AT&T powers IoT for Oracle enterprise communications
Enabling its industry cloud application customers to connect and manage their internet of things (IoT) devices on the comms provider’s network through a single platform, Oracle announced that it is incorporating AT&T IoT connectivity and network APIs into its Enterprise Communications Platform (ECP).
Oracle sees the move as potentially positively affecting the future of 5G network deployments and applications through “seamless” IoT integration and enhanced communication capabilities, representing a “crucial” next step toward bringing real-time communications to its suite of cloud applications.
Supported by AT&T, ECP is now delivering IoT connectivity and near real-time communications to Oracle’s suite of industry cloud applications. With integrated capabilities such as IoT edge application management, the tech firm and telco said the all-in-one offering removes the customer burden of managing complex integrations and network contracts.
Built on Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI), the unified communication and edge architecture is designed to give businesses the connectivity and real-time data intelligence they need to power critical new services and experiences. The integration with AT&T IoT connectivity and network API’s is available across OCI regions in the US.
ECP supported by AT&T, is said to be capable of providing a foundation for new industry applications – from consumer to industrial business – delivering high-performing, reliable connectivity enabling innovation and new services, such as a turnkey; communications-enabled restaurant operation; automated utility grid management; or enriched telehealth capabilities.
An example cited by the firms is FirstNet, the US nationwide high-speed Public Safety Network purpose-built for first responders. With ECP, it is now providing the foundation for Oracle’s Public Safety suite, helping to deliver secure communications that enable critical components such as dispatch command centres and near real-time camera feeds for first responders actively engaging in incidents.
“Our mission has always been to help improve the way the world communicates, and with ECP supported by AT&T and FirstNet, we’re taking a massive step toward that vision,” said Andrew Morawski, executive vice-president and general manager at Oracle Communications.
“Together, we can help organisations across industries benefit from the full potential of 5G, by building a new generation of vertical applications offering endless opportunities to innovate.”
Sarita Rao, senior vice-president at AT&T Partner Solutions, said: “AT&T is committed to empowering our ecosystem partners to build solutions that integrate AT&T programmable connectivity, whether using our IoT API’s or our emerging network API’s.
“By teaming with Oracle to incorporate IoT connectivity and programmable APIs into Oracle industry applications, we are providing businesses and organisations a tighter level of integration between the network and application, driving performance and reliability gains, while also eliminating integration requirements and separate contracting events. It’s co-creation at its best.”
Oracle taps AT&T to connect its enterprise IoT application services
Oracle is incorporating cellular IoT connectivity and network APIs from AT&T into its Enterprise Communications Platform (ECP), it has said. The move means Oracle’s enterprise customers can do away with the need to manage complex integrations and network contracts when deploying fleets of IoT devices; these elements are now incorporated into Oracle’s cloud-based ECP proposition, enabling an “all-in-one platform”, it said.
The ECP offer, running on the company’s hosted Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) service, features a bunch of industry cloud applications, which can now be combined easily with data from AT&T-connected IoT devices. The service is available across OCI regions in the US. The integration extends to the US First Responder Network (FirstNet), which piggybacks on AT&T infrastructure, as the basis for Oracle’s own suite of public safety solutions.
Oracle said FirstNet and ECP are the “foundation” for this, helping to deliver “secure communications enabling critical components such as dispatch command centres and near real-time camera feeds for first responders actively engaging in incidents”. Otherwise, Oracle is pitching AT&T-connected IoT solutions on its enterprise platform for “innovation and new services” practically everywhere (“from consumer to industrial business”).
It cited examples including “turnkey, communications-enabled restaurant operation, automated utility grid management, or enriched telehealth capabilities”. It stated: “ECP is delivering IoT connectivity and near real-time comms to Oracle’s suite of industry cloud applications. With integrated capabilities such as IoT edge application management, this all-in-one offering… gives the connectivity and data intelligence to power critical new services.”
Andrew Morawski, executive vice president and general manager at Oracle Communications, said: “Our mission has always been to help improve the way the world communicates, and with ECP supported by AT&T and FirstNet, we’re taking a massive step toward that vision. Together, we can help organisations across industries benefit from the full potential of 5G, by building a new generation of vertical applications offering endless opportunities to innovate.”
Sarita Rao, senior vice president for partner solutions at AT&T, said: “AT&T is committed to… our ecosystem partners to build solutions that integrate… programmable connectivity, whether using IoT APIs or network APIs. By teaming with Oracle… we are providing a tighter level of integration between the network and application, driving performance and reliability gains while also eliminating integration requirements and separate contracting events. It is co-creation at its best.”
