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To: Clarksterh who wrote (22877)2/12/1999 8:59:00 AM
From: Jeff Vayda  Respond to of 152472
 
Clark:

Eric is paying to have the network set up. Given their track record, it is a small investment for a big political advantage. (See we are open, we have a CDMA system in our back yard. Oh by the way it is not doing very well. It has less capacity/coverage than our system. It is costing much more and on and on and on.) I can foresee lots of Foo Foo Rah* to come out of this set up!

Jeff Vayda

*Foo Foo Rah (extraneous bullsh!t)



To: Clarksterh who wrote (22877)2/12/1999 2:08:00 PM
From: Maurice Winn  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 152472
 
*cdma2000 in Finland* This is an interesting development. From what I've seen so far, it might simply be a straight out commercial deal with a company in Finland which can see which way the wind is blowing and they are going to win business rather than some trade war, political battle or make a point for the Finnish motherland.

They will also know that there will be no legal battles over IPR if they use cdma2000 [unless Ericy is stupid enough to try it, which they almost certainly are, but the cost will be borne by the supplier of infrastructure as part of the sale and purchase agreement, probably funded by the CDMA Development Group as a test case].

Finland, with the highest cellphone penetration, is perhaps the best place to start a WWeb business because there will be a high proportion of people who will be ready to turn it on. People might have two phones; a GSM for yakking and a cdma2000 for WWeb stuff, at least until the cdma2000 system is built out to provide reasonable coverage.

Nokia might produce a dual mode GSM/cdma2000 handset so that subscribers could have a single device. This fits their multimode strategy. Nokia seems fairly up with market developments, despite Tero's insistence that CDMA is no good, GSM rules and Nokia only wants to produce rotten CDMA handsets so that they don't cannibalize their wonderful GSM or some such idea.

I'd say that Nokia would do very well out of a Finnish cdma2000 network and Ericy would be feeling ill. Next thing you know, Nokia and the cdma2000 infrastructure crowd will be racing like a herd of Panzers in a blitzkrieg across Europe. GSM will be doomed and cdma2000 will take over.

I don't think the cdma2000 effort in Finland is simply a political stunt. Well, it might be, but a commercial effort makes as much sense, with Nokia as the brains and money which will make it work.

Even without Nokia, the local company will have plenty of suppliers.

Thanks for the guardband and chip rate information. Seems that there will be no problem there.

Nokia will move on cdma2000 ahead of others. They got where they are by being first and best. They won't change that strategy anytime soon. First and best has included replacing perfectly good models even before competition comes over the horizon, as Tero has pointed out.

---------------------------------------------------------------------
A Finnish Internet service provider will test the European Commission's
claim it has not shut competing mobile phone technologies out of Europe.

Clari Net Oy, wholly owned by Finnish ISP Saunalahden Serveri Oy, has
applied for a license to operate a third-generation mobile phone network in
Finland using cdma2000 technology, a technology based upon today's
Interim Standard-95 CDMA systems.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Ericy will be watching this development with a knot in their stomach.

Mqurice



To: Clarksterh who wrote (22877)2/12/1999 5:07:00 PM
From: Jim Lurgio  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 152472
 
More on 3G and the WP-CDMA offering

Golden Bridge Technology Featured On Caspar Weinberger's World Business Review TV Series
BOCA RATON, Fla.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Feb. 12, 1999--Multi-Media Productions (USA), Inc. announces the appearance of Feliciano Giordano, founding president of Golden Bridge Technology, Inc. and managing director of GBT Europe, on World Business Review.

The weekly television series focuses on technology and is hosted by Caspar Weinberger, Chairman of Forbes magazine and Secretary of Defense during the Reagan administration. Also appearing on the show is communications industry expert Sue Almeida, co-founder of Network Strategy Partners LLC, to discuss the topic of Remote Access Services.

''Golden Bridge Technology was selected to appear on the show because its application of former military technology may revolutionize the wireless communications industry,'' said Charles Hopkins, the show's Associate Producer.

Golden Bridge Technology, Inc. (GBT) is developing commercial applications for a former military technology called Spread Spectrum, and is providing a number of wireless communication devices for the mobile telephone and Internet markets.

''The technology enables assured communications, highest quality of service and privacy in a highly congested electromagnetic environment,'' said Giordano. This is accomplished by spreading the signal to be transmitted over a wide frequency band (thus the name spread spectrum) using a pseudo-random code, so it appears as noise or static. It then mixes with background noise, making the signal nearly undetectable.

At the receive end, the signal is 'de-spread' using the same code, resulting in the exact recovery of the original signal. ''This gives the user wired line quality in a mobile telephone service,'' said Giordano. A different code is used for every communication session, which provides almost absolute privacy.

Other applications include wireless local loop, mobile telephony, Local Area Networks, and high data rate direct connection to the Internet. Almeida said GBT's use of Spread Spectrum was indicative of a growing trend she called 'anywhere access.' ''This is a huge trend,'' she said. ''What we're doing as an industry is trying to give everyone access to all of their tools all of the time.''

The most difficult task in Spread Spectrum is the design of the receiver module used to capture and de-spread the signal. ''This is known as signal acquisition,'' said Giordano, who added, ''Conventional methods for signal acquisition are relatively slow, creating a number of system design limitations that affect quality of service, capacity and complexity.

A very fast signal acquisition method, using a device called a Matched Filter, was invented over forty years ago at MIT, said Giordano. The filter essentially enabled the instantaneous capture and analysis of the signal, however due to its size and the circuitry required to manufacture the device, it was not practical for commercial use. Another drawback to commercialization of the filter was the fact that it produced a very high power drain, thus a very short battery life.

A number of inventions by GBT scientists have drastically reduced both the size of the circuit and its power drain, making it more suitable for commercial applications. ''Advances in semiconductor technology have contributed to the reduction in the size and cost of the chip on which the circuit is located,'' Giordano stated. This has enabled GBT to develop a Matched Filter based technology that has opened whole new vistas in wireless communications for all sorts of applications and markets, such as cordless telephones.

One of the areas GBT has focused on is applying spread spectrum technology to the next generation cellular system. In January, 1998 the world's standards bodies universally adopted a particular implementation of Spread Spectrum, known as W-CDMA ('W' stands for 'wideband), for Third Generation Cellular systems (G3), because of the greater capacity the application enables. By design, this is the exact technology GBT had decided to develop when the company was formed in 1995. ''The other choice would have been Narrowband-CDMA, which exhibits inferior performance characteristics in addition to lower capacity,'' said Giordano. As a result, GBT's Matched Filter based technology has been adopted in the US WP-CDMA proposal to the International Telecommunications Union for the IMT2000, the global standard for the next generation cellular system.

About World Business Review

World Business Review, with host Caspar Weinberger, takes the viewer behind the scenes to examine the leading-edge technologies and innovative business solutions shaping our future. Blending interviews and panel discussions with global field reports and technical reviews, each half-hour broadcast is designed to enable leaders from a variety of industries to offer their insight into the challenges and opportunities businesses face as the 21st century nears.

Taped in Washington, D.C., World Business Review currently airs on PBS The Business Channel, and in prime business time slots in numerous Public Television markets including San Francisco, New York, Denver and Miami. The weekly series can also be viewed on United Airlines or from any desktop computer via AENTV. Individual videotapes or continuing education systems (via Indiana State University) are available by calling 1-800-WBR-1032, or by visiting www.wbrtv.com, which showcases featured topics and specific companies' technologies.