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To: John Biddle who wrote (4593)12/28/1999 10:26:00 AM
From: Ruffian  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13582
 
I have a lot of patience,>

Nokia GPRS to support all terminals

HELSINKI, Dec 28 (Reuters) - Finnish telecom operator Nokia (NYSE:NOK - news) said on
Tuesday its General Packet Radio Service (GPRS) infrastructure would support all three
planned classes of GPRS mobile phone terminals.

It said this across-the-board support may have been underestimated by some players in GPRS,
which is a system bringing permanent data connections to GSM (Global System for Mobile
Communications) phones.

''The Nokia GPRS solution has full support for all ETSI specified interfaces... resulting in a competitive functionality from the
outset including support for Short Message Services over GPRS and for all classes of GPRS-enabled mobile terminals,'' Nokia
said in a statement.

''The importance of supporting all (interfaces by ETSI, the European Telecommunications Standards Institute) has probably been
somewhat underestimated,'' the head of Nokia's GPRS business programme Petri Poyhonen told Reuters.

Poyhonen said terminal producers are planning three kinds of handsets for GPRS called classes A, B and C, with different
telecommuncations functionality.

The simplest phones, class C, will only be able to carry either voice or data connections, which means someone using the phone
for WAP (Wireless Application Protocol) Internet services will not be able to take voice calls, which will be diverted.

Therefore GPRS networks will need to include ETSI's interface ''Gd'' to carry a short message services telling the phone user if
the caller has left a message in the voice mailbox, Poyhonen said.

Class B phones will be able to let users switch to voicecalls from data use when the phone rings, and that will require networks to
include ETSI interface ''Gs.''

Class A phones would seamlessly let users talk without closing their GPRS data connections, Poyhonen said.

Other ETSI interfaces -- Gn, Gb, Gr, Gp, Gf -- are needed for all GRPS networks, and will provide functions such as
inter-network roaming for all three classes of handsets.

The first GPRS phones -- expected to hit the market in mid-2000 -- will likely be class C and B phones, with the class C models
especially fit for data-only use, he said.

Class A phones will enter the market much later, if at all, possibly at around the same time as third generation wireless broadband
terminals are due, he said.

''Class A phones will be complicated and it is possible that phone makers will choose to use the resources for development of
other features instead,'' Poyhonen said.



To: John Biddle who wrote (4593)12/28/1999 1:18:00 PM
From: moat  Respond to of 13582
 
John,

Respectfully, I think you missed the point. The point is how to account for them (options).

As to the high-tech job market, who should get them, and how much, that's a different topic.

moat