The global tech trends of the future

Sep 14th at 08:27
14-09-2020 08:27:51+07:00

The global tech trends of the future

The unprecedented events of 2020 have brought into focus the critical role that digital infrastructure plays in the functioning of virtually every aspect of contemporary society. Denis Brunetti, president of Ericsson Vietnam, Myanmar, Cambodia, and Laos, writes about global technology trends and how sectors benefit from the gains that digital infrastructure can provide.

The global tech trends of the future
By Denis Brunetti, president of Ericsson Vietnam, Myanmar, Cambodia, and Laos

More than ever before, communication technologies are providing innovative solutions to help address social, environmental, and economic challenges by enhancing efficiency and enabling both intensified network usage and more well-informed decisions.

The communications industry supports other industries by enabling them to deliver services, while mobile networks globally and in Vietnam are proving yet again that they can deliver the performance and reliability to support society in this hour of need.

Every year our global chief technology officer Erik Ekudden releases a report on the technology trends that he sees shaping the communications industry. In this year’s report, the trends reflect on the ongoing evolution of the network platform in terms of the key needs that are driving its evolution and the emerging capabilities that will meet both those and other needs.

Digital infrastructure offers endless possibilities to individuals, enterprises, and governments across the globe with its unique ability to bridge vast distances and enable powerful new solutions to a wide range of social, environmental, and economic challenges. Healthcare, education, finance, commerce, governance, and agriculture are just a few of the sectors that stand to benefit from the massive efficiency gains that digital infrastructure can provide.

Designed to carry vital messages, commands, reasoning, insights, intelligence, and all the sensory information needed to support the continuous evolution of industry and society, the network platform is designed to be the spinal cord of digital infrastructure. The major advantage of the network platform is that it will be accessible anywhere, with guaranteed performance, and will be inherently reliable, fulfilling all requirements for secure communication.

The first three of the seven trends this year are the key drivers of network platform evolution. All three highlight the growing need to bridge the gap between physical and digital realities. Most notably, this involves delivering sensory experiences over networks and utilising digital representations to make the physical world fully programmable.

A collaborative and automated physical world

As physical and digital realities become increasingly interconnected, advanced cyber-physical systems have emerged. The systems consist of humans, physical objects (machines and other things), processes, networking and computation, and the interactions between them all.

Their primary purpose is to provide individuals, organisations and enterprises with full transparency to monitor and control assets and places, thereby generating massive efficiency benefits. One early example of this is the way that cyber-physical systems can help planners optimise energy and materials usage.

Connected, intelligent machines

Machines will become increasingly intelligent and autonomous as their cognitive abilities continue to expand. Their understanding of the world around them will continue to grow in tandem with their ability to interact with other machines as part of a cognitive system of systems.

The internet of senses

The ability to deliver multisensory experiences over future networks will make it easier than ever before to transfer skills over the internet. It will ultimately lead to the emergence of the internet of senses, which combines visual, audio, 3D touch, and other technologies to allow human beings to have remote sensory experiences.

The internet of senses will enable seamless interaction with remote objects and machines, making it possible to fully realise use cases such as remote health checks, remote operation of machinery, holographic communication, and virtual reality holidays.

Eventually, brain-computer interfaces will enable communication at the speed of thought where, instead of speaking to machines, humans will merely think in order to direct them.

A fully-connected future

The remaining trends are increasingly advanced technologies in four areas – non-limiting connectivity, pervasive network compute fabric, trustworthy infrastructure, and cognitive networks. Breakthroughs in these four areas will be essential to fully enable the top three trends and continuously expand the capabilities of digital infrastructure through the network platform in the years and decades ahead.

Future technologies will enable a fully digitalised, automated, and programmable world of connected humans, machines, things, and places.

Traffic in future networks will be generated not only by human communication but also by connected and intelligent machines embedded with AI. As time goes on, the percentage of traffic generated by humans will drop as that of traffic generated by machines – including autonomous vehicles, drones, and surveillance systems – rises.

Items that make up the Internet of Things require even more sophisticated communication than humans do. For example, they must be able to interact dynamically with the network. Sensor data will be used to support the development of pervasive cyber-physical systems consisting of physical objects connected to collaborative digital twins. Future capabilities will also include support for the transfer of modalities like sense of smell.

It is clear the most important future network trends to watch are those that relate most closely to the growth and expansion of intelligent digital infrastructure on the network platform.

VIR





NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Local SMEs plunge for digital moves

Despite facing many challenges from the pandemic, a large proportion of local small- and medium-sized enterprises are looking to digitalise themselves to bring new...

Predicted consumer resets to shape Vietnam FMCG market: Nielsen

The news cycle related to Covid-19 transmission no longer influences trends on the FMCG market in Vietnam and Southeast Asia.

HCM City, Busan to set up virtual inter-sector working group

HCM City and Busan city of the Republic of Korea (RoK) are to establish a virtual inter-sector working group to bolster bilateral cooperation.

Vietjet CEO Nguyen Thi Phuong Thao named among 100 people transforming business in Asia

Vietjet CEO Nguyen Thi Phuong Thao has been named among Business Insider's 100 People Transforming Business in Asia in 2020.

Adapting to new solar PPA regulations

Circular 18 became effective from last month and superseded the previous Circular 16 on the same subject matter. Circular 18 introduces updated template power...

Promoting a redesigned model for stable growth

The aftermath stemming from the pandemic has worsened global economic hardships but also opened up new potential. Dam Nhan Duc, head of Research and Corporate...

Night-time economy stalls in Vietnam

Localities throughout Vietnam are facing hefty challenges in developing their night-time economy as local governments struggle to shift preconceived notions of the...

Vietnamese, Bulgarian firms enhance trade ties

Vietnamese businesses have promoted their high-quality products to Bulgarian importers and distributors at an two-day online conference which wrapped up on Friday.

Procedural bottlenecks prevent businesses from benefiting from Government support packages

The central and local governments and other agencies have announced a number of policies and programmes to help businesses overcome difficulties caused by the...

MPI prepares new decree on SOE information disclosure

The Ministry of Planning and Industry (MPI) is developing a new decree to guide State-owned enterprises (SOEs) on disclosing information, aiming to develop a...


MOST READ


Back To Top