QUALCOMM goes Wi-Fi [old article from July] news.com.com
< By Ben Charny Staff Writer July 29, 2002, 1:10 PM PT
Cell phone heavyweight Qualcomm plans to put Wi-Fi capabilities into tens of millions of phone chips, a Qualcomm spokesman said Monday. Qualcomm, which licenses cell phone designs to manufacturers and makes chipsets, is the latest company to begin merging cell phones with the Wi-Fi wireless networks, which create a powerful wireless zone of about 300 feet. But it is still undecided as to just when the company will finish development work and ship the first chips, the spokesman said.
Qualcomm declined to comment further on its plans for the new chips. Analysts say Qualcomm intends to begin designing and selling cellular phone chips with Wi-Fi inside to keep pace with the rest of the wireless industry, which is already selling such hybrid devices.
The wireless industry considers Wi-Fi a way to augment cell phone networks. Because Wi-Fi networks can also ferry voice calls, these networks could be used in the future to improve cell phone reception in buildings, where cellular coverage is traditionally poor.
Wi-Fi could also be used as a way for carriers, for now, to meet the hype of so-called 3G, or third-generation, wireless Web networks, an area they've begun building and selling services on. The carriers are promising a nationwide wireless network capable of speeds that make it easy to download music on a cell phone, among other features.
Downloading anything of any size to a cell phone or PDA (personal digital assistant) is a real task. That's where Wi-Fi comes in. It could be used to do the "heavy lifting," Cahners In-Stat analyst Allen Nogee said. For instance, a cell phone able to access a Wi-Fi network could use Wi-Fi to download a huge document to a personal computer, which has more computing power than a cell phone, for example.
"There is some very real potential to offloading some of the voice calls onto Wi-Fi," said Keith Waryas, a wireless analyst with IDC. ... contd...>
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