Forget 5G, the US and China are already fighting for 6G dominance


Filepic showing a 5G and 4G apparatus in Spain. The scrum for 6G is already intensifying even as it remains a theoretical proposition, and underscores how geopolitics is fueling technological rivalries, particularly between the US and China. — Bloomberg

Most of the world is yet to experience the benefits of a 5G network, but the geopolitical race for the next big thing in telecommunications technology is already heating up.

For companies and governments, the stakes couldn’t be higher. The first to develop and patent 6G will be the biggest winners in what some call the next industrial revolution. Though still at least a decade away from becoming reality, 6G – which could be up to 100 times faster than the peak speed of 5G – could deliver the kind of technology that’s long been the stuff of science fiction, from real-time holograms to flying taxis and Internet-connected human bodies and brains.

Save 30% OFF The Star Digital Access

Monthly Plan

RM 13.90/month

RM 9.73/month

Billed as RM 9.73 for the 1st month, RM 13.90 thereafter.

Best Value

Annual Plan

RM 12.33/month

RM 8.63/month

Billed as RM 103.60 for the 1st year, RM 148 thereafter.

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!
6G

Next In Tech News

French regulator says some crypto firms unresponsive as EU licence deadline approaches
Meta mulls doubling output of Ray-Ban glasses by year end, Bloomberg News reports
Musk's X recovers after outage hits thousands globally
Apple rolls out Creator Studio to boost services push, adds AI features
Microsoft rolls out initiative to limit data-center power costs, water use impact
Polygon targets stablecoin payments with deals worth $250 million
Spain moves to curb AI deepfakes, tighten consent rules on images
Voice AI startup Deepgram raises $130 million at $1.3 billion valuation
US senators introduce long-awaited bill to define crypto market rules
Massive cyberattack on Polish power system in December failed, minister says

Others Also Read