and international partners.”
“The key to driving innovation in wireless is to leverage a broad ecosystem of experts in networking, radio software, and emerging AI technologies,” said Joe Kochan, CEO of NSC. “What started with a competitive proposal process to elicit the best technology solutions from among NSC’s large and diverse membership is now expanding under the Linux Foundation, and NSC is proud to continue partnering with both LF and the FutureG team to advance OCUDU development efforts and build the next generation of wireless capabilities.”
References:
Comparing AI Native mode in 6G (IMT 2030) vs AI Overlay/Add-On status in 5G (IMT 2020)
SKT 6G ATHENA White Paper: a mid-to-long term network evolution strategy for the AI era
Dell’Oro: RAN Market Stabilized in 2025 with 1% CAG forecast over next 5 years; Opinion on AI RAN, 5G Advanced, 6G RAN/Core risks
Nokia and Rohde & Schwarz collaborate on AI-powered 6G receiver years before IMT 2030 RIT submissions to ITU-R WP5D
SK Telecom, DOCOMO, NTT and Nokia develop 6G AI-native air interface
Market research firms Omdia and Dell’Oro: impact of 6G and AI investments on telcos
Ericsson goes with custom silicon (rather than Nvidia GPUs) for AI RAN
Dell’Oro: Analysis of the Nokia-NVIDIA-partnership on AI RAN
RAN silicon rethink – from purpose built products & ASICs to general purpose processors or GPUs for vRAN & AI RAN

