\"<p>Sinéad
Sinéad Pillion, Head of Operations Ericsson Athlone, with Minister of State Robert Troy and Denis Dullea, Head of R&D Ericsson Athlone. (Image via Ericsson)<\/span><\/figcaption><\/figure>NEW DELHI: Swedish telecom gear maker Ericsson<\/a> Monday said it will hire 250 people in various positions at its Research and Development Centre in Athlone, Ireland, over the next three years to support the company’s growth in developing 5G equipment<\/a>.

“The highly-skilled roles, which include opportunities for software developers,
data scientists<\/a>, architects, cloud and mobile communication engineers at all career stages, will be added over the next three years,” Ericsson<\/a> said in a statement. This project is supported by the Irish government through Industrial Development Agency (IDA) Ireland.

The Athlone facility, which is the global R&D headquarters of Ericsson Digital Services OSS (Operations Support Systems), currently employs 1,200 people developing its OSS and Cloud RAN (Radio Access Network) portfolio. Ericsson employs an additional 200 at its Dublin base.

“These new jobs are in new areas in cloud-native technologies, providing some really exciting opportunities for the Midlands,” said Tánaiste and Minister for Enterprise, Trade & Employment, Leo Varadkar TD.

\"T-Mobile<\/a><\/figure>

T-Mobile signs up Ericsson, Nokia to power 5G enterprise solutions<\/a><\/h2>

Ericsson RAN and Core solutions will power T-Mobile’s 5G ANS. As a result, the telco’s enterprise and government customers will get the required latency, security, reliability and speed for 5G use cases such as augmented reality and virtual reality, as per an official statement.<\/p><\/div>

\"&lt;p&gt;Sinéad
Sinéad Pillion, Head of Operations Ericsson Athlone, with Minister of State Robert Troy and Denis Dullea, Head of R&D Ericsson Athlone. (Image via Ericsson)<\/span><\/figcaption><\/figure>NEW DELHI: Swedish telecom gear maker Ericsson<\/a> Monday said it will hire 250 people in various positions at its Research and Development Centre in Athlone, Ireland, over the next three years to support the company’s growth in developing 5G equipment<\/a>.

“The highly-skilled roles, which include opportunities for software developers,
data scientists<\/a>, architects, cloud and mobile communication engineers at all career stages, will be added over the next three years,” Ericsson<\/a> said in a statement. This project is supported by the Irish government through Industrial Development Agency (IDA) Ireland.

The Athlone facility, which is the global R&D headquarters of Ericsson Digital Services OSS (Operations Support Systems), currently employs 1,200 people developing its OSS and Cloud RAN (Radio Access Network) portfolio. Ericsson employs an additional 200 at its Dublin base.

“These new jobs are in new areas in cloud-native technologies, providing some really exciting opportunities for the Midlands,” said Tánaiste and Minister for Enterprise, Trade & Employment, Leo Varadkar TD.

\"T-Mobile<\/a><\/figure>

T-Mobile signs up Ericsson, Nokia to power 5G enterprise solutions<\/a><\/h2>

Ericsson RAN and Core solutions will power T-Mobile’s 5G ANS. As a result, the telco’s enterprise and government customers will get the required latency, security, reliability and speed for 5G use cases such as augmented reality and virtual reality, as per an official statement.<\/p><\/div>