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


To: foundation who wrote (22010)4/30/2002 8:15:09 AM
From: David E. Taylor  Respond to of 196854
 
Ben:

Ericsson (NASDAQ: ERICY - news) today announced expansion of their original phase one contracts with China Unicom for CDMA equipment and services covering seven provinces in China.

Ericsson's total CDMA solution has been expanded in the Jiangsu, Anhui, Sichuan, Yunnan, Henan, Heilongjiang and Liaoning provinces and deployment has already been completed.


Of those seven provinces, only three - Jiangsu, Anhui, Liaoning - are in China Unicom's (CHU-HK) service area. The other four are in the regions still served by the parent Unicom Group, who of course are footing the capex bill for the CDMA One network expansion by Ericsson for all seven provinces.

David T.



To: foundation who wrote (22010)4/30/2002 8:39:59 AM
From: JohnG  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 196854
 
MOT Stonewalls on GPRS Radiation Safety Issue

news.zdnet.co.uk

Motorola backtracks on GPRS safety concerns
10:13 Friday 27th October 2000
Richard Barry

Motorola says New Scientist report on GPRS radiation
safety was wrong but declines to explain why

Mobile manufacturer Motorola is backtracking on recent comments by its
spokesman suggesting that GPRS, the high-speed successor to GSM,
might have to be made slower in order to stay within radiation absorption
guidelines.

Motorola marketing manager Rainer Lischetzki recently told New Scientist
that implementing GPRS at the speeds its marketing division has hyped --
between 27Kbps and 86Kbps -- could cause a phone to overheat. He also
said such speeds could push a phone's microwave radiation beyond
European guidelines on the energy that can be absorbed by the brain.

But Motorola now
says the New
Scientist report was at
fault, claiming that
Lischetzki is not
"qualified" to discuss
GPRS issues despite
the fact that he is
Motorola's technical
marketing manager
for GPRS.

ZDNet's request for an
interview with Lischetzki
was refused. According
to Motorola's director of
communications Mark Durrant the company is not prepared to risk
"another inaccurate report".

Instead Motorola has issued as statement conceding that: "Whilst the
initial GPRS phones that enter the market may not operate at their highest
theoretical data speeds, that fact is not related to the issues raised by New
Scientist." Motorola offers no explanation about why higher speeds will not
be available.

However the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) confirmed that higher
speeds could be potentially dangerous. "It is conceivable that GPRS
devices... could produce exposures above the levels specified in the
Council Recommendation," said a DTI spokesman.

Simon Mann, technical spokesman for the National Radiological
Protection Board (NRPB) agrees, saying that although mobile
manufacturers will have to observe regulations governing the emissions
from mobile phones, it is "entirely feasible" that some GPRS mobiles,
particularly those at the top end of the market, could tip over the [emission]
limits".

The issue revolves around whether or not GPRS mobile phones will
operate at the speeds mobile manufacturers are touting. Typically GPRS
mobiles are hyped as transferring data at around three to five times faster
than current mobiles, although consensus suggests these speeds are
exaggerated.

Analogue mobile phones have a transmitter which is on all the time when
making a call, with one phone having exclusive use of one radio channel.
GSM phones share channels, with up to eight phones taking it in turns to
transmit short bursts of data on a single channel. This means that although
a GSM phone has a maximum power output of two watts, in practice it
transmits an eighth of that -- quarter of a watt, maximum. This can and
frequently is reduced still further.

To save battery life and to increase the number of phones that can be
handled by the system, the mobile's power is automatically adjusted to the
minimum necessary to keep a reliable link with the base station.

GPRS uses exactly the same system, but to increase the amount of data
transferred a phone can use more than one slot. Thus a three-slot GPRS
link, carrying around 30 to 40kbps, will use a maximum of three-quarters of
a watt. This is roughly the same as an analogue phone used for a single
voice call, but as with GSM the power levels will often be lower than the
maximum especially in areas with a high density of base stations or a low
density of buildings.

Average power levels are further reduced by GPRS being a packet-based
system -- the transmitter is only on when data is being sent and is idle
otherwise. A file transfer from the phone to the base station will make the
transmitter work at full tilt -- keystrokes or Web browsing will only fire up the
transmitter occasionally, reducing the average power output to a few
milliwatts.

When ZDNet eventually got to speak with Lischetzki, he said confusion
over what speeds GPRS would actually run at were damaging both for
Motorola and for the mobile industry in general and that his comments
about the safety of GPRS mobiles were misconstrued. He offers no
clarification on theses comments.

Motorola's refusal to answer questions was condemned by the
Consumers' Association. "Given the concern among consumers about
health issues and mobile phones, I think Motorola's actions are unhelpful,"
said a spokeswoman. She added: "Clarity is needed on these issues. It's
a topic of concern for many consumers."