Nokia Expands Global Telecom Partnerships to Drive AI Growth

Nokia
From mobile phones to 5G networks — Nokia powers global communication. [TechGolly]

Key Points:

  • Nokia grew its network agreements with TIM Brasil and Deutsche Telekom.
  • The TIM Brasil deal now covers fourteen new states across Brazil.
  • Nokia and Deutsche Telekom will build automated AI mobile networks.
  • These moves follow Nokia’s recent data center contract with Telefonica.

Nokia announced major new partnerships with TIM Brasil and Deutsche Telekom on Monday. The Finnish technology company wants to profit from the massive global shift toward artificial intelligence. These fresh agreements show how Nokia is finding new ways to make money beyond its traditional business lines.

Just last week, Nokia signed a big contract with Telefonica. That deal requires Nokia to provide network equipment for data centers across Spain. Now, the company is bringing its AI-focused hardware to even more countries.

The agreement with TIM Brasil represents a massive expansion. Previously, Nokia only helped modernize networks in the state of São Paulo. The new deal pushes their technology into fourteen additional states. This expansion will reach roughly forty-two percent of the people living in Brazil. Thanks to this upgrade, TIM Brasil can offer smart services to corporate clients using Nvidia AI platforms.

Over in Germany, Nokia and Deutsche Telekom decided to deepen their working relationship. The two companies plan to build mobile networks that run on cloud technology and rely natively on artificial intelligence. They want to create automated systems that adapt quickly to future internet demands.

Telecom operators around the world are rushing to upgrade their systems to fast 5G speeds. They desperately need stronger networks to handle the massive data loads that modern AI tools require. This global tech race gives equipment makers like Nokia and its rival Ericsson a huge opportunity to sell their newest hardware.

Nokia started this major business pivot last year to secure its future. The company bought Infinera, an American optical networking firm, to drastically strengthen its internet infrastructure capabilities. Shortly after that purchase, chip giant Nvidia invested one billion dollars into Nokia and claimed a small ownership stake.

Today, Nokia looks very different from the company that sold mobile phones a decade ago. Leaders are completely restructuring the business. They are betting everything on artificial intelligence and data centers to survive a recent slowdown in standard 5G spending.

EDITORIAL TEAM
EDITORIAL TEAM
Al Mahmud Al Mamun leads the TechGolly editorial team. He served as Editor-in-Chief of a world-leading professional research Magazine. Rasel Hossain is supporting as Managing Editor. Our team is intercorporate with technologists, researchers, and technology writers. We have substantial expertise in Information Technology (IT), Artificial Intelligence (AI), and Embedded Technology.
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