
These alliances accelerate AI‑enabled, secure 5G adoption for enterprises and give CSPs scalable, cost‑effective network optimisation, cementing Ericsson’s role as a pivotal 5G infrastructure enabler.
Enterprise mobility is at a turning point as Ericsson and Microsoft combine their strengths to deliver AI‑powered 5G connectivity directly within Windows 11. By integrating Intune with Ericsson Enterprise 5G Connect, IT departments can automate network selection, enforce security policies, and manage eSIM profiles without manual intervention. This reduces operational overhead and ensures a consistent user experience across global sites, addressing long‑standing barriers to cellular‑connected laptops and positioning 5G as a default enterprise transport layer.
On the network side, Ericsson’s agentic rApp as‑a‑Service on AWS introduces a generative‑AI interface that lets operators converse with their RAN through natural language. The solution plugs into the Open RAN‑defined Non‑RT RIC, translating spoken or typed commands into concrete optimisation actions. This approach shortens deployment cycles, improves cost control and accelerates the autonomous‑networks journey for CSPs, differentiating Ericsson in a crowded AI‑network‑orchestration market.
The new R&D centre in Yokohama underscores Ericsson’s commitment to open, programmable 5G ecosystems. Focused on O‑RAN, high‑performance programmable radios and cross‑industry collaboration, the facility will serve as a testbed for next‑generation mobile technologies and standardisation efforts. By anchoring innovation in Japan—a key market for advanced mobile services—Ericsson aims to shape global 5G roadmaps and nurture partnerships that will drive revenue growth through 2027 and beyond.
Comments
Want to join the conversation?
Loading comments...