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To: RR who wrote (3674)9/26/2000 12:48:06 AM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 65232
 
Just hafta post about that cdma stock.....

From: William Hunt from the Buy Range

Korean Firms Set Sights on Growing Chinese Telecom Market

Korean telecommunications equipment manufacturers have been stepping up efforts to get a leg up on entering the Chinese market. The telecommunications market there is potentially the world¡¯s largest, and the Chinese government is expected to build an American-style synchronous CDMA network capable of supporting 75 million subscribers by 2004. Korean industry sources anticipate an official announcement from China of a decision to go with CDMA technology by the end of this year.

Top executives of major Chinese telecommunications equipment makers and service providers, including China Unicom, which has been spearheading the introduction of CDMA technology into China, visited Korea last week to discuss concrete steps to move ahead with the introduction of CDMA, which is the standard currently used in Korea. During their visit, representatives of these firms met with Minister of Information and Communication Ahn Byung-yub and heads of major telecommunications service providers and equipment manufacturers such as SK Telecom, Samsung and LG. Chinese premier Zhu Rongji, who is due to visit Seoul to participate in ASEM in October, is expected to announce China¡¯s official decision on the introduction of CDMA technology at that time. Ahn said that he understands that the Chinese government has decided to opt for synchronous technology, adding that mobile telecommunications services would be launched in China in the first half of 2001.

China had 62 million subscribers to mobile telecommunications services as of July and Korean observers estimate that this number will grow to 75 million before the end of this year and further to 180 million in 2002. Out of the current 62 million subscribers, only about 350,000 currently use CDMA technology. China Unicom plans, however, to expand the CDMA service network in China, and Korean observers estimate that demand for additional equipment will reach US$7.5 billion for system operations equipment and US$25 billion for mobile phones.

Meanwhile, Korean telecommunications equipment firms such as Samsung Electronics, LG Electronics and Hyundai Electronics have been taking steps to penetrate the Chinese market by entering into partnerships with local firms. Samsung Electronics, for instance, will set up a telecommunications research center in Beijing in October and just last week, Korea¡¯s top telecommunications service provider SK Telecom signed a comprehensive joint management contract with China Unicom.

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To: RR who wrote (3674)9/26/2000 12:54:25 AM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 65232
 
You know, once is not enough, tee he he.....

From: Cooters on the Buy Range

China Unicom Vows to Expand Network Using Qualcomm Standard

--From AOL.-- Cooters

Beijing, Sept. 26 (Bloomberg) -- China Unicom Ltd., the country's No. 2 mobile phone service operator, said it will push ahead with plans to take over and expand a cellular network using a U.S. standard developed by San Diego-based Qualcomm Inc.

While no timetable has been set for the takeover, China Unicom will adopt Qualcomm's code division multiple access, or CDMA, standard, Chairman Yang Xianzu told reporters in Beijing this week. The government in June handed China Unicom control of an experimental network based on the CDMA standard from a company called Great Wall Telecoms Co.

``China Unicom has always adopted a positive and practical attitude toward developing CDMA technology in China,'' Yang said. ``Unicom will, of course, restructure and upgrade the technology as well as expand it.''

Yang's statement could mark a reversal for Unicom, which last year called off talks with Qualcomm on using CDMA for the country's No. 2 cellular phone service. The move also comes as China prepares to open the market to several phone technologies to compete with the existing European standard used by most of the country's cellular phone subscribers.

At the same time, however, Qualcomm officials are reluctant to predict what will happen next. ``It's anybody's guess what's happening in China,'' says Steven Sivitz, senior CDMA product manager with Qualcomm. ``We're always reading the newspapers to find out what's going on.''

China is also developing its own standard for so-called third- generation cellular phones, which it has submitted to the International Telecommunications Union, the world's governing body, for acceptance later this year.

China's promotion of its own mobile phone technology and opening of the domestic market to several standards may level the playing field, analysts say.

``The pie is certainly big enough for more than one phone standard in China,'' said Marvin Lo, who tracks phone companies at BNP-Paribas Peregrine Securities Ltd. in Hong Kong. ``Perhaps the government sees that the present capacity is not adequate for future subscriber growth.''

Warring Standards

Unicom already runs the country's second-largest cellular network using a European cellular phone standard called the Global System for Mobile Communications, or GSM. Nearly all of China's 57 million cellular phone subscribers use GSM.

