Led by former Qualcomm and Intel executives, EdgeQ is developing a converged 5G and AI silicon platform for edge computing networks. Credit: Elenabs / Getty Images A new startup has emerged from stealth mode with a design that converges 5G connectivity and AI compute onto a system-on-a-chip (SoC) that’s aimed at edge networks. Founded in 2018, EdgeQ was launched by former executives at Broadcom, Intel, and Qualcomm and has racked up $51 million in funding. EdgeQ’s AI-5G SoC is aimed at 5G private wireless networks for the Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT). EdgeQ says its chip will allow enterprises in manufacturing, energy, automotive, telco and other verticals to harness private networking for disruptive applications, intelligent services, and new business models. “We are rapidly evolving from a smartphone economy to a constellation of intelligent edge devices,” said Vinay Ravuri, CEO and founder of EdgeQ, in a statement. “This will cause massive disruption to the current paradigm, where existing fixed-function approaches are inadequate to meet the scale, speed, and breadth of new end connections.” The company states that today’s connectivity and compute constructs are based on legacy networks that are largely closed and monolithic. This fixed hardware can no longer scale efficiently and economically to support 5G service-oriented applications. The software-defined SoC is intended to replace existing wireless and legacy networks with edge components that can be used to build 5G spectrum private wireless networks, the networking equivalent of a private clouds. The AI portion allows for processing massive amounts of data coming in from a variety of feeds and enabling real-time processing at the edge rather than sending it back to a data center. EdgeQ will deliver a converged 5G and AI silicon platform that is open and software programmable for both devices and edge infrastructure. By introducing open programmability to the baseband, EdgeQ provides a new software-driven development model for OEMs and operators that can support existing cellular protocols, such as 4G, 5G and beyond. “By building 5G and AI hardware in a newly imaginative, software-friendly manner, we empower and inspire customers with an open and programmable platform that is adaptable, configurable, and economical for 5G-based applications,” Ravuri said. Related content feature What is a digital twin and why is it important to IoT? Digital twins are virtual replicas of physical devices that IT pros and data scientists can use to run simulations before actual devices are built and deployed. Digital twins can also take real-time IoT data and apply AI and data analytics to optimiz By Josh Fruhlinger and Keith Shaw May 09, 2024 17 mins Internet of Things Network Security Networking news Tata Communications launches edge computing platform for enterprises The company will offer two pricing models for CloudLyte — one based on CPU resources used, and the other it terms as “use case as a service.” By Prasanth Aby Thomas May 07, 2024 3 mins Edge Computing Internet of Things how-to What is IPv6, and why is adoption taking so long? IPv6 has been in the works since 1998 to address the shortfall of IP addresses available under IPv4, yet despite its efficiency and security advantages, enterprise uptake is slow By Josh Fruhlinger Apr 01, 2024 9 mins Internet Internet of Things Networking news Cisco, partners to offer tailored IoT/OT packages Cisco plan highlights partners that specialize in operational technology and is aimed at fostering IT/OT convergence. By Michael Cooney Feb 29, 2024 3 mins Channel Sales Internet of Things Networking PODCASTS VIDEOS RESOURCES EVENTS NEWSLETTERS Newsletter Promo Module Test Description for newsletter promo module. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe