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Technology Stocks : Qualcomm Moderated Thread - please read rules before posting -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: mightylakers who wrote (6607)1/26/2001 4:59:39 PM
From: JohnG  Respond to of 197032
 
ML. Evidently there is planning well beyond 2.4Mbps for CDMA. Remember this July article that claimed 15Mbps in 2001.
JohnG

Samsung to support 15-Mbit/s
synchronous services in 2001

By Yoonhee Park
EE Times
(07/05/00, 4:58 p.m. EST)

SEOUL, South Korea — Samsung expects to deliver
third-generation (3G) cellular systems next year
that support services with data rates up to 15
Mbits/second, exceeding the maximum 2-Mbit/s
rate typical of 3G systems that follow the
International Mobile Telecommunications (IMT)
standard for services using the 5-MHz spectrum
band.

<&b>Samsung's work is based on the IMT-2000 standard
being hammered out by the Third Generation
Partnership Project 2 (3GPP2). The systems would
be based on an extension to the 1X EV technology
that the 3G project is now developing. That
technology ensures data service up to 5.2 Mbits/s
using a 1.25-MHz band, the same chunk of
bandwidth used by today's CDMA-based cellular
systems. <&b/>

The 3GPP2 group expects to offer a 3X version of
the technology that delivers 5.2 Mbits/s over a
5-MHz swath of spectrum, Samsung said. The
company claims that the use of synchronous
technology will provide more than a sevenfold
efficiency gain compared with the asynchronous
method used in 3G systems that deliver data rates
of 2 Mbits/s.

The synchronous approach will also allow more-flexible systems
that can support standards like those coming for both the 1X EV
and cdma2000 technologies, Samsung said. This approach will
make it easier for service providers to upgrade from one service to
the next or to increase the number of subscribers without replacing
underlying hardware.

OEMs here have almost completed cellular systems based on the
cdma2000 1X (IS-95C) specification, which can provide a basic
platform for synchronous IMT-2000 services. These systems are
expected to be commercially available in October.

Major IT companies in South Korea, including SK Telecom and LG
Telecom, are preparing to support cdma2000 1X (IS-95C) services,
which are expected to go live here in the second half of this year.
Korea's equipment manufacturers hope to beat competing systems
from suppliers outside Korea by as much as three months.

The 1X EV systems, meanwhile, are slated to be available in the
second half of 2001, when that standard is expected to come to a
final vote.

For its part, LG Telecom started its development of wideband
CDMA systems in 1999. However, the work is not expected to be
finished until late 2002 at the earliest.



To: mightylakers who wrote (6607)1/26/2001 5:19:45 PM
From: carranza2  Respond to of 197032
 
Remember Gilder's HDR's several-fold-increase-in-speed-by- the-end-of-the-year [2000] comment in his August '00 issue?

I was halfway expecting an announcement confirming Gilder in yesterday's call.