Saturday, June 6, 2026
  • Subscribe
  • Advertise
  • Advertising Specifications
  • Editorial
  • Editorial Features
  • About Us
  • Contact
Data Centres Africa
  • Magazine Topics
  • Infrastructure
  • Sectors
  • Regions
  • Magazine Issues
  • Editorial Features 2026
No Result
View All Result
  • Magazine Topics
  • Infrastructure
  • Sectors
  • Regions
  • Magazine Issues
  • Editorial Features 2026
No Result
View All Result
African Wireless Communications
No Result
View All Result
Home Magazine Case Studies

SoftBank Corp. evolves Telecom infrastructure for the AI era: From carrying data to orchestrating intelligence

23/03/2026
Reading Time: 2 mins read
Share on LinkedInShare on Twitter

At Mobile World Congress (MWC) Barcelona 2026, SoftBank Corp. unveiled its transition from a traditional carrier that moves data – raw, uninterpreted data packets – to an AI-native infrastructure provider enabling distributed AI workloads across edge and cloud environments.

SoftBank Corp. makes the point that, traditionally, telecommunications networks have been built to carry data, not comprehend it; static infrastructure designed to move information from origin to destination without understanding what it contained.

In the AI era, SoftBank’s Telco AI Cloud vision evolves the network into a central nervous system: an active computation platform that operates AI models directly within the infrastructure. Through AI-RAN-based MEC (Multi-access Edge Computing), SoftBank can now orchestrate and broker AI workloads across this distributed edge, offloading GPU compute to deliver real-time, reliable inference where it is needed.

By embedding this intelligence from the core to the edge, SoftBank states that it is creating a distributed platform that delivers meaning, not just data, enabling immediate decision-making for robotics, autonomous systems and smart cities.

For Physical AI, this means resource-constrained robots can now perform complex, scalable behaviors that would otherwise be difficult to achieve independently; powered not by what they carry but by the network intelligence that surrounds them.

Enabling the era of physical AI

That vision is already taking shape. A key highlight of the announcement was SoftBank’s focus on ‘Physical AI’: the convergence of AI with the physical world of robotics. Unlike traditional centralised clouds, Telco AI Cloud brings intelligence to the edge, enabling robots to make split-second decisions based on sensor data, performing complex behaviors that their onboard hardware alone could not independently support.

Following a collaboration with Yaskawa Electric Corporation focused on deploying robots in real-world environments, SoftBank demonstrated a joint proof-of-concept with Ericsson. The demonstration showcased how AI-RAN networks can optimise connectivity for robots, ensuring the stability required to work safely alongside humans in dynamic environments.

Related Posts

Orange Cyberdefense expands into Spain in collaboration with MasOrange
World News

Orange Cyberdefense expands into Spain in collaboration with MasOrange

26/05/2026
Magazine

euNetworks strengthens Super Highway network with new Frankfurt-Strasbourg route

19/05/2026
Magazine

Onecom celebrates triple success at the Vodafone Partner Awards

19/05/2026
Global Signal Exchange enables large scale criminal referral in West Africa, as new AI platform goes live
Case Studies

Global Signal Exchange enables large scale criminal referral in West Africa, as new AI platform goes live

12/05/2026

Subscribe

Get the latest networking news and insights delivered to your inbox.

SIGN UP

READ THE LATEST ISSUE

African Wireless Communications is the continent’s leading independent resource for wireless, mobile, and critical connectivity professionals. We provide an in-depth look at the rapidly evolving telecommunications landscape in the region, covering everything from cellular, satellite, and fixed wireless access to fibre backhaul and cloud-ready data centre infrastructure.

By delivering breaking news, expert analysis, and strategic insights across our print publication, website, and e-newsletters, African Wireless Communications offers a powerful, ‘one-stop’ media combination. Our multi-channel platform is dedicated to keeping industry decision-makers connected, informed, and equipped to navigate the future of African wireless communications.

Follow Us

Content

  • Magazine
  • Infrastructure
  • Sectors
  • Regions
  • Subscribe
  • Editorial
  • Advertise
  • About Us
  • Features List
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookies Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

© 2026 African Wireless Communications - A Denyan Media Ltd Publication.

No Result
View All Result
  • Magazine Topics
  • Sectors
  • Infrastructure
  • Regions
  • Magazine Issues
  • Advertise
  • Advertising Specifications
  • Editorial
  • Editorial Features
  • About Us

© 2026 African Wireless Communications - A Denyan Media Ltd Publication.

We use cookies to analyse site traffic and improve your experience with the latest data centre insights. By clicking 'I Agree', you consent to our use of cookies in accordance with our Privacy Policy.