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Pastimes : The New Qualcomm - write what you like thread. -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: T L Comiskey who wrote (814)10/29/1999 7:33:00 PM
From: Ruffian  Respond to of 12242
 
Graham Tanaka, President Tanaka Capital Mgmt: INTC, NVLS, QCOM,
NXTL, NOK, ERICY

From: C R Nasmythe
Date: 29 Oct 1999
Time: 15:16:58
Remote Name: 63.22.104.60

Comments

Tech demand good

Graham’s Picks:

INTC bullish about 4q in their first webcast last night; Y2K not an issue, but more importantly INTC working on becoming
internet building block supplier

Will still drive advances in microprocessors, but adding a new layer of growth

Addition to Dow gives INTC more visibility, and brings Dow up to date

netcognizance.com

NVLS – likes NVLS as well as whole semi industry because of upcoming silicon shortage

NVLS the leader in the new technology

Likes QCOM and NXTL better than NOK and ERICY because they have CDMA technology – NOK and ERICY
battling each other for marketshare



To: T L Comiskey who wrote (814)10/29/1999 9:31:00 PM
From: Ruffian  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12242
 
Fixed Getting Nervous?

Mobile Operators Should Compete on Voice
Not Data, Says Report

By Vanessa Clark

29 October 1999

Mobile operators should use wireless data as a way to
increase voice calls and not try to compete with fixed
operators in the data market says a new report from U.K.
analysts Schema Consulting.

The report, Opportunities for Unified Telecoms Services: The
convergence of IP, intelligent networks and mobile
technologies, sets out to advise mobile operators on business
strategies that will justify the investments being made in
wireless data technologies. It warns operators that they will
not be able to compete with fixed operators in data alone as
technologies like xDSL and cable modems mean that wired
data rates will continue to outstrip mobile rates.

However, Schema sees new technologies like WAP as an
excellent chance for operators to drive voice revenues, reduce
churn and provide unified telecoms services - but will only
ever generate incremental revenues themselves.

"Mobile operators are ... going to have to think about the
ways in which mobile data can complement the services
provided over the fixed network, rather than try to compete
with them head on," said Henry Harrison, senior consultant at
Schema.

Location-based services are going to be crucial here. For
example, calls made on a personal mobile phones could be
billed to a corporate account when they are used on-site.
Another service Schema suggested was that shopkeepers
could offer free phone calls from within their stores to attract
customers to special offers. The shopkeeper would pay the
operator for the calls with the cost off-set by increased sales.

Harrison said that pure mobile data is a gamble for operators,
especially in Europe where they are being asked to commit
billions of dollars to untested networks and technologies as
part of the auctioning of licenses. In the U.S. operators are
taking a more evolutionary approach to 3G not requiring a
massive initial investment.

Harrison warns that "expectations for mobile data are in
danger of being over-inflated because of a focus in top speeds
for new technologies." For instance, GPRS rates, set at around
107.2 kbps, are shared by all the users in the cell - so the more
users means a slower actual rate. And although 3G standards
make the promise of data rates at up to 2Mbps, this is only
under ideal conditions, stationary and at the middle of the cell.

It is crucial that operators manage users expectations now to
avoid this impacting the market later.

Harrison says that operators will have to set up pricing models
that charge a premium for higher rates. "Whatever the
technology, lower speeds are cheaper and the pricing of data
services has got to follow this model," he said.

The $500 million study was conducted over the last five
months in Europe and the U.S. and consulted operators, ISPs
and vendors as well as 700 end-users.