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To: scratchmyback who wrote (4637)3/1/2007 12:28:40 PM
From: Eric L   of 9255
 
Telstra's new 3GSM Big Boomers for the Outback of Oz

Cool! Kudos to Ericsson. They made committments to Telstra and are living up to them.

Ericsson and Australian telecom operator Telstra said they launched the world’s first 200km cell range in a commercial mobile broadband network. The achievement was announced at the 3GSM World Congress in Barcelona. - PhysOrg -

>> Incredible Telstra 'Next G' Coverage

Geekzone (New Zealand)
1-MAR-2007

Telstra recently announced that they had achieved 2.3Mbps at a range of 200kms from an HSDPA cellsite using an Ericsson supplied software update.

This is an amazing feat and a world first. The results were announced at the recent 3GSM conference. There is an article over at Physorg [in which] Sol Trujillo was quoted as saying:

"The benefits of 3GSM technology and HSPA could not have been economically taken to extensively to regional and remote Australia without the use of 850 MHz spectrum and the Ericsson software enhancements to extend the range and capacity of the network."

A good endorsement for the lower 850MHz frequency range.

This breaks the previous Telstra record set in 1999 with 120km achieved on the CDMA network using a 'boomer' cell site located at Mt Dowe NSW¹

¹ cdg.org

It just goes to show the benefits of living in a flat country. It would be difficult to achieve a similar range in New Zealand because of geography but it will be interesting to see what Nokia can do when Vodafone starts to adopt the 900MHz spectrum for HSDPA services.

Telstra and Ericsson deserve some credit for actually rolling out a new network in about 10 months and for achieving such a high data rate at such a distance.

I believe the skeptics (including myself) have now been silenced. ###

>> Ericsson and Telstra Achieve World First 200 Km Cell Range In Nationwide Network With Up To 14.4 Mbps

Ericsson
February 12, 2007

ericsson.com

Ericsson (NASDAQ:ERIC) and Australian operator Telstra will achieve two significant milestones when later this week they launch the world's first 200km cell range in a commercial mobile broadband network and maximum network downlink speeds of 14.4Mbps. This was announced today by Ericsson President and CEO Carl-Henric Svanberg and Telstra Chief Executive Officer, Sol Trujillo. These initiatives will further boost network capacity and ensure consistent services as Telstra's customer numbers grow.

Just four months after the launch of Telstra's Next G (TM) network, Ericsson's Extended Range software has been installed in selected mountaintop sites across Australia, supporting all 3G services over extensive geographical areas.

Sol Trujillo said Telstra had displayed global leadership when it built the "turbocharged" Next G (TM) network in just 10 months.

"We are already seeing our customers use these world leading mobile broadband services in ways they have never done before," Trujillo said.

"Since launching Next G (TM) with HSDPA, Telstra has doubled the volume of total data traffic carried on all of its wireless networks. With the new distance upgrades, even some of the most remote customers in outback Australia will be able to see the benefits."

The Ericsson solution enables coverage up to 200km from a base station, a major leap from the 50km range typically supported today. This is particularly important for users who want to take advantage of the high-speed network from remote locations on and off-shore (including ships and oil-rigs).

"Extended Range gives Telstra a unique opportunity to offer ever-improving service capabilities to customers via their mobile devices, data cards, or home-networking services," added Svanberg.

The software upgrade means the Next G (TM) network data capacity has now been tripled. The advanced software employs High-Speed Packet Access (HSPA) technology to achieve peak network speeds of up to 1.9Mbps in the uplink and 14.4Mbps in the downlink. Downlink speeds of 2.3Mbps at a 200km range have also been achieved during testing. This also provides an increase in overall capacity for existing Next G (TM) customers, even in the network's busiest periods.

"These are both world-first achievements on any nationwide wireless network," Trujillo said.

Telstra's Next G (TM) network coverage provides mobile broadband access to 98.8 percent of Australians, covering 1.9 million square kilometres.

Carl-Henric Svanberg said he was pleased to be a founding partner of Telstra's Next G (TM) test bed.

"Ericsson is fully committed to the continued evolution of mobile networks and looks forward to stretching the boundaries of technology," he said.

Already, the Next G test bed is testing 7.2Mbps data cards for launch in mid-2007 on Telstra's 14.4Mbps capable Next G (TM) network.

"The benefits of 3GSM technology and HSPA could not have been economically taken so extensively to regional and remote Australia without the use of 850 MHz spectrum and the Ericsson software enhancements to extend the range and capacity of the network," Trujillo concluded.

Ericsson is shaping the future of Mobile and Broadband Internet communications through its continuous technology leadership. Providing innovative solutions in more than 140 countries, Ericsson is helping to create the most powerful communication companies in the world. ###

- Eric -
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