Private Network Check Readiness - TeckNexus Solutions

GFiber and Nokia Test Home Internet Network Slicing

GFiber Labs and Nokia are partnering to shape the future of home internet with network slicing. Network Slicing lets customers customize bandwidth for gaming, work, and secure tasks. GFiber’s successful demo with Nokia shows how slices can create smoother gameplay, better video calls, and safer online banking - all while putting real-time control in users’ hands.
GFiber and Nokia Test Home Internet Network Slicing
Image Credit: Gfiber

GFiber Labs is shaping what the future of home internet can look like — and network slicing may be its next big step.

Bringing New Internet Experiences to GFiber Customers with Network Slicing


At GFiber, staying ahead means delivering better ways for people to use the internet. This year alone, GFiber introduced new lifestyle-driven internet plans for most of its cities. And just last week, the company completed a successful demo with Nokia, showcasing a new capability: network slicing.

Understanding Network Slicing for Better Home Internet

In simple terms, network slicing lets providers divide a home network into multiple dedicated lanes, each optimized for a specific task.

During the GFiber Labs test, engineers set up two gaming consoles and used lab equipment to flood the network with traffic. As expected, the games stuttered and lagged. Then they activated a dedicated “slice” just for gaming traffic. Instantly, the gameplay smoothed out, with responsive controls and no noticeable lag.

This demo was just a first step, but it showed real promise.

Why Network Slicing Beats One-Size-Fits-All Internet

Today’s home internet connections treat all traffic the same way, whether someone is playing games, attending video calls, or running smart devices. But not all activities have the same needs. Gamers worry about latency, while remote workers need clear video and solid connections. Home businesses want stable uptime and extra security.

With technologies like AI and AR becoming more common, next-level performance will matter even more. Network slicing could be a practical way to meet these different demands at the same time.

Giving Customers Control with GFiber and Nokia Network Slicing

Unlike traditional traffic management that works behind the scenes, network slicing aims to hand over more control to users. Imagine being able to choose which applications or devices get priority at any moment, giving families flexibility to adapt their internet to how they live, work, and play.

GFiber says this won’t compromise its dedication to an open and unrestricted internet. Instead, it’s about adding meaningful customization that customers can use.

Transactional Slices: Secure Connections on Demand

GFiber is also exploring “transactional slices.” These are short-lived, on-demand slices that spin up automatically for sensitive tasks. For example, when logging into online banking, a transactional slice could create a secure, direct path to the bank’s server, avoiding unnecessary exposure across the broader internet. This happens behind the scenes, adding a quiet but significant layer of peace of mind.

A Natural Fit for GFiber’s Lifestyle Internet Plans

Network slicing aligns well with GFiber’s new lineup of lifestyle-focused internet products like Core, Home, and Edge. These offerings already target different household needs, from basic browsing to heavy streaming and smart home use. Adding real-time, customizable slices takes that concept further, matching network performance with what matters most to each household.

What’s Ahead for GFiber and Nokia

While the potential is exciting, there’s work ahead before network slicing is ready for everyday use. Automation will play a big part in making sure slices can be created and managed seamlessly. GFiber plans to continue collaborating with Nokia this year to figure out the best way to bring this idea to life.

GFiber Labs was built to test and deliver ideas like this — practical innovations that could change how people experience home internet. The team hopes that network slicing could one day become a core feature that gives customers more say in how their connections perform.


Recent Content

Vietnam is entering the hyperscale AI data center map, with VNPT and LG CNS positioning to meet local and regional demand. For telecom operators and enterprises, now is the time to align AI roadmaps with data center strategy: plan for high-density racks and liquid cooling, secure GPU capacity, engineer diverse connectivity, and build energy resilience. As the regions AI infrastructure forms, those who co-design workload placement, interconnect, and power from the outset will gain durable cost and performance advantages.
The Cellular Operators Association of India (COAI), representing Reliance Jio, Bharti Airtel, and Vodafone Idea, is pushing back against direct 5G spectrum allocation for enterprises. COAI argues that India’s urban coverage, revenue priorities, and national security risks make an operator-led model via spectrum leasing or network slicing, more viable. The Department of Telecommunications is reviewing TRAI’s recommendation, with the decision set to shape India’s private 5G market for years.
NTT DATA has launched a Global Microsoft Cloud Business Unit to help enterprises worldwide accelerate AI-powered cloud transformation. Backed by 24,000 Microsoft-certified specialists in over 50 countries, the unit focuses on cloud-native modernization, cybersecurity, Agentic AI orchestration, and sovereign cloud adoption. With deep integration into Microsoft’s engineering and sales ecosystem, NTT DATA aims to deliver secure, scalable, and compliant digital transformation at global scale.
At SIGGRAPH 2025, NVIDIA unveiled Omniverse NuRec libraries for high-fidelity 3D world reconstruction, Cosmos AI foundation models for reasoning and synthetic data generation, and powerful RTX PRO Blackwell Servers with DGX Cloud integration. Together, these tools aim to speed the creation of digital twins, enhance AI robotics training, and enable scalable autonomous system deployment.
Reliance Jio has claimed the title of the world’s largest telecom operator with 488 million subscribers, including 191 million on its 5G network. Despite a 25% tariff hike, Jio’s 5G adoption continues to soar, making up 45% of its total wireless data traffic. Backed by investments in AI, 6G, and satellite internet—plus a partnership with SpaceX’s Starlink—Jio is expanding its reach beyond India to become a global tech leader.
Orange has expanded its partnership with OpenAI to localize AI models for underrepresented African languages like Wolof and Pulaar. These models will run on Orange’s secure, sovereign infrastructure, ensuring privacy and regulatory compliance. With applications in health, education, and digital equity, Orange’s Responsible AI strategy aims to make generative AI more accessible for Africa’s rural populations and especially for women, who face digital and language-based barriers.
Whitepaper
Explore RADCOM's whitepaper 'Unleashing the Power of 5G Analytics' to understand how telecom operators can drive cost savings and revenue with 5G. Learn about NWDAF's role in network efficiency, innovative use cases, and analytics monetization strategies. Download now for key insights into optimizing 5G network performance....
Radcom Logo

It seems we can't find what you're looking for.

Download Magazine

With Subscription

Subscribe To Our Newsletter

Private Network Awards 2025 - TeckNexus
Scroll to Top

Private Network Awards

Recognizing excellence in 5G, LTE, CBRS, and connected industries. Nominate your project and gain industry-wide recognition.
Early Bird Deadline: Sept 5, 2025 | Final Deadline: Sept 30, 2025