DAS

All DAS Videos:

  • With Corning's acquisition of SpiderCloud, they are focused on helping enterprises with their communications strategies. Bill Cune, Vice President of Wireless Market Development of Corning discusses SpiderCloud, its integration with the Corning ONE system, and how the two are driving robust communications in the enterprise as well as large public venues.

  • Bill Cune, Vice President of Commercial Technology at Corning talks about the ONE Wireless Platform for carriers' wireless and wireline needs. Cune adds that Corning’s converged platform also applies to enterprise customers, going beyond DAS systems and creating a network that will last into the future.

  • The edge represents a huge market opportunity. Tier 1 venues, the middleprise and outdoor urban are all in play. But they all have unique cycles and market drivers - so where are we placing our bets? What problems need to be solved and who plays a role in solving them?

  • Edge Densification means increasing the throughput per square meter. Today this means deploying any number of technologies based on the venue, carrier involvement, and business model requirements. So how do you determine the best solution for the application and how is this going to become repeatable and easier?

  • It’s universally agreed that the “edge” has consisted of large and highly visible outdoor and indoor public venues, solved by direct capital investment by willing carriers. However, the carrier has reached a level capex exhaustion that is requiring the ecosystem to rethink the edge densification business. Is this indirect model forcing the entire ecosystem to establish new roles and business initiatives of their own?

  • Mike Collado, Vice President of Marketing for SOLiD tells TIA NOW how the middleprise represents the line of demarcation where wireless operators will no longer fund in- building systems. Collado says this change in the industry means a clear shift for SOLiD’s market focus, moving towards the middleprise and investing in outdoor DAS and transport technologies, bringing connectivity closer to the handset through edge densification.

  • Bill Cune, VP of Commercial Technology at Corning, spoke with TIA NOW following TIA's Small Cell & DAS Workshop about what type of infrastructure that can support DAS, small cell, remote radio head and Wi-Fi technologies.

  • Mario Simard, Group Manager of Business Development at EXFO spoke with TIA NOW, following TIA's Small Cell & DAS Workshop, about the importance of education about fiber for in-building wireless and the transformation between Fronthaul and Centralized-RAN.

  • Allen Dixon, Enterprise Account Executive at H&M Networks, presented on a panel at TIA’s DAS and small cell workshop and later spoke with TIA NOW about converged network infrastructures and in-building wireless.

  • The emerging middle-enterprise space is not a high profile market, but requires in-building connectivity and public safety infrastructure just as much as large venues. Mike Collado, Vice President of Marketing for SOLiD Technologies, tells TIA NOW what a middleprise customer looks like and why industry should be focusing on this burgeoning market.

  • Dr. Rikin Thakker and Dr. Michael Dellomo of RF Academics bring their Wireless and Cellular Workshop Series LIVE on TIAonline.org. Find out more about the upcoming, co-hosted events between the Telecommunications Industry Association and RF Academics.

  • At TIA 2015, Tom Marcin, Vice President of Operations at Henkels and McCoy spoke to TIA NOW about why carriers are asking for small cell and DAS based technologies. He adds that enterprise customers are asking for PON technologies to transform the services they are able to provide.

  • At the TIA 2015 conference, Bill Cune, VP of the Commercial Technology in the Wireless Group at Corning Optical Communications, tells TIA NOW why fiber needs to support more converged networking technologies.

  • The Red Rock Casino Resort and Spa is a premiere location in the Las Vegas area and requires first class cellular service for their customers. So how do you upgrade an existing cellular infrastructure without disrupting the hotel guests?

  • As nationwide hospitals evolve from primarily inpatient care to an outpatient focus, communications technologies including IT and cellular systems become the nervous center of the hospital.

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