Nokia CEO stated during a panel discussion at Davos that a 6G network will be available by 2030.

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While the 5G network has yet to be widely available, the next-generation 6G network has already begun to make headlines in the technology world. Qualcomm, Apple, Google, and LG are just a few of the companies that have pledged to work on this technology. Nokia, on the other hand, now appears to be joining the party. Nokia CEO Pekka Lundmark claimed that the 6G mobile network will be operational by the end of this decade while speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos.


Nokia CEO Pekka Lundmark stated on a panel at the World Economic Forum in Davos on Tuesday that 6G mobile networks will be commercially available by 2030. This timeline closely reflects Huawei's expectations for when the technology will be available on the market. Smartphones, on the other hand, do not appear to be the most "common interface," according to Lundmark.



"Certainly, the smartphone as we know it today will not be the most common interface by then," Lundmark predicted. "Many of these features will be built into our bodies directly." He didn't go into great detail about how or what this will look like, but he did say that by 2030, there will be a "digital twin of everything," requiring "huge computational resources."


Companies have already begun to make significant investments in 6G. Some of the world's most powerful tech companies have been seen working on this next-generation technology, even collaborating on it. Qualcomm, Apple, Google, and LG are just a few of the companies that are part of a 6G working group. In the meantime, a large number of users have yet to make the switch from 4G to 5G. Particularly in some parts of India, where the true speed of the 4G network has yet to be experienced.


We don't know how fast 6G will be yet; the speed will be determined in the near future by the International Telecommunication Union (ITU). It is, however, expected to be 100 times faster than 5G.


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