
"In explaining the rationale for its move, the comms tech provider says Bengaluru is recognised as one of the country's fastest-growing technology hubs, and is well known for its skilled professional talent pool - especially in software engineering - hence the presence of major global telecom companies. It adds that the dynamic ecosystem positions the city as a prime location for R&D operations in India."
"Already boasting three R&D centres in India, located in Chennai, Bengaluru and Gurgaon, in 2023, Ericsson announced the launch of an India 6G programme with the formation of an India 6G research team in its Chennai R&D centre. This comprises senior research leaders and a team of researchers across the areas of radio, networks, artificial intelligence (AI) and cloud, who have been entrusted with developing fundamental services for the future of telecommunications."
"The company's R&D sites in Chennai, Bengaluru and Gurugram span critical telecom domains including transport, packet core, OSS, BSS, cloud and advanced artificial intelligence (AI) technologies. The R&D unit will initially focus on developing 5G and 5G Advanced features for the Ericsson 5G baseband. The work will be carried out in close collaboration with the company's global RAN software teams."
Ericsson has established a new Radio Access Network (RAN) software research and development unit in Bengaluru, India. Bengaluru is recognised as a fast-growing technology hub with a skilled software engineering talent pool that attracts major global telecom companies. The new unit complements existing R&D centres in Chennai and Gurugram and will initially focus on developing 5G and 5G Advanced features for the Ericsson 5G baseband in collaboration with global RAN software teams. Regional initiatives include an India 6G programme, application-specific integrated circuit development, and work across transport, packet core, OSS, BSS, cloud and advanced AI technologies.
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