Earlier this week I argued that the AI Grid debate needs to move on from where you place a GPU to whether geographically dispersed compute can behave as a single fabric. I stand by that. But a story that has been building across the press this week is a useful reminder that the location question, the one I have been answering the same way for two years, is now being settled in public by the people who actually own the radio networks. And they are settling it against the tower.
The reporting is consistent. Light Reading describes Nokia and Nvidia's AI-RAN proposition running into telco resistance. Verizon, Vodafone, Orange and, notably for me, Telus have all raised doubts about putting graphics processing units into the radio access network. AT&T's chief technology officer has cast public doubt on the case for AI compute at the far edge. The enthusiasm for GPU-in-the-RAN comes from two operators, T-Mobile US and SoftBank, and almost no one else. Much of the rest of the industry is looking at Intel's newer CPUs for its open RAN rollouts rather than filling cell sites with accelerators.
I want to be precise about what this does and does not prove. It does not prove that AI in the RAN is a bad idea. Applying machine learning to scheduling, link adaptation and energy management inside the baseband is real, it is shipping, and Ericsson's AI-in-RAN software subscription is a reasonable way to bring it into existing hardware. What the operators are rejecting is narrower and more specific. They are rejecting the proposition that the cell site should become a general-purpose AI inference venue, stuffed with GPUs, monetised by hosting third-party workloads at the edge of the network. That is the proposition I have said for two years does not survive contact with power, cooling, space, security and, above all, the absence of a monetisation model.
My position has been that AI Grid deployment begins at the central office and the mobile switching office, not the cell site, because every physical and commercial constraint favours the aggregation point over the tower. The reasoning was never controversial to anyone who has stood in both kinds of building. A central office has power feeds, environmental control, physical security and fibre already in place. A cell site has a cabinet, a limited power budget and a landlord. When Verizon, Vodafone, Orange and Telus decline to put GPUs at the far edge, they are not making a new argument. They are confirming an old one, and they are confirming it with capital allocation decisions rather than conference slides, which is the only confirmation that counts.
There is a workstream reason this caught my eye. Telus appearing on the skeptics' list is consistent with what I see in the market: operators that are serious about autonomous operations are also the ones being disciplined about where AI compute physically lands. Those two forms of discipline are related. An operator that thinks clearly about the economics of edge inference tends to think clearly about the economics of everything else in the network.
The AI-RAN enthusiasm gap also matters for how we read vendor claims. When a technology has two vocal operator champions and a longer list of vocal operator skeptics, that is the signature of a capability that has been field-validated in specific conditions but not commercially validated across the market. I have made this distinction before and it applies cleanly here. SoftBank's agentic AI-RAN demonstrations and T-Mobile's Nvidia-backed edge trials are real engineering. They are not yet evidence that the model generalises to operators with different cost structures, different energy prices and different enterprise demand. Treat a two-operator enthusiasm as a pilot signal, not a market verdict.
So where does this leave the fabric argument I made last week? Exactly where I left it, and stronger. The operators are removing the least defensible node from the AI Grid, the cell site as inference host, which clears the ground for the argument that actually matters. Once you accept that heavy inference will not live at the tower, the interesting question becomes how you knit central offices, regional data centres and a small number of genuinely latency-bound edge sites into one addressable pool. The industry spent this week deciding where the compute will not go. That is progress. The harder decision, who owns the fabric that arbitrates across the places it will go, is still open, though.

