17 questions across region, vertical, devices, spectrum, and commercial model - returns a consultant-grade technology recommendation with rationale and vendor guidance.
15 questions to determine the right deployment architecture - SNPN, enterprise RAN, managed breakout, or hybrid - with responsibility matrix and vendor engagement sequence.
Get a planning-grade estimate of how many radios your private network deployment will likely require - and whether coverage or capacity is the binding constraint. Produces a range based on your site area, environment complexity, spectrum band, device mix, and use case profile. Useful for budget sizing and vendor conversations before formal RF design.
Generate a structured, weighted vendor evaluation framework for your private network procurement. Calibrated to your vertical, use cases, architecture, compliance requirements, and procurement priorities. Produces a weighted scorecard, vendor question bank, red flags, required proof points, and evaluation process guide.
Translate your operational use cases into precise technical SLA requirements - latency, jitter, throughput, availability, QoS class, handover, redundancy, and spectrum implications. Built for enterprise architects, OT/IT teams, and procurement teams specifying private network requirements.
Independent 5-year TCO comparison for enterprise wireless networks, covering hardware, installation, spectrum, management, and operating costs across Wi-Fi, CBRS, private LTE, and private 5G. Built on TeckNexus intelligence, published research, deployment benchmarks, and region-specific cost assumptions. Calibrated by region, site type, and deployment environment.
How resilient is your network against today's threat landscape - signalling protocol attacks, AI-weaponised social engineering, ransomware, inter-roaming exploits, and 5G-specific vulnerabilities? This assessment benchmarks your security posture across five dimensions: threat awareness, network architecture, detection and response, AI and automation, and governance.
Compare total cost of ownership across private wireless connectivity options. Input operational parameters to model TCO over a multi-year period and identify the lowest-cost architecture for your environment.
Side-by-side comparison tool for private wireless technology options - LTE, 5G, Wi-Fi, and CBRS - across key performance, cost, and operational dimensions to support technology selection decisions.
Deployment-backed analysis of CBRS total cost of ownership across multiple industries. Provides real-world ROI benchmarks from live CBRS deployments — useful for validating business cases and comparing against vendor estimates.
Quick-estimate tool for private 5G deployment costs. Input site size, device count, and coverage requirements to get an indicative infrastructure cost range - useful for early-stage budget planning.
Estimate the sustainability impact of deploying private wireless — including energy efficiency gains, carbon reduction, and ESG reporting metrics - across industrial and enterprise environments.
Model the total cost of ownership of deploying Celona's 5G LAN solution versus existing Wi-Fi or wired infrastructure. Useful for enterprise and industrial sites evaluating CBRS-based private 5G.
Search US licensed spectrum availability by frequency, geography, and licensee. Essential for US-based private network spectrum planning and CBRS/PAL availability checks.
Compare on-premises infrastructure costs against AWS cloud deployment. Useful for modelling edge AI and private network core cloud migration scenarios.
Model infrastructure costs for on-premises vs Azure cloud. Relevant for enterprises evaluating hybrid private network and AI workload deployments on Azure edge.
Use structured tools built from real deployment evidence to select technologies, prioritise use cases, and build the business case — without weeks of research or expensive consulting.
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At SK AI Summit 2025, CEO Jung Jaihun outlined plans to expand the Ulsan artificial intelligence data center (AIDC) to 1GW-class capacity, stand up a nationwide trio of hubs (Gasan in the Seoul metro, Ulsan in the south, and a new southwest site), and take the model into Southeast Asia starting with Vietnam. The operator is also deepening technology collaborations with Amazon Web Services (AWS) on Edge AI and with NVIDIA on AI-RAN and a Manufacturing AI Cloud; it intends to buy more than 2,000 NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell GPUs and scale Korea’s largest GPU cluster, Haein, as core compute for industrial AI workloads.
The Federal Communications Commission plans a November vote to rescind a January ruling that tied carrier cybersecurity obligations to CALEA, resetting the regulatory posture after high-profile intrusions tied to Chinese state-linked actors. In January, the FCC interpreted the Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act (CALEA) to require telecommunications carriers to protect their networks against unlawful access or interception, and paired that interpretation with a proposal to require written cybersecurity plans and baseline controls. The commission signals it will pivot to a more targeted, collaborative posture with carriers instead of a one-size-fits-all mandate.
