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Ericsson Deepens 5G Edge with ...

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Ericsson Deepens 5G Edge with Carleton University as North American AI Race Heats Up

Ericsson Deepens 5G Edge with Carleton University as North American AI Race Heats Up
The Silicon Review
09 June, 2025

Ericsson Canada’s renewed alliance with Carleton University signals a strategic push to shape the future of AI-powered 5G networks as industrial automation surges across North America.

Ericsson Canada is doubling down on its tech game by keeping its research deal with Carleton University rolling through 2026. The partnership, which kicked off in 2019, has grown into a key driver for pushing out next-gen tools to make 5G and AI networks tougher, faster, and smarter. It’s all about building strong, flexible systems that can handle real-time data—crucial for future factory tech and on-the-spot computing. This move shows Ericsson’s in it for the long haul when it comes to leading innovation in North America, even as the global race for better telecom gear heats up.

Ericsson and Carleton have already poured close to $6 million into this team-up, and the work they’re doing is all about next-level tech. They’re diving into stuff like software-based networking, smart traffic control using machine learning, and real-time data tools—all key for making sure industrial IoT runs with zero lag. Carleton’s got the tech smarts—especially with AI and system tweaks—so Ericsson can play around with new ideas in a safe, virtual space before taking them live on real 5G networks. That trial run helps speed things up and cut mistakes. It’s a smarter way to prep stuff for industries like factories, power plants, and transit—where having strong, nonstop internet isn’t a bonus, it’s what keeps the whole show running.

This new deal isn’t just for looks—it’s a solid move that boosts Ericsson’s research game right when U.S. and Canadian companies are diving headfirst into digital upgrades. With tech moving fast and automation raising the bar, this team-up helps Ericsson build smarter, self-running 5G systems built to handle the tough stuff. For companies and telecom players, it’s a clear signal: Ericsson’s not just selling service—they’re building serious capability. And as AI starts shaping what networks need to handle, this low-key collab with Carleton could end up being the real driving force behind the next wave of industrial tech.

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