Oracle taps AT&T to connect its enterprise IoT application services
Oracle is incorporating cellular IoT connectivity and network APIs from AT&T into its Enterprise Communications Platform (ECP), it has said. The move means Oracle’s enterprise customers can do away with the need to manage complex integrations and network contracts when deploying fleets of IoT devices; these elements are now incorporated into Oracle’s cloud-based ECP proposition, enabling an “all-in-one platform”, it said.
The ECP offer, running on the company’s hosted Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) service, features a bunch of industry cloud applications, which can now be combined easily with data from AT&T-connected IoT devices. The service is available across OCI regions in the US. The integration extends to the US First Responder Network (FirstNet), which piggybacks on AT&T infrastructure, as the basis for Oracle’s own suite of public safety solutions.
Oracle said FirstNet and ECP are the “foundation” for this, helping to deliver “secure communications enabling critical components such as dispatch command centres and near real-time camera feeds for first responders actively engaging in incidents”. Otherwise, Oracle is pitching AT&T-connected IoT solutions on its enterprise platform for “innovation and new services” practically everywhere (“from consumer to industrial business”).
It cited examples including “turnkey, communications-enabled restaurant operation, automated utility grid management, or enriched telehealth capabilities”. It stated: “ECP is delivering IoT connectivity and near real-time comms to Oracle’s suite of industry cloud applications. With integrated capabilities such as IoT edge application management, this all-in-one offering… gives the connectivity and data intelligence to power critical new services.”
Andrew Morawski, executive vice president and general manager at Oracle Communications, said: “Our mission has always been to help improve the way the world communicates, and with ECP supported by AT&T and FirstNet, we’re taking a massive step toward that vision. Together, we can help organisations across industries benefit from the full potential of 5G, by building a new generation of vertical applications offering endless opportunities to innovate.”
Sarita Rao, senior vice president for partner solutions at AT&T, said: “AT&T is committed to… our ecosystem partners to build solutions that integrate… programmable connectivity, whether using IoT APIs or network APIs. By teaming with Oracle… we are providing a tighter level of integration between the network and application, driving performance and reliability gains while also eliminating integration requirements and separate contracting events. It is co-creation at its best.”
Oracle taps AT&T to connect its enterprise IoT application services
Oracle is incorporating cellular IoT connectivity and network APIs from AT&T into its Enterprise Communications Platform (ECP), it has said. The move means Oracle’s enterprise customers can do away with the need to manage complex integrations and network contracts when deploying fleets of IoT devices; these elements are now incorporated into Oracle’s cloud-based ECP proposition, enabling an “all-in-one platform”, it said.
The ECP offer, running on the company’s hosted Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) service, features a bunch of industry cloud applications, which can now be combined easily with data from AT&T-connected IoT devices. The service is available across OCI regions in the US. The integration extends to the US First Responder Network (FirstNet), which piggybacks on AT&T infrastructure, as the basis for Oracle’s own suite of public safety solutions.
Oracle said FirstNet and ECP are the “foundation” for this, helping to deliver “secure communications enabling critical components such as dispatch command centres and near real-time camera feeds for first responders actively engaging in incidents”. Otherwise, Oracle is pitching AT&T-connected IoT solutions on its enterprise platform for “innovation and new services” practically everywhere (“from consumer to industrial business”).
It cited examples including “turnkey, communications-enabled restaurant operation, automated utility grid management, or enriched telehealth capabilities”. It stated: “ECP is delivering IoT connectivity and near real-time comms to Oracle’s suite of industry cloud applications. With integrated capabilities such as IoT edge application management, this all-in-one offering… gives the connectivity and data intelligence to power critical new services.”
Andrew Morawski, executive vice president and general manager at Oracle Communications, said: “Our mission has always been to help improve the way the world communicates, and with ECP supported by AT&T and FirstNet, we’re taking a massive step toward that vision. Together, we can help organisations across industries benefit from the full potential of 5G, by building a new generation of vertical applications offering endless opportunities to innovate.”
Sarita Rao, senior vice president for partner solutions at AT&T, said: “AT&T is committed to… our ecosystem partners to build solutions that integrate… programmable connectivity, whether using IoT APIs or network APIs. By teaming with Oracle… we are providing a tighter level of integration between the network and application, driving performance and reliability gains while also eliminating integration requirements and separate contracting events. It is co-creation at its best.”