NEC is moving to scale its cloud and SaaS business support capabilities with a $2.9 billion acquisition of CSG Systems International, positioning Netcracker at the center of the combined telecom monetization play. CSG brings a sizable recurring-revenue portfolio in digital BSS, billing, charging, and customer engagement used by communications, cable, media, and digital service providers, complementing Netcracker’s OSS/BSS, orchestration, and service automation strengths. The all-cash deal values CSG at approximately $2.9 billion on an enterprise value basis and has unanimous board approval, with closing targeted for 2026 pending CSG shareholder approval and customary antitrust and other regulatory reviews.
South Korea is funding a national AI stack to reduce dependence on foreign models, protect data, and tune AI to its language and industries. The government has committed ₩530 billion (about $390 million) to five companies building large-scale foundation models: LG AI Research, SK Telecom, Naver Cloud, NC AI, and Upstage. Progress will be reviewed every six months, with underperformers cut and resources concentrated on the strongest until two leaders remain. The policy goal is clear: build world-class, Korean-first AI capability that supports national security, economic competitiveness, and data sovereignty. For telecoms and enterprise IT, this is a shift from “consume global models” to “operate domestic AI platforms” integrated with local data, compliance, and services.
OneLayer wins “Excellence in Private Network Security” for its innovative platform providing device-level visibility, Zero Trust access control, and real-time threat detection across LTE and 5G enterprise environments. Purpose-built for private cellular networks, OneLayer enables IT and OT teams to secure and manage all connected assets—including non-cellular devices—through unified device identities and context-aware security.
Palo Alto Networks wins “Excellence in Private Network Security” for its AI-powered Zero Trust platform securing private 4G and 5G networks. Built for mission-critical environments, the solution delivers end-to-end protection across core, edge, and cloud—enabling carriers, enterprises, and critical infrastructure operators to deploy private wireless networks securely, at scale, and with confidence.
In 2024, the U.S. cable sector generated $568.7 billion in total economic output and supported 1.3 million jobs across the country. This footprint spans broadband networks, video programming, construction, manufacturing, and a broad vendor ecosystem. It underscores why cable remains a central pillar of America’s connectivity and media economy even as consumption shifts to IP and streaming. Cable broadband providers—led by Comcast, Charter Communications (Spectrum), Cox, Altice USA (Optimum), Mediacom, Cable One (Sparklight), and WOW!—accounted for $366 billion in total economic impact and nearly 888,000 jobs.
T-Mobile has set a clear handover plan that pairs continuity with a sharpened focus on digital, AI, and new growth vectors. Srini Gopalan, currently Chief Operating Officer, will become CEO of T-Mobile US, succeeding Mike Sievert. Sievert moves to a newly created Vice Chairman role, remaining on the management team and Board to advise on strategy, innovation, talent, and external relations. The structure signals operational continuity and a deliberate next phase for the Un-carrier playbook across wireless, broadband, and adjacent services. Expect Gopalan to intensify investments in AI across care, sales, and network operations.
Digital Nasional Berhad (DNB) and Ericsson have launched a national upskilling program to train 40,000 municipal and government employees in 5G, AI, IoT and automation, signaling a shift from network build to service delivery readiness. Malaysia’s 5G footprint is expanding and the country is positioning for AI-led growth by 2030. Infrastructure alone will not unlock outcomes. Cities and agencies need people who can specify, procure, secure and operate digital services at scale. This initiative targets the execution gap by training frontline staff and policy makers on how to translate connectivity into citizen services, operational efficiency and data-driven decisions.
Jack Dorsey’s BitChat is a decentralized messaging app using BLE mesh networks to deliver encrypted messages without the internet. With no central servers, user accounts, or cloud storage, BitChat promises privacy but raises questions about security, user experience, and practical use in real-world settings like protests, emergencies, and areas with no connectivity.
Frequently Asked Questions
About our tools, how they are built, and how to get involved.
TeckNexus Independent Tools
TeckNexus independent tools are assessments, selectors, ROI calculators, and AI prioritisation tools developed entirely by TeckNexus. The methodology, scoring logic, and outputs are owned by TeckNexus — no vendor funds, influences, or has visibility into individual results. They are free to complete. Accessing the full output and PDF report requires registration.
