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To: Ruffian who wrote (6850)2/24/2000 9:42:00 PM
From: SKIP PAUL  Respond to of 13582
 
Wireless 2000 Show Highlights Advanced, Multi-Function Phones
By Lisa Levenson
Wireless 2000 Show Highlights Advanced, Multi-Function Phones

New Orleans, Feb. 24 (Bloomberg) -- Cellular phones that can
download and play digital music, show movies and television
programs, or let users shop and surf the Web will be the focus of
next week's Wireless 2000 trade show in New Orleans.

The Cellular Telecommunications Industry Association's
convention will run Monday through Wednesday at the Morial
Convention Center. CTIA's Latin American conference is scheduled
for Wednesday, while sessions for smaller wireless companies and a
program on wireless data are set for Sunday.

Aside from promoting whiz-bang new features, phone makers and
service providers are eager to tap into the exploding wireless-
data market, which Cahners In-Stat Group forecasts will attract
23.9 million U.S. users by 2003, up from 1.73 million last year.
Carriers want customers to use their phones more -- and to spend
more each month -- by enticing them with wireless access to the
Internet.
``CTIA seems to be about wireless data in all its flavors,'
said Ken Hyers, a Cahners analyst. ``Everybody is getting onto the
data bandwagon. It's just about trying to figure out what people
want and how to package it.'

More than 20,000 executives and wireless enthusiasts are
expected to attend Wireless 2000. Microsoft Corp. Chairman Bill
Gates, AT&T Corp. Wireless Group Chairman and Chief Executive John
Zeglis, Amazon.com Inc. Chief Executive Jeff Bezos, America Online
Inc. Chairman Steve Case and U.S. Federal Communications
Commission Chairman William Kennard are scheduled to speak.

New Products

Wireless data is becoming more important to phone companies
as they upgrade their networks to so-called third-generation
standards. With this new technology, they expect to offer Internet
access to wireless phones at speeds as much as three times faster
than today's fastest personal computer modems.

Chipmaker Qualcomm Inc. will demonstrate its ``high data rate
technology' at the show. It's expected to take on more
significance as phone sales outpace personal-computer sales. AT&T
Chairman C. Michael Armstrong has predicted that there will be
twice as many wireless subscribers as PCs worldwide within three
years, with one wireless phone for every six people on Earth.

At the show, Sprint Corp.'s PCS Group will introduce a new
``smart phone' from LG InfoComm, with personal-organizer
functions, and a number of Samsung Corp. phones, with larger
screens for Web surfing or features that target teens, like the
capability to download special rings and screen images.

Nokia Oyj's 8890 world phone, another new entry, is a 3.2-
ounce, brushed-aluminum device as big as a deck of cards that can
be used around the globe because it relies on global system for
mobile communications, or GSM, technology. The tiny phone also has
an infrared port for exchanging data with other devices.

Alliances, Ventures

With software included in many new cellular phones, some
users already can download driving directions, weather forecasts,
stock quotes and news updates, and they can communicate with their
companies' computer networks.

Xerox Corp. and Wireless Knowledge LLC, a venture of
Microsoft and Qualcomm, are among the companies entering this
market. They want to help mobile executives gain access to
documents on their office computers while they travel, with new
computer servers that let workers retrieve and send documents to
others using pagers or cell phones.
``Content and office functionality now moves to wireless
devices,' said Clarence Wesley, general manager of Xerox Mobile
Systems. The Xerox MobileDoc service will be available on certain
Motorola Inc. pagers and Nokia phones.

Hyers said he expects Wireless Knowledge and Sprint PCS,
which already have a relationship, to ``tie the knot more tightly
than they have in the past.'

Microsoft Investment

Last May, national wireless provider Nextel Communications
Inc. received a $600 million investment from Microsoft to help
develop its Nextel Online service. The world's largest software
maker said earlier this month that it's in talks with various
wireless carriers to carry content from its Web sites using MSN
Mobile.
``They're like an octopus -- let's put our arms here and here
and here -- we'll hug everybody,' Hyers said, referring to
Microsoft.

Microsoft won't be the only company striking partnerships at
CTIA, said Jon Dorfman, associate analyst at the Strategis Group,
a Washington-based market researcher.
``There are going to be a lot of major relationships and
alliances announced,' he said.

Motorola, for example, plans to unveil collaborations with a
company whose products help block vehicle noise and a developer of
in-car wireless communications systems, to tap the so-called
``telematics' market.

Strategy Analytics Inc., a Wellesley, Massachusetts-based
market researcher, forecasts that more than 50 percent of new cars
will be telematics-capable by 2006, with the market opportunity
surging to $24.3 billion worldwide.



To: Ruffian who wrote (6850)2/24/2000 9:51:00 PM
From: SKIP PAUL  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13582
 
Ericsson Stages Live Global WCDMA Multi-party Link-up

Business & High Tech Editors

CeBIT 2000

STOCKHOLM, Sweden--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Feb. 24, 2000--(NASDAQ:
ERICY) Ericsson is demonstrating at CeBIT 2000 the world's first live
multi-party link-up of WCDMA pilot systems across seven countries in
four world regions.

In a move that brings WCDMA technology another step closer to
commercial deployment, Ericsson is staging the first live public
demonstration featuring a multi-party link-up between Ericsson's WCDMA
pilot systems in Canada, Germany, Japan, New Zealand, Spain, Sweden
and the UK.

Visitors to the Ericsson stand will be able to try out a
selection of wireless services that are possible over a WCDMA network,
such as multi-party video conferencing, listening to streaming music,
sending wireless postcards to family and friends, and wireless
Internet surfing to favorite sites.

Ericsson recently won the first-ever agreement for a commercial
end-to-end 3G system. The Finnish 2G Ltd. has chosen Ericsson as the
main supplier of a nationwide mobile network integrating GSM and 3G.

Around the world, Ericsson's customers, the operators, are
already trying WCDMA pilot systems and potential applications. Trying
this at an early stage ensures that operators achieve a smooth
roll-out of services and networks once they acquire the license.

Ericsson's WCDMA pilot systems can handle voice calls at 8 kbps,
circuit-switched data at 64, 128 and 384 kbps, and packet-switched
data at up to 472 kbps. Each system uses Ericsson's common packet
switching platform that handles both realtime IP and ATM between
network nodes and within each node. The innovative platform offers
mobile network operators a flexible infrastructure for future-proof
transition to the 3G networks which will be needed for new mobile
Internet services.

Ericsson is leading the development of 3G mobile communications
and the transition to 3G systems. Ericsson offers a smooth transition
path from all 2G systems to 3G systems based on WCDMA, cdma2000 and
EDGE. Ericsson is the only supplier with a full range of both second
and third generation systems. The company offers a 3G portfolio with
end-to-end solutions, including terminals, applications and
infrastructure.

Ericsson has already announced 3G pilot systems on three
continents, leveraging the company's more than 10 years of research in
3G technologies. The company has set up 3G pilot systems in Canada,
China, Germany, Italy, Japan, UK, U.S., Spain and Sweden.

Ericsson is the leading provider in the new telecoms world, with
communications solutions that combine telecom and datacom technologies
with freedom of mobility for the user. With more than 100,000
employees in 140 countries, Ericsson simplifies communications for its
customers network operators, service providers, enterprises and
consumers - the world over.