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


To: data_rox who wrote (53346)7/8/2006 7:39:01 PM
From: engineer  Respond to of 197013
 
ROX

EVDV failed because it had nothing technical behind it. the NOKIA proposal was worded more like "kill Qualcomm" than it was technical in nature.

the MOT version was a little better, but it failed to solve alot of technical issues that would have prevented it from working. Mostly it was an attempt to block EVDO until such time as UMTS and the attempt at 4G got out there. When Q bought Flarion, it kinda screwed the 4G people and thus the EVDV flags all got dropped.



To: data_rox who wrote (53346)7/9/2006 6:53:15 PM
From: Eric L  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 197013
 
cdma2000 Release D 1xEV-DV Remembered



The QUALCOMM 1xEV-DV CSM6700 & MSM6700

[San Diego - May 22, 2003] QUALCOMM Announces Complete End-to-End CDMA2000 Revision D Commercial Solution: CDMA2000 Revision D enables wireless carriers to provide voice and bi-directional high-speed packet data services simultaneously on a single Radio Frequency (RF) carrier. As specified by 3GPP2, the CDMA2000 Revision D standard is backward compatible with IS-95 and the CDMA2000 Release 0, A, B and C standards, providing today’s CDMA2000 1X operators a seamless network evolution. CDMA2000 Revision D is a significant advance over CDMA2000 Revision C supporting not only similar peak forward rates to 1xEV-DO but also high data rate reverse links to better support high-resolution cameras, video streaming, video telephony and other multimedia services. CDMA2000 Revision D and 1xEV-DO Revision A, also being developed in 3GPP2, will allow the wireless operator two different complementary choices for deployment of high rate forward and reverse link packet services. ... “CDMA2000 1X operators that are evaluating emerging wireless standards such as 1xEV-DV can continue to look to QUALCOMM as the CDMA industry leader for complete, easy-to-migrate, end-to-end system solutions,” said Sanjay Jha, president of QUALCOMM CDMA Technologies. ... The CSM6700 chip is targeted to deliver a higher level of integration for CDMA2000 1X infrastructure equipment manufacturers for their CDMA2000 Revision D base station products, and is backward compatible with the IS-95 and CDMA2000 1X Release 0 and Release A features. The CSM6700 solution supports more than 200 forward-link and reverse-link channels and 4-way receive diversity. Delivering more than six times the user capacity compared to the current CSM5000 solution for CDMA2000 1X, the increased user capacity allows infrastructure equipment manufacturers and network operators to upgrade their CDMA2000 1X equipment with significantly higher network capacity improvements, equipment design space savings and cost efficiencies. ... The CSM6700 and MSM6700 solutions will be available to support CDMA2000 Revision D technology trials with samples expected to ship in 2004.

cdmatech.com

Hopefully this violates no board rule ...

... and yes, the graphic will be equally applicable to the soon to be departed Nokia CDMA BU. <g>

Best,

- Eric -