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Technology Stocks : Qualcomm Moderated Thread - please read rules before posting
QCOM 165.03+1.0%3:59 PM EST

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To: foundation who wrote (25422)8/10/2002 8:48:13 AM
From: foundation  Read Replies (2) of 196746
 
Vodafone Refuses To Clarify Launch Date For 3G Mobile Service

SATURDAY AUGUST 10 12:00AM
THE INDEPENDENT (LONDON)
COPYRIGHT 2002 NEWSPAPER PUBLISHING PLC

THE MOBILE phone operator Vodafone yesterday refused to be pinned down to a
firm launch date for its third-generation mobile phone service in the UK other
than to reiterate it planned to go live at some point next year.

The company, which had originally planned to launch its 3G service in the second
half of this year, said the system would now be available for consumers to use
from 2003. A spokesman also reiterated the company's belief that its 3G service,
which is expected to offer users faster access to the internet and video clips on
mobile devices, would not become a mass market proposition until 2004.

The move came after Vodafone admitted it would only manage to launch a trial
3G service in the UK this year - in line, it said, with plans it set out two months
ago. Consequently, it denied its consumer 3G launch had been delayed, insisting
that it had already stated its initial 3G offering in 2002 would be little more than
a trial. "We would argue it's not a delay," a spokesman said.

While the company had originally pledged a 2002 launch date, Sir Christopher
Gent, the company's chief executive, confirmed two months ago that the network
would originally undergo trials prior to a consumer launch. "Initially, 3G networks
will be opened to conduct a series of friendly- user' trials, leading up to full-scale
roll -out following completion of user product acceptance testing," he said in May.

Sir Christopher said then that the company had not planned to promote the
service this year because it did not think there would be enough so-called dual
-mode handsets, phones that will work on current networks and on 3G networks,
on the market.

While analysts agreed with that, they said yesterday they suspected Vodafone
might have encountered other problems, possibly to do with the network. They
also noted that it did not bode well for 3, formerly Hutchison 3G, which insists it
will still launch a 3G service in the UK toward the end of this year.

Separately, Vodafone said it had spent EUR88m (pounds 56m) on lifting its
shareholding in two European companies. It now owns 54.1 per cent of Vodafone
Telecel- Comunicacoes Pessoais in Portugal and 73.1 per cent of Europolitan
Vodafone in Sweden.

wirelessweek.com
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