Unicom will eventually gain one million subscribers on Great Wall Telecom's experimental network started by the People's Liberation Army that runs on a 1995 version of Qualcomm's CDMA standard. The network operates in four Chinese cities --Beijing, Shanghai, Xian and Guangzhou.

``We were handed the network,'' said Dun Huang, the general manager of one of Unicom's units. ``What we're going to do with it is a question that our management has to ponder over.''

By opening the market to several standards, the government may be trying to give domestic phone makers an edge over foreign rivals such as Nokia Oyj and Motorola Inc., which make nearly all of the GSM cellular phones sold in China.

Domestic makers such as TCL Communications Equipment Co. have difficulty procuring components, let alone matching the designs and features found in the phones made by bigger foreign rivals.

That may explain the move away from GSM, the dominant standard in China. The Chinese government in August licensed five domestic companies to make CDMA mobile phones. The five companies are Qiao Xing Universal Telephone Inc., Datang Telecom & Technology Co., Zhongxing Telecom Co., China Putian Telecommunications Co. and Huawei Communications Co.

``Our understanding of the government's strategy is that it recognizes telecommunications as a crucial industry, which it wants to remain in the hands of Chinese companies,'' said Jeff Feng, a Qiao Xing spokesman in Guangdong, China.


Standards Raised

In addition to CDMA, China expects to win approval from the ITU this year for a standard it has championed. The so-called TD- SCDMA is likely to evolve into a transmission technology for third- generation mobile phones providing high-speed Internet access.

China developed TD-SCDMA together with Siemens AG, Germany's largest telecommunications company.

Domestic equipment makers licensed to use it may gain an advantage in the local market over foreign firms such as Motorola, Nokia and Ericsson AB.

``What it will mean is that the mobile phone makers will have to manufacture phones which comply with the standard,'' said Bertrand Bidaud, an analyst with market research firm Gartner Group Inc. Siemens also stands to benefit as a mobile phone maker which has spent many years of effort in China, Bidaud says.

For the time being, domestic phone makers such as Qiao Xing see cdma2000, Qualcomm's standard for high-speed mobile access to the Internet, as their chance to gain a foothold in the China market. Qiao Xing is partly owned by Hyundai Electronics Industries Co. of South Korea, one of the world's largest makers of CDMA phones.

``We see CDMA as the opportunity for our company to take off,'' said Qiao Xing's Feng. ``We have been in discussions with both Great Wall and Unicom on supplying CDMA equipment to them.''


In addition to Siemens, Korean companies are also poised to gain a larger share of the mobile phone business in China.

Last week, Unicom Chairman Yang led a nine-person delegation to visit South Korea's Shinsegi Telecom to study the operation of a cdma2000 phone network.

Unicom wants to cooperate with Shinsegi to adopt cdma2000, according to South Korea's Yonhap news agency.

Busy Signal

Government approval for Unicom to operate a CDMA network comes after months of deliberation over which technology it wants to use to expand the country's cellular phone networks for high- speed Internet access.

Unicom's earlier decision not to adopt CDMA in part caused Qualcomm's shares to slump by as much as 67 percent this year, amid concern the San Diego-based firm will fail to gain royalties from Asia's largest and fastest-growing phone market.

While that lack of resolve may appear to be confusion to some, China's government is clearly interested in ensuring that its domestic manufacturers do not miss a chance to enter their own market, which happened in the case of the GSM standard.

``The government has to proceed very cautiously on the next generation of cellular phone technology,'' said Wang Lijian, an official at China's Ministry of Information Industry in Beijing, which regulates the country's phone industry. ``It's not a wrong choice that we'd like to make.''


Sep/25/2000 22:32 ET

Message 14453986

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To: RR who wrote (3674)9/26/2000 1:31:20 AM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 65232
 
OK, OK..... three's a charm.... just bustin' on ya RR ;-)

SAN DIEGO: so well.''

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2000 9:42:00 PM EST
Sep 25, 2000 (AP WorldStream via COMTEX) -- Worldwide, about 60 million cell phone users rely on CDMA networks, popular because they uses radio spectrum more efficiently and decrease the incidents of calls in a moving vehicle being dropped.

GSM, the current European standard, claims more than 200 million users. Europe, however, has adopted a version of CDMA, dubbed WCDMA, for its next-generation cellular networks that was developed by companies that built on Qualcomm technology.