No. TeckNexus owns the methodology, scoring, and output logic for all independent tools. No vendor has paid to influence recommendations or results. If a vendor is referenced in an output — for example, as a category of solution — it is because the evidence supports it, not because of a commercial relationship.
Registration allows TeckNexus to generate and deliver a personalised PDF report, track your results if you return, and — with your permission — notify you of updated benchmarks or relevant intelligence. Registration is free. Your data is not shared with any vendor without your explicit consent.
Individual submission data is held by TeckNexus and not shared with any third party without your explicit consent. Aggregated and anonymised data may be used to produce industry benchmark reports. No personally identifiable information is included in any published output.
All tools labelled TeckNexus in the directory — including the Private Network Technology Selector, Private Network Architecture Selector, AI Use Case Prioritisers (Manufacturing, Mining, Ports, Airports, Utilities), and the Private Network ROI Calculators (Manufacturing, Mining). More tools are added regularly.
Co-Developed & Sponsored Tools
Co-developed tools are built by TeckNexus in partnership with an industry sponsor. The sponsor co-funds development and is clearly disclosed on the tool. TeckNexus owns the methodology, platform, and output logic — the sponsor does not influence scoring or results. These tools are free for users to complete.
Your contact details may be shared with the named sponsor — but only with your explicit consent at the point of form submission. Your results and individual response data are not shared. The consent step is clearly presented before submission.
No. Sponsorship funds the development and hosting of the tool — it does not influence the methodology, scoring, or outputs. TeckNexus retains full editorial control. Sponsored tools go through the same methodology review as independent tools.
Yes. TeckNexus works with vendors, operators, and industry bodies to co-develop tools that serve enterprise decision-makers. Use the partner enquiry form on this page to tell us what you have in mind — tool category, target vertical, and what you are trying to achieve. We will get back to you to discuss fit and next steps.
Third-Party Tools (Curated Directory)
Third-party tools are ROI calculators, TCO models, decision aids, and planning resources produced by vendors, operators, or industry bodies. They are included in the TeckNexus directory because they offer genuine utility to enterprise decision-makers — but they are clearly labelled as vendor-produced. TeckNexus curates the directory and does not endorse any individual tool or vendor.
Tools are assessed for relevance, utility, and credibility. We look for tools that offer meaningful input fields and substantive outputs — not marketing calculators with fixed results. Listing is not paid placement. Any vendor can submit a tool for consideration using the form on this page.
Standard directory listings are unpaid. TeckNexus does not accept payment to influence which third-party tools are listed or how they are described. Separate commercial arrangements exist for co-developed and sponsored tools, which are clearly labelled as such.
Use the tool submission form at the bottom of this page. You will need to provide tool details, vendor information, and confirm that you are authorised to submit on behalf of the organisation. TeckNexus reviews all submissions before listing.
Vertical Intelligence Platforms (Paid)
Each Vertical Intelligence Platform is a structured set of 25+ decision cards built from TeckNexus analysis of real enterprise private network deployments. They cover a specific industry — Manufacturing, Mining, Ports, Airports — and are organised into six sections: vertical overview, business priorities and use cases, private wireless strategy, proof and ecosystem, decision framework, and deployment readiness. They are updated continuously as new deployments emerge.
A subscription to one vertical gives you access to all 25+ decision cards for that industry, continuous updates as new deployments are analysed, and the ability to share access across your team. Each card is structured around a specific decision — use case selection, vendor shortlisting, deployment model, ROI prioritisation — so you can navigate directly to what you need.
A research report gives you a snapshot at a point in time. The Vertical Intelligence Platform is continuously updated and structured around decisions, not narrative. Instead of reading a 60-page PDF, you navigate directly to the card relevant to your current question — vendor selection, use case validation, deployment model — and get evidence-backed guidance without the research overhead.
No. Each vertical is subscribed to separately at $1,200 per year. This keeps pricing proportionate to what you actually need. If you require multiple verticals, contact us to discuss multi-vertical access.
Yes. Each vertical has a sample platform available — accessible from the tool cards on this page. The sample gives you a representative selection of decision cards so you can assess the depth and format before committing.
The platforms are built for enterprise technology and operations teams evaluating private network investment, vendors building go-to-market strategies for specific industries, and consultants or system integrators advising clients on deployment options. They are also used by telcos and managed service providers tracking enterprise buyer priorities by vertical.
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