Miles
12-06-2003, 05:16 PM
Qualcomm Incorporated and Mack Telecom Services Private Ltd have signed an agreement to provide CDMA training in India.
Under the terms of the agreement, Qualcomm’s CDMA University will provide the curriculum, training material and “train the trainer” programmes to help Mack Telecom start operations at its training centre in Bangalore.
“We chose Mack Telecom after evaluating several potential partners in India. We were looking for a company with significant experience in deploying CDMA technology and with a commitment to training and education and therefore Mack Telecom was a natural choice,” said John Scott, senior director of programme management.
He also said the programme is targeted at reaching out to the every engineering graduate and telecom professional.
Mack Telecom is a Bangalore-based provider of engineering services to most international equipment vendors and Indian telecom operators for building wireless and optical fibre networks.
The company has about 300 engineers and technicians and has about 22 man-years or 32,000 man hours of experience in handling CDMA technology based networks.
Read More (http://www.business-standard.com/today/story.asp?Menu=2&story=16322)
Under the terms of the agreement, Qualcomm’s CDMA University will provide the curriculum, training material and “train the trainer” programmes to help Mack Telecom start operations at its training centre in Bangalore.
“We chose Mack Telecom after evaluating several potential partners in India. We were looking for a company with significant experience in deploying CDMA technology and with a commitment to training and education and therefore Mack Telecom was a natural choice,” said John Scott, senior director of programme management.
He also said the programme is targeted at reaching out to the every engineering graduate and telecom professional.
Mack Telecom is a Bangalore-based provider of engineering services to most international equipment vendors and Indian telecom operators for building wireless and optical fibre networks.
The company has about 300 engineers and technicians and has about 22 man-years or 32,000 man hours of experience in handling CDMA technology based networks.
Read More (http://www.business-standard.com/today/story.asp?Menu=2&story=16322)