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To: Uncle Frank who wrote (42295)4/30/2001 3:19:43 PM
From: Ruffian  Respond to of 54805
 
<The CDMA community appears to have one of the largest Latin American wireless
companies under its wing. BellSouth
International wants to convert its TDMA systems to CDMA-based 1X technology but has
yet to announce such a decision.>

Wireless war reaches a new frontier

by by Lynnette Luna
Telephony, Apr 30, 2001

The battle over wireless market share is beginning in Latin America. Droves of
infrastructure vendors are heading south to
duke it out and win favor among Latin America's TDMA operators, all of which are
studying their plans for the next
generation of data services.

The opportunity could be tremendous for big contracts that call for major technology
swaps — something the vendor
community needs in light of a slowing economy in the U.S. and other parts of the world.

It's evident now that a migration from TDMA technology to its wireless data predecessor
enhanced data rates for GSM
evolution (EDGE) won't be ready until 2003 at the earliest, and some vendors believe
EDGE will never be deployed because
it lacks economies of scale. Latin American operators now have two choices: migrate to a
global technology like GSM's
general packet radio service (GPRS) or move to CDMA. The latter is considered the
more economical choice.

“EDGE is really something we don't see happening, so we're working with customers to
move forward to either CDMA or
GPRS,” said Mark Tharby, vice president of wireless Internet solutions marketing for
Nortel Networks.

“Latin America has a couple of conflicting opportunities. Each technology has pros and
cons. GSM has close alignment with
global standards, but CDMA has a lot of next-generation features, and you get some
economic advantages,” he added.

AT&T Wireless started the chain reaction earlier this year when it opted to deploy GSM
technology alongside its TDMA
network in the 1900 MHz band. It needed a quicker data play to compete with its CDMA
carriers, which are launching
high-speed data services known as 1XRTT. GPRS can provide AT&T Wireless with a
data story by the end of the year.
The company's affiliates followed suit.

Nokia and Motorola have introduced GSM base stations capable of operating at 850 MHz,
the frequency most Latin
American operators use.

About 75% of Latin America's operators use TDMA technology, while CDMA holds
almost 25%. A small percentage of
carriers have deployed GSM technology to date, but the GSM community was issued a
blow when spectrum auctions at the
1800 MHz band, a shoo-in for GSM technology, failed to attract any bidders.

Cristiane Mahler, a senior analyst with The Yankee Group's Latin American wireless
practice, said TDMA carriers must
make their technology decisions in the coming months.

“They have to be proactive about making a decision or they could stand to lose market
share to existing CDMA operators
when [CDMA operators] roll out 1X technology quickly,” she said.

The CDMA community appears to have one of the largest Latin American wireless
companies under its wing. BellSouth
International wants to convert its TDMA systems to CDMA-based 1X technology but has
yet to announce such a decision.

BellSouth's acceptance of CDMA also has played out in the U.S. market where TDMA
operator Cingular, jointly owned by
BellSouth and SBC Communications, is mulling a move to either GSM or CDMA.
BellSouth advocates CDMA, while SBC
wants to move to GPRS technology.

“We're still debating technologies,” said William Clift, Cingular's chief technology officer.
“We have a direction in mind, but
we want to be sure the parents are on board. There are a lot of financial considerations.”

All the while, big Latin American operators like Telefónica, which holds CDMA and
TDMA properties, are watching the
U.S. TDMA market to see how technology decisions play out.

“We will see a battle,” Mahler said.

Ericsson, the dominant TDMA vendor in Latin America, will try to convince its customers
to move to GSM technology. And
Nokia is heavily marketing its new 850 MHz GSM base stations to get a bigger chunk of
the infrastructure market in the
Americas. At the same time, big CDMA advocates like Lucent Technologies, Samsung
and the CDMA Development
Group will work hard to convince carriers that the CDMA path is the easiest and most
economical path to the third
generation.