
AC-Series-1, eBook 3: Telecom Industry's Last Stand: 5G, 6G, and Beyond: A Race Against Irrelevance
5G, 6G, and Beyond: A Race Against Irrelevance
(AC-Series-1, Book 3)
The Great Disconnect: How 5G and 6G Became Billion-Dollar Sinks
The telecom industry has spent trillions deploying new towers, fiber lines, and spectrum — and it still can’t deliver on the promises it made. This eBook dives deep into the unsustainable economics behind 5G and the growing delusion of 6G.
It’s not just a story of failed infrastructure — it’s a warning about an industry that’s lost control of the narrative.
What You’ll Discover Inside:
The Economic Breakdown of 5G Rollouts
– From urban deployment costs to rural abandonment, learn why the math never worked — and never will.
6G as a Marketing Illusion
– How early 6G whitepapers exaggerate capabilities to buy time, funding, and stockholder faith — while the underlying technology remains decades away from viability.
The Global Tower Problem
– Why small cell deployment is choking under regulatory red tape, physical zoning limits, and community pushback.
Spectrum Wars and Policy Panic
– How spectrum auctions became a global revenue addiction, and why governments can’t walk away even as the value crumbles.
The Real Competitor: AC-Based Networks
– Adaptive Computing satellites are bypassing fiber, skipping towers, and delivering results — all while telecom giants are stuck retrofitting legacy systems they can no longer afford.
Who This eBook Is For:
– Strategic consultants
– Infrastructure analysts
– Venture investors
– Telco executives who know the numbers don’t add up anymore
– Engineers and researchers working on what comes after mobile
If you work in or around the telecom space — or rely on it for your business — you can’t afford to ignore what’s coming next.
Part of the AC-Series-1 Collection
This is Book 3 in the AC-Series-1, a 21-eBook series expanding on the original hardcover Death of Mobile. Each title stands alone, delivering deep focus on a single collapsing pillar of the mobile age — and what Adaptive Computing is doing to replace it.