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


To: Eric L who wrote (7476)2/18/2001 2:10:55 PM
From: mightylakers  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 197124
 
asynchronous platform is a formula developed based on GSM technology being used in Europe

Man, I was surprised to see a Korean professor to say this. Then I found out he's a professor in business.

That tells me how successful the GSM cabals fooled the mass.



To: Eric L who wrote (7476)2/18/2001 2:32:44 PM
From: laodeng  Respond to of 197124
 
<Now, isn't there any international competitiveness for IMT-2000's synchronous technology? Technological experts do not believe so. >

Why did he list arguments to contradict himself?

Or maybe the Korean language is similar to chinese, which uses negative answer to make a negative question positive?

laodeng



To: Eric L who wrote (7476)2/19/2001 2:42:18 PM
From: Maurice Winn  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 197124
 
<The Korea Post
February 17, 2001
Prof. Chung Jae-young

koreapost.com

Following article on "The Korean economy and IMT -2000 synchronous technology" was contributed to The Korea Post by Prof. Chung Jae-young of Sung Kyun Kwan University in Seoul. He teaches business management. Excerpts from the article follow.--Ed.
>

EricL, excellent article by Professor Chung Jae-young. Very polite too. I prefer to simply call the GSM Guild pushing VW-40 what they are - a bunch of bandits! They have even tried to get away with Q! technology without paying, but the courts are consistenly telling them to not steal and to pay Q! as required by Q!

Korea can see what the W-CDMA crowd is trying to do.

I bet China sees it too. But of course they both wish to negotiate as good a deal with QUALCOMM as they can. China and Korea [and Japan] are all better off with cdma2000 because they can develop [Korea already has it and Japan has too with companies such as Kyocera] great skill in CDMA which will translate into cdma2000. NTT prefers W-CDMA for their narrow sectional interest.

To choose between cdma2000 and W-CDMA we really only need to know that cdma2000 is synchronized and has turbo coding and can hum along in 1.25MHz or 5MHz at a nice slow chip rate, whereas W-CDMA is thrashing around unsynchronized, burning silicon at high chip rates and using a weird, convoluted, concatenated coding instead of the swanky and fast Turbo coding of cdma2000.

But throw in that it is backward compatible.

And it is ready now.

And it has only 5% instead of 10% or 15% royalties attached.

And there are hordes of licensees with a wide-open technology pathway to 2010.

So, why would anyone choose W-CDMA? Other than, as Tero says of operators choosing Lucent and Nortel for W-CDMA "They do it for the money and to avoid risk". Of course, if it crashes, there is still risk in that there is opportunity cost in buying a dud network [even if they don't pay for it].

Mqurice



To: Eric L who wrote (7476)2/19/2001 3:36:48 PM
From: gdichaz  Respond to of 197124
 
Eric L: Help. You know Europe and you know the US and the bridges which bind us together.

There still seems to be a gap in the way the Europeans deal with Asia. Out of sight, out of mind, seems not right. So what is it?

Puzzled why Nokia for example has a very very sharp guy in China who seems to have to send msgs to his home base with such stuff as "nothing is easy". True of course, but why is it necessary to send such a basic point home?

The cultural interplay is fascinating for me to try to understand. Perhaps you have an idea or two.

Best.

Chaz

And I am flabbergasted that the interview with a man of deep knowledge and obvious skill and smoothness ignored the CDMA opportunity starting in October in China. Why? Timing?