By delivering fiber‑like speeds without physical cabling, Taara’s light‑based platform could fast‑track 6G rollouts and unlock new AI‑driven services, giving operators a cost‑effective, flexible alternative to traditional RF and fiber networks.
At the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Taara unveiled its next‑generation light‑based connectivity solution aimed at powering 6G and AI‑intensive applications. The company positions the technology as a hybrid between fiber‑grade speed and wireless flexibility, addressing the capacity limits of radio frequency and the costly trenching required for fiber.
Taara’s breakthrough relies on solid‑state silicon photonics that replace traditional mechanical mirrors with electronic steering. A pocket‑sized module can transmit, receive, and steer data at tens of gigabits per second while consuming minimal power, promising “infinite” bandwidth without interference. The first commercial offering, called Tara Beam, will showcase these capabilities.
During the demo, a Taara engineer highlighted the chip’s ability to fit in his hand, emphasizing the shift from bulky optics to compact, steerable light links. He noted that advances in photonic integration, algorithms, and hardware now make free‑space optical links viable at scale.
If adopted widely, Taara’s solution could accelerate 6G deployment, lower infrastructure costs, and enable ultra‑low‑latency AI services in dense urban environments, reshaping how carriers build future networks.
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