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Technology Stocks : The New Qualcomm - a S&P500 company
QCOM 180.90+2.1%Oct 31 9:30 AM EDT

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To: Ramsey Su who wrote ()5/31/2000 11:42:00 PM
From: Ruffian  Read Replies (1) of 13582
 
<Technically speaking, US-favoured CDMA system is the same as the European's GSM
system, which is widely used in China.> LoL!

Unicom's plan to phase in CDMA not changed (06/1/2000)

China Unicom, the country's competition-conscious second largest telecommunications
company, has not given up on building a mobile communication network using CDMA
technology.

``We have not received any official document to call off the construction and deployment of a
CDMA network in China,'' said a spokesman with China Unicom.

CDMA stands for code division multiple access.

The spokesman, who declined to be identified, said the CDMA project is still on track but
refused to provide more details.

Early this year, China Unicom announced it would probably provide CDMA service this
summer. And it has finished choosing CDMA equipment supplier candidates for government
review.

Recent remarks from senior Information Industry Ministry officials confirmed that a CDMA
network is in the works.

Information Industry Vice-Minister Zhang Cunjiang said last week that the government will
continue to help China Unicom to create a competitive mobile phone market centring on
American CDMA technology.

The market is now dominated by China Mobile, which use European GSM technology.

"The biggest support from the government is to solely authorize China Unicom to construct
and operate the CDMA network,'' said Zhang.

A US-based Associated Press report said China Unicom told industry analysts at a briefing
on Monday it will not adopt the CDMA wireless telephone standard and will instead stick with
a competing one.

Shares of Qualcomm, the biggest potential beneficiary of China's CDMA deployment, fell as
much as 9 per cent in early trading Tuesday after a more than 40 per cent drop over the past
two weeks.

China Unicom served 5.2 million mobile subscribers by the end of last year, compared with
the 40 million belonging to China Mobile.

The company expects the CDMA network to let it compete with China Mobile. It plans to go
public later this month in Hong Kong and New York.

A February agreement with Qualcomm, the main CDMA technology copyright holder, paved
the way for China Unicom to endorse the technology nationwide.

However, a series of construction delays cast doubts on the cost and timing of CDMA.

Technically speaking, US-favoured CDMA system is the same as the European's GSM
system, which is widely used in China.

But industrial experts say CDMA deployment may come too late. GSM and CDMA network
are narrow-band networks. The next kind of network, due in 2003, will enable much faster
wireless transfers for things such as video images and other multimedia.

(By Wang Chuandong, China Daily)

chinadaily.com.cn.net
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