Patrick, all, LSI (and DSP Communications) completing supplier deals to sell CDMA chips to Korean phone manufacturers.
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Chip vendors take on Qualcomm in Korea
By B.H. Seo EE Times (09/08/99, 4:15 p.m. EDT)
SEOUL, South Korea?Chip makers are gearing up to take on market leader Qualcomm Inc. here after concluding agreements to supply code-division multiple-access (CDMA) chip sets to domestic mobile phone manufacturers.
While acknowledging that San Diego-based Qualcomm remains far ahead in the race to supply CDMA chip sets to the Korean market, Korean manufacturers here said they have reason for optimism after completing supplier deals with CDMA chip set makers DSP Communications Inc. ( Cupertino, Calif.) and LSI Logic Corp. (Milpitas, Calif.).
Industry sources said the U.S. companies are talking with mobile phone manufacturers here to supply their chip sets. The deals mean Korean phone manufacturers could save millions by switching suppliers from Qualcomm, which holds key patents on CDMA technology, to other U.S. chip set makers like DSP and LSI Logic.
"The supply price is lower than Qualcomm by 20 to 30 percent, and domestic mobile phone manufacturers want to be out from under its shadow," an industry source said.
Agreements inked
DSP announced last year it would supply CDMA chip sets to SK Teletech. It recently completed agreements to supply its chip, which supports IS-95C and CDMA 2000 standards, to a handful of domestic phone makers. Arnon Kohavi, senior vice president for strategic relations, declined to identify the three new Korean customers, but confirmed the design wins and said DSP will begin delivering its CDMA chip sets as early as the end of the year.
"We position ourselves as an alternative to Qualcomm," Kohavi said, adding that DSP thus far supplies about 1 million chip sets to Japanese and Korean customers. Kohavi said the firm not only wants to enter the Korean market but is seeking long-term relationships with Korean mobile phone makers when they sell products oversees.
DSP Communications established a design center in San Diego last year to develop CDMA-based solutions for the IMT-2000 third-generation wireless phone market. LSI Logic has also developed cooperative relationships with Korean and Japanese mobile phone makers.
As these companies seek to make inroads in the Korean market, others are said to be preparing to enter the CDMA competition here. Samsung Electronics Co., Motorola Inc., Philips Electronics' VLSI Technology unit and others are also said by industry sources to be in various stages of CDMA chip-set development. Samsung Electronics said in April it had completed development of a CDMA chip set that includes a mobile station modem (MSM), a baseband analog processor and general-use operating system software for CDMA handsets. However, some observers expressed doubts that these new entrants to the market could develop adequate CDMA solutions anytime soon.
For its part, Qualcomm said it welcomes the competition in Korea. "As the CDMA pie continues to grow, there will be more competition," said company spokeswoman Anita Hix. She stressed, however, that Qualcomm has delivered more than 50 million MSMs and is several generations ahead of its competitors in South Korea.Exclusive to EE Times by Chom Dan Inc. (Seoul). |