Oracle taps AT&T to connect its enterprise IoT application services
Oracle is incorporating cellular IoT connectivity and network APIs from AT&T into its Enterprise Communications Platform (ECP), it has said. The move means Oracle’s enterprise customers can do away with the need to manage complex integrations and network contracts when deploying fleets of IoT devices; these elements are now incorporated into Oracle’s cloud-based ECP proposition, enabling an “all-in-one platform”, it said.
The ECP offer, running on the company’s hosted Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) service, features a bunch of industry cloud applications, which can now be combined easily with data from AT&T-connected IoT devices. The service is available across OCI regions in the US. The integration extends to the US First Responder Network (FirstNet), which piggybacks on AT&T infrastructure, as the basis for Oracle’s own suite of public safety solutions.
Oracle said FirstNet and ECP are the “foundation” for this, helping to deliver “secure communications enabling critical components such as dispatch command centres and near real-time camera feeds for first responders actively engaging in incidents”. Otherwise, Oracle is pitching AT&T-connected IoT solutions on its enterprise platform for “innovation and new services” practically everywhere (“from consumer to industrial business”).
It cited examples including “turnkey, communications-enabled restaurant operation, automated utility grid management, or enriched telehealth capabilities”. It stated: “ECP is delivering IoT connectivity and near real-time comms to Oracle’s suite of industry cloud applications. With integrated capabilities such as IoT edge application management, this all-in-one offering… gives the connectivity and data intelligence to power critical new services.”
Andrew Morawski, executive vice president and general manager at Oracle Communications, said: “Our mission has always been to help improve the way the world communicates, and with ECP supported by AT&T and FirstNet, we’re taking a massive step toward that vision. Together, we can help organisations across industries benefit from the full potential of 5G, by building a new generation of vertical applications offering endless opportunities to innovate.”
Sarita Rao, senior vice president for partner solutions at AT&T, said: “AT&T is committed to… our ecosystem partners to build solutions that integrate… programmable connectivity, whether using IoT APIs or network APIs. By teaming with Oracle… we are providing a tighter level of integration between the network and application, driving performance and reliability gains while also eliminating integration requirements and separate contracting events. It is co-creation at its best.”
Oracle taps AT&T to connect its enterprise IoT application services
Oracle is incorporating cellular IoT connectivity and network APIs from AT&T into its Enterprise Communications Platform (ECP), it has said. The move means Oracle’s enterprise customers can do away with the need to manage complex integrations and network contracts when deploying fleets of IoT devices; these elements are now incorporated into Oracle’s cloud-based ECP proposition, enabling an “all-in-one platform”, it said.
The ECP offer, running on the company’s hosted Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) service, features a bunch of industry cloud applications, which can now be combined easily with data from AT&T-connected IoT devices. The service is available across OCI regions in the US. The integration extends to the US First Responder Network (FirstNet), which piggybacks on AT&T infrastructure, as the basis for Oracle’s own suite of public safety solutions.
Oracle said FirstNet and ECP are the “foundation” for this, helping to deliver “secure communications enabling critical components such as dispatch command centres and near real-time camera feeds for first responders actively engaging in incidents”. Otherwise, Oracle is pitching AT&T-connected IoT solutions on its enterprise platform for “innovation and new services” practically everywhere (“from consumer to industrial business”).
It cited examples including “turnkey, communications-enabled restaurant operation, automated utility grid management, or enriched telehealth capabilities”. It stated: “ECP is delivering IoT connectivity and near real-time comms to Oracle’s suite of industry cloud applications. With integrated capabilities such as IoT edge application management, this all-in-one offering… gives the connectivity and data intelligence to power critical new services.”
Andrew Morawski, executive vice president and general manager at Oracle Communications, said: “Our mission has always been to help improve the way the world communicates, and with ECP supported by AT&T and FirstNet, we’re taking a massive step toward that vision. Together, we can help organisations across industries benefit from the full potential of 5G, by building a new generation of vertical applications offering endless opportunities to innovate.”
Sarita Rao, senior vice president for partner solutions at AT&T, said: “AT&T is committed to… our ecosystem partners to build solutions that integrate… programmable connectivity, whether using IoT APIs or network APIs. By teaming with Oracle… we are providing a tighter level of integration between the network and application, driving performance and reliability gains while also eliminating integration requirements and separate contracting events. It is co-creation at its best.”
