At present strong-AI is not yet invented, in fact it may be 10-years before the theory is fully developed so that practical applications in technology are possible. Consequently I don't see any possible applications to improve 5G, currently, and will likely be at least 10-years in future. By that time, 5G will be obsolete, and we will have moved to more advanced systems.
At present strong-AI is not yet invented, in fact it may be 10-years before the theory is fully developed so that practical applications in technology are possible. Consequently I don't see any possible applications to improve 5G, currently, and will likely be at least 10-years in future. By that time, 5G will be obsolete, and we will have moved to more advanced systems.
has just made a comment pertinent to your question on another thread; I recommend that you follow him to keep-up with the cutting-edge of the research/theory developments in strong-AI:
Deep learning can assist a wide range of applications in mobile networks. Applications vary based on whether the data is collected by mobile device sensors or mobile network infrastructure.
To name a few:
1) Network state prediction (e.g., cellular traffic prediction, network traffic classification, channel state information prediction, QoE prediction)
2) Mobility management (e.g., mobile user trajectory prediction, city-wide movement patterns of users/vehicles)
3) User localization based services (e.g., mobile location estimation based on channel state information)
Altair works with some major Telecoms in order to help them to develop antennas devices and to place them in proper locations in urban/not urban zones. The AI could effectivelly helps by the analysis of previous study done in the past (4G or 3G) and analyse the broadrange differencies btw the different technologies. The result could be a model approach to propose to those companies where to place new antennas or 'shifters' using the existing network....