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Technology Stocks : Qualcomm Moderated Thread - please read rules before posting
QCOM 161.39-1.9%3:59 PM EST

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To: foundation who wrote (30127)12/17/2002 6:52:34 AM
From: foundation  Read Replies (2) of 197226
 
Cingular Switches E911 Strategy To U-TDOA

BY MARK ROCKWELL
DECEMBER 16, 2002
NEWS@2 DIRECT

WASHINGTON--The FCC's rejection of Cingular Wireless' request for more time to install E-OTD E911 location technology has pushed the carrier to switch gears in favor of the rival Uplink Time Difference of Arrival Technology.Cingular has told the FCC that after completing field trials involving TruePosition's network-based U-TDOA technology, it was moving away from E-OTD, a platform that has resulted in E911 delays - and financial penalties - for several carriers. The company also told the FCC it would file yet another request to implement U-TDOA.

The FCC forwarded Cingular's filing to the commission's Enforcement Bureau, which is where the carrier probably will make its additional request for U-TDOA. The bureau might hammer out another set of implementation deadlines for the U-TDOA technology, possibly with some fines for the delay, according to industry lawyers familiar with the filing. Cingular in October suspended shipments of E-OTD gear and began testing TruePosition's network-based solution. Also this fall, AT&T Wireless agreed to pay $2 million in fines for failing to meet the government's Phase II E911 requirements and said it would deploy a TDOA network-based solution in order to expedite availability of E911-compliant service. The carrier also is continuing trials of E-OTD handset-based solutions.

A spokesperson for the Enforcement Bureau had no comment on the matter. Cingular points to its successful U-TDOA trial as a solid reason for switching horses.

The trial, which took place in Oct. 23-24 Wilmington, Del., included 17 test sites, covering about 20 square miles of suburban territory. About 1,500 test calls were made from all kinds of locations, from moving vehicles to 125 separate stationary locations, according to Cingular's FCC filing.

Of those calls, 67 percent were located to within 47.1 meters and 95 percent to within 112.2 meters-well in line with the FCC's limits for network-based location technology, said Cingular. 'Based on these successful results, Cingular has decided to deploy U-TDOA as its Phase II solution, rather than E-OTD,' the carrier said in its filing.

wirelessweek.com

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The trial, which took place in Oct. 23-24 Wilmington, Del., included 17 test sites, covering about 20 square miles of suburban territory.

Representative sampling?

Down another dead end?

LOL!
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