Network Infrastructure

July 13, 2023

The Utilities Sector Has a Lot on Its Plate. Is Enghouse Network Resource Management the Best Way to Ease the Burden?

It’s not easy being a utility: from technological advancements, changing customer expectations, and evolving regulatory landscapes, the pressure’s on. Meeting all these challenges means innovation, a full digital transformation, new partnerships and relationships, but also the best way to manage and plan out the data network you will need as table stakes in all this. Is fibre network management your ideal first step?
December 14, 2022

Groundhog Day – Service Management vs Network Management: The Battle rages on

According to a Cowen and Company survey, network experience is the top factor impacting telecom users' critical buying decisions and reason for churn – even more than price and customer service. In other words, quality trumps everything else – which means it also needs to be first and foremost for network operators.
October 6, 2022

A New Approach to Inventory Management

The $300bn rail industry is investing in 5G to support high-speed operations. But with added complexity from new tech and legacy systems, rail operators will need advanced OSS tools to manage it all.
May 5, 2022

Webinar: An Inevitable Journey: From SONET to Packet Core

The utility industry stands on the verge of a revolution. It’s time to leave behind legacy communications networks and move towards a smarter and more sustainable grid. In this webinar, we explain how our Network Inventory Management solution can support a smooth migration for mission-critical networks.
April 28, 2022

Private 5G is Focused 5G… Is Going to be Super-Profitable 5G

AgriFood Connect is an Australian not-for-profit organisation set up to get the agricultural and manufacturing sectors Down Under get more excited about the power of technology. Soon, it’s going to be able to offer those unimpressed farmers something pretty remarkable: a way for them to use all the power of IoT, virtual reality, control of robots and machinery and probably a lot more - no matter how remote their acreage is in the Outback.