
Europe : picoChip
announced a reference design for an ultra-low cost 3G/HSDPA basestation
for use in a home or small office as an alternative to WiFi and UMA
(Unlicensed Mobile Access). The PC8208 modem reference design for
a 3G access point or "femtocell" basestation supports HSDPA
with a software upgrade to HSUPA. The reference design enables an
OEM to develop a femtocell with the lowest bill of materials and fastest
time-to-market of any solution available today. Such a system enables
cellular operators to counter competitors offering UMA or voice-over-WiFi
(VoWiFi), but - a crucial difference - allows customers to use existing
standard cellular handsets.
The picoChip Node B software
reference design provides a modem that is fully compliant to 3GPP
Rel5 2005-06 (FDD) for 4 users with a 200m range, and supports 7Mb/s
High-Speed Downlink Packet Access (HSDPA). Software upgrade to HSUPA
will be available next year. The reference design includes all baseband
processing (sample rate, chip rate and symbol rate operations), as
well as MAC-hs scheduler, operations and management (OAM) functionality
and protocol termination. It complements picoChip's other proven reference
designs for advanced wireless systems, including the industry-standard
solution for WiMAX basestations.
Mobile operators increasingly
perceive a threat from the convergence of WiFi, VoIP and fixed telephony
within the home, and are seeking a way to increase their share of
the residential calls market. The femtocell or home-basestation supports
cellular calls locally, and then uses broadband, typically DSL or
cable modem, to carry traffic to the operator's core network. Crucially,
as a standard 3G basestation, it operates with all existing handsets
rather than requiring customers to upgrade to expensive dual-mode
devices. This provides cellular carriers with an effective means of
countering the threat of VoIP, UMA or VoWiFi. As the same handset
is used for all calls, it improves customer loyalty and reduces churn,
as barriers to changing operators increase. An additional benefit
is that both network coverage and capacity are increased in a cost-effective
manner, exactly where they are most needed by the end user.
From the customer's perspective
a home basestation offers the benefit of using a single mobile handset
with a built-in personal phonebook for all calls, whether from home
or elsewhere. This eliminates user frustration caused by changing
between handsets with different interfaces and functionality.
"Small basestation
designs proposed by other vendors have taken a different approach,"
commented Doug Pulley, Chief Technical Officer of picoChip. "They
use designs originally intended for a macrocell application, wholly
inappropriate for this environment. The picoChip architecture is specifically
optimized for this important new application, and provides the fastest
and lowest cost route for OEMs to develop a residential access point."
The PC8208 is the latest
addition to the picoChip family of reference designs for 3G basestation
applications. The PC8218 picocell and PC8228 microcell designs were
both announced and demonstrated last year.
Product information: PC8208
femtocell
Specification:
-- 200m range
-- 10km/h mobility
-- 4 users
-- Residential/ small office
Downlink:
-- 7.21Mb/s (between 4
users), or
-- 4 user Circuit switched
data (Release4), or
-- 4 users at 12.2kb/s
(voice)
Uplink:
-- Future upgrade to HSUPA,
or
-- 4 user Circuit switched
data (Release4), or
-- 4 users at 12.2kb/s
(voice)