Some analysts wonder if Qualcomm will be able to continue to collect royalties from WCDMA operators in particular at current market rates.

Some cellular carriers in Japan, Korea and the United States, meanwhile, are adopting CDMA2000, a separate standard for next-generation phones that is preferred by Qualcomm.

Prudential's royalty projections call for Qualcomm to collect dlrs 1.8 billion from CDMA2000 royalties in 2005 and dlrs 1.3 billion from WCDMA.

Courts in Europe and Japan have upheld Qualcomm patents for the underlying technology of both. Qualcomm expects patents to be challenged in other regions, but executives believe it will prevail in most cases.

"Whichever way it goes, it's not particularly critical to us as long as it's CDMA - and it will be CDMA - so it's moving ahead," Jacobs said in an interview.


Qualcomm suffered a serious setback in February when China Unicom, China's second-largest telecommunications company, reneged on a deal to deploy Qualcomm technology in a new mobile telephone network. The company's fortunes appeared to revive recently when Wu Jichuan, China's minister of information technology, said his country must rely on Qualcomm to meet the needs of the market. Qualcomm shares rose 6 percent on the day of Wu's comments.

Copyright 2000 Associated Press, All rights reserved

www2.marketwatch.com{4ED6160A-8FB9-4377-BB1F-502756044547}

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To: RR who wrote (3674)9/26/2000 4:14:44 PM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 65232
 
Tuesday September 26, 3:51 pm Eastern Time
Press Release
SOURCE: Extreme Networks, Inc.

Industry's First Demo of Gigabit Switching At 192 Mpps Performed by Extreme Networks

ATLANTA, NetWorld + Interop, Sept. 26 /PRNewswire/ -- Breaking a new barrier in Gigabit switching performance, Extreme Networks, Inc. (Nasdaq: EXTR - news), is demonstrating an industry leading 192 million pps of throughput with its BlackDiamond®6816, performing wire- speed IP routing across a non-blocking 256 Gbps backplane at NetWorld + Interop, booth #4820.

The BlackDiamond 6816, featuring 128 GBE ports, provides a superior performance alternative for telecom carriers, metropolitan networks and large enterprise customers choosing broadband switching to support millions of Web connections and billions of electronic transactions.

``The BlackDiamond 6816 gives service providers and large scale enterprises the speed and carrier-class reliability they demand from a high density switch,'' said George Prodan, vice president of worldwide marketing for Extreme Networks. ``With this demonstration, Extreme Networks takes another step in delivering the fastest performing solutions on the market.''

The modular BlackDiamond 6816 is ideally suited at the core of the Internet Data Center, providing non-stop performance with support for bandwidth management including Web caching redirection, server load balancing and simple to configure management features.

The demonstration of the BlackDiamond 6816 will be performed with Ixia's 1600(TM) series of packet generators. ``Ixia is pleased to provide high-speed traffic generation and performance verification for Extreme Networks' BlackDiamond 6816,'' said Eran Karoly, vice president of marketing of Ixia. ``By utilizing four IXIA 1600 chassis, fully loaded with 128 ports of Gigabit Ethernet, Ixia is capable of creating an Internet scale verification environment that makes it possible to realistically demonstrate the non-blocking switching capabilities of the BlackDiamond 6816.''

About Extreme Networks

Extreme Networks is a leading provider of high-performance, broadband networking solutions designed for the Internet economy. The Company's family of Summit®, Alpine(TM) and BlackDiamond switching solutions are built on a unique combination of ExtremeWare(TM) management software and an ASIC-based common architecture that enable service providers, e-businesses and enterprises to expand their businesses and be more competitive by speeding traffic through a simplified, super scalable network infrastructure.

Headquartered in Santa Clara, Calif, Extreme Networks sells its award- winning switching solutions in more than 50 countries through authorized resellers. The Company was listed as the ``Fastest Growing Company in Silicon Valley'' based on three-year revenue growth by The Silicon Valley Business Journal. For more information, visit www.extremenetworks.com.

The release of products incorporating new technologies is subject to risks and uncertainties.

NOTE: Extreme Networks, BlackDiamond and Summit are registered trademarks of Extreme Networks, Inc. Alpine and ExtremeWare are trademarks of Extreme Networks, Inc.

SOURCE: Extreme Networks, Inc.

biz.yahoo.com

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