The telecom industry continued moving beyond traditional voice and data service during the week of July 6. AT&T expanded its enterprise portfolio through a partnership with Everbridge and completed a low-latency mobility trial with Ericsson and MediaTek, while Verizon became the U.S. connectivity provider for newly manufactured BMW Group vehicles through KDDI's global platform. Telefónica selected Thales to strengthen its IoT eSIM capabilities, Deutsche Telekom and Ericsson deployed private 5G at the Port of Hamburg, and EchoStar's leadership change signaled a deeper strategic transition. The common thread: connectivity is increasingly packaged as part of a broader business solution rather than sold as a standalone service.
This week's developments centered around one common theme: automation. Nokia expanded strategic AI partnerships with both Google Cloud and Amazon Web Services, bringing generative AI into operational assurance and autonomous networking. Ericsson's latest Mobility Report showed global 5G subscriptions surpassing three billion, with roughly half of worldwide mobile traffic now running over 5G. And throughout DTW Ignite, vendors repeatedly emphasized autonomous networking, unified operational data and AI-assisted operations. Individually, none of these announcements fundamentally changes the telecom landscape — collectively, they point toward an industry where network operations become increasingly automated, predictive and software driven.
A week of quiet but consequential moves. AST SpaceMobile put three more BlueBird satellites in orbit, pushing direct-to-smartphone coverage closer to commercial reality, while bidding rolled on in the FCC's Auction 113, America's first major spectrum sale since 2022. Ericsson's mid-year Mobility Report confirmed 5G has crossed roughly 3.1 billion subscriptions globally, even as the company defended its chip strategy against Nvidia's AI ambitions in the radio network. And in Singapore, MVNO redONE's wind-down offered a case study in what saturation does to undifferentiated brands.