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Ericsson , Bukit Jelutong - Ericsson Resource & Competence Center.

PROJECT TITLE

A single storey warehouse annexed with a double storey office building located at Lot9, 1,Jalan PersiaranTiang Perusahaan,U8/92, Seksyen 23,U8, Bukit Jelutong Industrial Park, 40150 Shah Alam 40300,Alam, Selangor Darul Ehsan, Malaysia                  

ADDRESS                                                                                    

9, Jalan Tiang U8/92, Seksyen U8, Bukit Jelutong Industrial Park, 40150 Shah Alam, Selangor                                        

CURRENT CLIENT BRIEF                                                                            

In 1876, Lars Magnus Ericsson started a small mechanical workshop in central Stockholm, which went on to become one of the world’s leading information and communication technology companies. In 1880, he launched the first wall-mounted telephone and delivered the first switchboard. Ericsson's very first mobile phone, designed in 1956, weighed like a young teenager at 40 kilos and was about the size of a suitcase. Perhaps not really “mobile”. And never destined to be a best-seller, since the network that was built to support it couldn’t handle more than 100 subscribers. (In 1987 that Ericsson would release its first real handheld mobile phone, the HotLine Pocket.) Since the start in 1876, Ericsson had been active in making both phones and networks. In October 2001, Ericsson’s cell phone division merged with the Japanese home electronics firm Sony and formed Sony Ericsson. The competition had become much tougher in the cell phone sector, and Ericsson could no longer rely solely on its own technical expertise. 

In December 2009, Ericsson launched the world's first commercial 4G network in collaboration with TeliaSonera (previously Swedish PTT Televerket). The network was based on the new standard for mobile telecommunication systems: LTE, Long Term Evolution.
For long now, Ericsson has been dedicated to advancing 5G, enabling the Internet of Things. Presently, Ericsson is also engaged in the development of 6G, anticipating that it will deliver an “extended reality” experience, engaging all our senses.