AT&T powers IoT for Oracle enterprise communications
Enabling its industry cloud application customers to connect and manage their internet of things (IoT) devices on the comms provider’s network through a single platform, Oracle announced that it is incorporating AT&T IoT connectivity and network APIs into its Enterprise Communications Platform (ECP).
Oracle sees the move as potentially positively affecting the future of 5G network deployments and applications through “seamless” IoT integration and enhanced communication capabilities, representing a “crucial” next step toward bringing real-time communications to its suite of cloud applications.
Supported by AT&T, ECP is now delivering IoT connectivity and near real-time communications to Oracle’s suite of industry cloud applications. With integrated capabilities such as IoT edge application management, the tech firm and telco said the all-in-one offering removes the customer burden of managing complex integrations and network contracts.
Built on Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI), the unified communication and edge architecture is designed to give businesses the connectivity and real-time data intelligence they need to power critical new services and experiences. The integration with AT&T IoT connectivity and network API’s is available across OCI regions in the US.
ECP supported by AT&T, is said to be capable of providing a foundation for new industry applications – from consumer to industrial business – delivering high-performing, reliable connectivity enabling innovation and new services, such as a turnkey; communications-enabled restaurant operation; automated utility grid management; or enriched telehealth capabilities.
An example cited by the firms is FirstNet, the US nationwide high-speed Public Safety Network purpose-built for first responders. With ECP, it is now providing the foundation for Oracle’s Public Safety suite, helping to deliver secure communications that enable critical components such as dispatch command centres and near real-time camera feeds for first responders actively engaging in incidents.
“Our mission has always been to help improve the way the world communicates, and with ECP supported by AT&T and FirstNet, we’re taking a massive step toward that vision,” said Andrew Morawski, executive vice-president and general manager at Oracle Communications.
“Together, we can help organisations across industries benefit from the full potential of 5G, by building a new generation of vertical applications offering endless opportunities to innovate.”
Sarita Rao, senior vice-president at AT&T Partner Solutions, said: “AT&T is committed to empowering our ecosystem partners to build solutions that integrate AT&T programmable connectivity, whether using our IoT API’s or our emerging network API’s.
“By teaming with Oracle to incorporate IoT connectivity and programmable APIs into Oracle industry applications, we are providing businesses and organisations a tighter level of integration between the network and application, driving performance and reliability gains, while also eliminating integration requirements and separate contracting events. It’s co-creation at its best.”
Oracle Incorporates AT&T IoT & Network API’s Into its Enterprise Communications Platform
Oracle announced that it is incorporating AT&T IoT connectivity and network API’s into its Enterprise Communications Platform (ECP).
This integration will enable Oracle’s industry cloud application customers to connect and manage their IoT devices on the AT&T network all in one platform.
Supported by AT&T, ECP is delivering IoT connectivity and near real-time communications to Oracle’s suite of industry cloud applications. With integrated capabilities such as IoT edge application management, this all-in-one offering removes the customer burden of managing complex integrations and network contracts. Built on the high performance and security of Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI), the unified communication and edge architecture gives businesses the connectivity and real-time data intelligence they need to power critical new services and experiences. The integration with AT&T IoT connectivity and network API’s is available across OCI regions in the U.S.
ECP supported by AT&T, is providing a foundation for new industry applications – from consumer to industrial business—delivering high-performing, reliable connectivity enabling innovation and new services, such as a turnkey, communications-enabled restaurant operation, automated utility grid management, or enriched telehealth capabilities.
America’s Public Safety Network—and ECP are providing the foundation for Oracle’s Public Safety suite, helping to deliver secure communications enabling critical components such as dispatch command centers and near real-time camera feeds for first responders actively engaging in incidents.
Sarita Rao, senior vice president, AT&T Partner Solutions said AT&T is committed to empowering our ecosystem partners to build solutions that integrate AT&T programmable connectivity, whether using our IoT API’s or our emerging network API’s. By teaming with Oracle to incorporate IoT connectivity and programmable API’s into Oracle industry applications, we are providing businesses and organizations a tighter level of integration between the network and application, driving performance and reliability gains while also eliminating integration requirements and separate contracting events. It’s co-creation at its best.”
Andrew Morawski, executive vice president and general manager, Oracle Communications
Our mission has always been to help improve the way the world communicates, and with ECP supported by AT&T and FirstNet, we’re taking a massive step toward that vision. Together, we can help organizations across industries benefit from the full potential of 5G, by building a new generation of vertical applications offering endless opportunities to innovate.