"At a total cost of $700 billion to $900 billion, the initial installations of 5G will cover 25% of the world's population by 2030... But because they require such expensive equipment, 'these networks are likely to be limited to select geographies...'" - https://t.co/aOmnbE1qoR
— Robert Horvitz (@open_spectrum) February 20, 2020
“In the early 1980s AT&T asked McKinsey to estimate how many cellular phones would be in use in the world at the turn of the century. The consultancy concluded that the total market would be about 900,000.”
— Tren Griffin (@trengriffin) February 23, 2020
McKinsey didn't understand the value of mobility.https://t.co/avT8DFAgl3
1/ That only "high band" is "true" 5G isn't even wrong. 5G isn't a frequency. It's a new technology (AKA, "New Radio").
— Tren Griffin (@trengriffin) February 20, 2020
"The economics work for providers to cover some 80% of the world’s population with low- to mid-band 5G networks by 2030..." https://t.co/SajtuDeeMx
We identified use cases in just four domains that make up 30% of the global economy— implying that there are opportunities to create trillions more in additional value across other sectors. https://t.co/lRjiK9xDaN pic.twitter.com/7EwEKllvyL
— McKinsey Global Inst (@McKinsey_MGI) February 20, 2020
With low-latency 5G networks, smart factories can run at maximum efficiency. The GDP impact of enhanced connectivity in manufacturing could reach $400 billion to $650 billion by the decade’s end. https://t.co/lRjiK9xDaN pic.twitter.com/W7VRlPwwVD
— McKinsey Global Inst (@McKinsey_MGI) February 21, 2020
Three factors will drive demand for #connectivity over the next decade: continued growth in online video consumption, massive growth in machine-to-machine connections, and significant adoption of augmented and virtual reality https://t.co/lRjiK9xDaN pic.twitter.com/qqtahcwOIH
— McKinsey Global Inst (@McKinsey_MGI) February 23, 2020
so 4g lte but with extra steps? https://t.co/4TYYy1Uy1U
— Jose (instert ad copy) (@MrJoseAcevedo) February 23, 2020
Why only one-quarter of the world will get true 5G wireless, @McKinsey says
— Fabrizio Bustamante (@Fabriziobustama) February 21, 2020
By @FortuneMagazine https://t.co/YoKc0q9mNb#IoT #Technology #5G #DigitalTransformation
Cc: @evankirstel @MikeQuindazzi @treasadovander @mvollmer1 @DrJDrooghaag @lesguer_lionel @adamsconsulting pic.twitter.com/ct8pSQQj4H
#McKinsey says that only one-quarter of the world will get true #5G wirelesshttps://t.co/0KSJJ3zx9S#telecoms #telecommunications #smartcities #smartcity #internetofthings #iot #iiot #industry40 #4IR #cloud #emergingtechnologies #emergingtech #innovation #digitaltransformation pic.twitter.com/uZnbDSiHqS
— Dimitris Ioannides (@diioannid) February 20, 2020
McKinsey: Connectivity evolution to drive global GDP past $2tn https://t.co/tyBV89F0Jb @evankirstel @NATEWIN_Network
— NATE (@NATEsafety) February 22, 2020
McKinsey report says next-gen comms, including 5G could increase global GDP by $1.2tn to $2.0tn by 2030.
— Evan Swarztrauber ⚜️ (@EvanS_FCC) February 22, 2020
Implementing use cases in mobility, healthcare, manufacturing and retail will unlock these benefits. https://t.co/YUBFp04lfR
We identified use cases in just four domains that make up 30% of the global economy— implying that there are opportunities to create trillions more in additional value across other sectors. https://t.co/lRjiK9xDaN pic.twitter.com/7EwEKllvyL
— McKinsey Global Inst (@McKinsey_MGI) February 20, 2020
Three factors will drive demand for #connectivity over the next decade: continued growth in online video consumption, massive growth in machine-to-machine connections, and significant adoption of augmented and virtual reality https://t.co/lRjiK9xDaN pic.twitter.com/qqtahcwOIH
— McKinsey Global Inst (@McKinsey_MGI) February 23, 2020
With low-latency 5G networks, smart factories can run at maximum efficiency. The GDP impact of enhanced connectivity in manufacturing could reach $400 billion to $650 billion by the decade’s end. https://t.co/lRjiK9xDaN pic.twitter.com/W7VRlPwwVD
— McKinsey Global Inst (@McKinsey_MGI) February 21, 2020
Our new report examines what is holding back investment in advanced networks and the widespread adoption of use cases. https://t.co/lRjiK9xDaN pic.twitter.com/JztXZYQ9bj
— McKinsey Global Inst (@McKinsey_MGI) February 22, 2020
We estimate that only a quarter of the global population is likely to gain high-band 5G coverage by 2030. But upgrades and expansions using existing technologies could give 80% of the world enhanced coverage at a lower cost. https://t.co/lRjiK9xDaN pic.twitter.com/Ui2r0yJGDu
— McKinsey Global Inst (@McKinsey_MGI) February 22, 2020
How much of the #5G hype will be realized? Check out the latest research from my colleagues at McKinsey Global Institute: https://t.co/1vAUqkgb3q https://t.co/nTuofHgUEN
— Susan Lund (@SusanLund_DC) February 21, 2020
How much of the #5G hype will be realized? Check out the our latest research, “Connected world: An evolution in connectivity beyond the 5G revolution" https://t.co/lRjiK9xDaN pic.twitter.com/qVCZv42G1U
— McKinsey Global Inst (@McKinsey_MGI) February 20, 2020
On top of industry use cases, bringing more of the world online could boost global GDP by up to $2 trillion, with most of value generated in the developing world. https://t.co/lRjiK9xDaN pic.twitter.com/ZRPL0MP3uy
— McKinsey Global Inst (@McKinsey_MGI) February 21, 2020
RT @McKinsey_MGI: Connected world: An evolution in connectivity beyond the 5G revolution https://t.co/5Fn79sxqAz
— shruti_forever (@shruti_pawaskar) February 21, 2020
The buzz is all about #5G, but that’s only part of the story. Existing connectivity technologies are evolving, and deploying them is much less capital-intensive. https://t.co/lRjiK9Pe2l pic.twitter.com/hZTSvUp7nm
— McKinsey Global Inst (@McKinsey_MGI) February 20, 2020
The adoption of #5G could create trillions of dollars in economic value over the next decade.
— Telegraph Technology Intelligence (@TelegraphTech) February 20, 2020
Its use in healthcare, manufacturing, retail and mobility alone could increase global GDP by $1.2tn to $2tn by 2030, according to @McKinsey https://t.co/DslCngeldh
Retailers can use sensors, trackers, and computer vision to revolutionize the customer experience, eliminating checkout and adding augmented reality to products.
— McKinsey Global Inst (@McKinsey_MGI) February 23, 2020
Retail use cases using enhanced connectivity could boost GDP by $420-$700 billion https://t.co/lRjiK9xDaN pic.twitter.com/uuIhixDKwD