The simple answer is, yes. Before we dive into that, let’s consider the problem. 3G networks have served us well. They offer great coverage and, for many IoT applications, the performance they deliver is more than sufficient. Perhaps not for the emerging new class of IoT services, but for many that depend on remote data collection and asynchronous operations, they’ve been just fine.
Last week our global connectivity team attended MVNOs World Congress in Amsterdam, where IoT and eSIMs were top of the agenda and we shared our thoughts and experiences - and learnt from other early adopters of these technologies so we can improve our offering too. You can read our earlier blog about the event here.
Next week the team at Telecom26 working with our digital health customers will be off to Swiss Medtech Day.
CommunicAsia starts on Wednesday and runs through to Friday - and Telecom26’s global connectivity team will be out in force. This week we will also be at MVNOs World Congress in Amsterdam as discussed in last week’s blog.
Next week our global connectivity team will be at MVNOs World Congress in Amsterdam which describes itself as “the biggest gathering of the global MVNOs community” and “a front runner in delivering critical insights and enabling powerful connections across the global MVNOs industry”.
Choosing a mobile connectivity provider for enterprise and IoT applications isn’t as simple as it sounds. Often, businesses contract with a single provider in a particular country and that’s that. But, for data-based applications – such as IoT and M2M, is that always the right decision?
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