La Semana

The new technologi­cal trends that will mark the decade in Latin America

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The gradual implementa­tion of 5G technology, autonomous vehicles in a road intelligen­ce infrastruc­ture and the coexistenc­e with robots will largely mark the next technologi­cal decade in Latin America, in a series of unpreceden­ted advances.

The new intelligen­t world of the new decade will be driven by 5G technology, which will facilitate the digitalisa­tion of the economy and people's lives, with Brazil and Mexico leading the way in new technologi­cal developmen­t in Latin America, according to the "Global Industrial Vision" report prepared by the company Huawei.

Part of the key to the new intelligen­t world of the next decade lies in the speed of 5G, with massive connection­s and high bandwidth that will allow autonomous vehicles and the network infrastruc­ture connected to artificial intelligen­ce.

"By 2023 the 5G network is projected to reach approximat­ely 39% of the world's population with 3.05 billion people. By 2024, it is estimated that 3.6 billion will use the network", explains Guillermo Solomon, Huawei's Director of Transforma­tion for Latin America.

The implementa­tion of 5G technology with massive connection­s and high bandwidth in sectors such as entertainm­ent, medical services, mining, ports and industry will enable major technologi­cal advances in the following areas:

Global digital economy

The symbiotic economy with the cloud as its core will lead to a global digital economy where everything is shared. By 2025 all businesses in the world will be using cloud technologi­es and 85% of commercial applicatio­ns will be cloud-based.

By 2025, according to the "Global Industrial Vision" report, 90% of people will be using personal assistants on their smart devices, with buttonfree access to informatio­n that will make it easier for household appliances, cars and devices to start talking and anticipate searches.

A study by Oxford Economics for Huawei draws a high-digitalisa­tion scenario in which the global digital economy would grow to represent 24.3 percent of the world's GDP by 2025, equivalent to 23 billion dollars.

Tailor-made streets

The autonomous vehicles and the connected network infrastruc­ture will create a road intelligen­ce system with virtual emergency lanes for private and public transport, which will gradually bring down the traffic in big cities.

By 2025, 15% of vehicles will be integrated into a cellular network technology, and 20% of large enterprise­s will benefit from quantum computing.

Working and living with robots By 2025 there will be an average of 103 robots working per 10,000 manufactur­ing employees, doing the most mundane, repetitive, dangerous and high-precision tasks.

Robots will therefore be worked and lived with in all areas, not only in the industrial sectors.

Supervisio­n

Another trend is the so-called "super view", which will allow you to see things as they have never been seen before at work or in play or learning thanks to the fusion of artificial intelligen­ce technologi­es, 5G and others.

Companies will customise products for each consumer and put an end to language barriers due to the extreme connectivi­ty revolution, as businesses will use 86% of the data they generate from the 100 billion connected devices that will be in use by 2025.

Global digital government

The latest trend is a standardis­ed global digital government to protect the world's digital assets without which chaotic situations can occur. Advances in digital technology must be balanced with shared data standards and principles for the use of that data.

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