Huawei launches world's first 50G PON prototype
Huawei has unveiled the first single-wavelength 50G passive optical network (PON) prototype, providing 50 Gbps downstream and 25-50 Gbps upstream transmission.
Huawei has unveiled the first single-wavelength 50G passive optical network (PON) prototype, providing 50 Gbps downstream and 25-50 Gbps upstream transmission.
Centre is a showcase for Huawei's products and security practices and a site where customers and partners can test and verify products.
Huawei used MWC in Barcelona to unveil a symmetric 10G Passive Optical Network terminal with ultra-fast transmission and zero-freezing Wi-Fi experience.
Opening Huawei's new Cyber Security Transparency Centre in Brussels, Deputy Chairman Ken Hu said, “Trust in cyber security is one of the major challenges that we face as a global community. It needs to be based on verifiable facts based on common standards."
Over 200 representatives from regulators, telecom carriers, enterprises and the media attended the event.
From 5G to folding phones, Huawei had plenty to showcase at the 2019 Mobile World Congress in Barcelona.
Cloud computing and Big Data are driving a new round of ICT transformation, as data centers become hotspots for investment.
Solution delivers highest-density 400G data center network and enables carriers to offer 5G, Internet of Things and Virtual Reality over flexible architecture.
The new CloudFAN helps operators implement smooth network evolution and enables premium broadband in the 10G Passive Optical Network (PON) era.
The Open Site Interest Group aims to develop mobile networks that can deliver a better experience and gain site development dividends in this process
Polish infrastructure provider HAWE and Huawei will carry out end-to-end MS-OTN full service bearer solution innovation to build the silk road of information networks together
The agreement to set up the centre, signed at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, is an important milestone of cooperation between Orange and Huawei.
Europe would fall behind the U.S. and China in the race to install the next generation of wireless networks if governments ban Huawei over security fears, according to an assessment by Deutsche Telekom