AI continues to permeate technology industries, enabling a new level of insight and prediction into consumer behaviour. Prominent acquisitions by digital advertising stakeholders, such as Apple, Amazon and Facebook, give an indication of the expectation of the technology at the highest level.
While the mobile device in itself has provided huge gains and benefits towards financial inclusion for those in developing nations, there is considerably more that technology can do.
While a variety of VR (virtual reality) units have been in development for decades, the technology has come to the forefront in recent years thanks to developments in sensor technologies and the availability of relatively cheap VR units in the form of mobile VR. In 2017 this was augmented by the development of standalone VR headsets from a range of companies, fully rounding out the potential for head‑mounted VR devices.
Juniper anticipates that the introduction of 5G services will take a somewhat different path to the implementation of 4G and the subsequent updates to protocols. As a result, Juniper believes that operators cannot rely on previous methods of implementing 4G networks.
Chatbots hold the potential one day to replace the tasks of many human workers with AI (Artificial Intelligence) programs sophisticated enough to hold fluent conversations with human users. Juniper Research defines a chatbot as: ‘A computer program utilising technology designed to simulate conversational interactions with human users, which may also include automated processes triggered from these interactions.’
Juniper Research spoke to Christine Caviglioli, SVP Automotive and Mobility Services, Gemalto, a 5GAA member, in April 2017.
As part of Juniper's 5G Market Strategies: Consumer & Enterprise Opportunities & Forecasts 2017-2025 research, a representative of the 5GAA was interviewed and case studied. The full 5G Market Strategies research is available to purchase from our researchstore.
It includes unqiue interviews with 5 leading 5G players, 8 year market sizing and forecasts for 5G Connections, ARPC, and Operator Billed Service Revenue and an Interactive Scenario Tool with over 10,000 data points.
Exoskeletons have been in development for decades, as well as being portrayed in a variety of media. The industry has reached a point where exoskeletons are now being deployed in various contexts. The most prominent of these have been medical uses, with military and industrial use cases being less publicised, but no less effective.
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The accessibility of the Internet and the ability to commit fraud remotely creates an appetising prospect for fraudsters. Meanwhile, the potential attack surface for miscreants is enormous; some 94 billion transactions were made for remote goods purchases in 2016, which is only a fraction of the total eCommerce landscape. Meanwhile, advanced security measures are increasingly being implemented to protect against fraud carried out at physical locations. It is for these reasons that fraudsters have developed, and are continually developing, new methods to illegally siphon cash over the Internet.
Beyond the connected car ecosystem, opportunities will present themselves for integration with other ecosystems, such as the smart home and smart city technology. Juniper believes that the true value of the ecosystem will be felt by others outside the connected car ecosystem, such as law makers and MNOs (Mobile Network Operators). The lack of standardisation in the market is especially interesting in the space for ADAS (Advanced Driver Assistance Systems) and autonomous cars.
The digital commerce sector is set to see substantial growth in user numbers over the next 4 years, as we see unique users surpass 3 billion by 2021. Juniper has identified two sectors set to drive the digital commerce market, in terms of transaction values; these are digital & physical goods and digital banking.