
| ALL TODAY'S PRESS RELEASES SEE BELOW |
| Mobile Operators To Benefit From WiMax |
|
24th June 2003 |
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US : As mobile data becomes more of a basic consumer and business user want through the years, services can be augmented by an emerging complementary standard to WiFi. This standard, 802.16a, will at first be used for fixed and portable applications and by 2004/2005 be utilized to offer the best price and performance available for high-speed wide area wireless data. This more robust standard for high-speed broadband wireless delivery to laptops and desktops will begin to augment the burgeoning WiFi market beginning in late 2004. The position of the 802.16a standard today parallels that of WLAN technology in the late 1990’s, when the market finally grew as 802.11 price vs. performance gains converted WLAN from a niche to mass market. In the very near future, 802.16a will also achieve important price and performance points, a new Visant Strategies study finds. “Under the current conditions, 802.16a could emulate 802.11’s rise several years from now,” said study author Visant Strategies Senior Analyst Andy Fuertes. “Many chip and equipment vendors ignored the chance to get into the 802.11 market early and create market share due to market-size limitations created by high equipment costs, a much smaller potential audience and no need for all things Internet and Intranet yet. WiMAX offers these technology companies a fresh start.” 802.16a is considered the next step beyond WiFi because it is optimized for broadband operation, fixed and later mobile, in the wide area network. It already includes numerous advances that are slated for introduction into the 802.11 standard, such as quality of service, enhanced security, higher data rates, and mesh and smart antenna technology allowing better utilization of the spectrum. The study, “ 802.16/WiMAX Technologies: World Market Forecasts 2003-2008,” finds WiMAX and WiFi complementary as the two technologies address different segments of the market and are optimized for different tasks; local vs. metropolitan area networking. Last mile access will be the first application for 802.16a but mobility will follow via 802.16e. WiMAX is considered a migration path to 4G, but more likely to be used by holders of BWA spectrum rather than mobile carriers. 802.16a is also expected to play a role in outdoor and private networks, the expansion of indoor hot spot locations, and backhaul applications that lack line-of -sight. The opportunity for 802.16a equipment is forecast to reach a value of approximately $1 billion in 2008, the study finds, with growth accelerating late in the period. The study provides global forecasts by region for 802.16a/e equipment, chipset shipments, and service revenues. |
TODAY'S
PRESS RELEASES |
The
total approved 3G capital expenditure until the end of 2004 amounts to
approximately EUR 35 million, part of which includes technology infrastructure
to be provided by Ericsson. |
As
mobile data becomes more of a basic consumer and business user want through
the years, services can be augmented by an emerging complementary standard
to WiFi. |
The
world's first ‘viral’ voice conferencing system – where
participants can join, leave, re-join or involve friends and colleagues
in conferences at will |
Pinpoint
Networks announced the market launch of J2ME application delivery services
on their Fuel platform with mobile operator, O2. |
ATELAB
Research Group unveils the first details about Chameleon - a new mobile
phone for players. The device operates in two positions; vertical as a
mobile phone and horizontal as a game console. |
This
applies to all network types including GSM/GPRS, CDMA, 1xRTT, UMTS and
WLAN, covers all services types including voice, data and premium content,
and all payment options including pre-paid, post-paid and converged payment
approaches. |
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