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To: Ramsey Su who wrote (24083)3/11/1999 11:11:00 PM
From: 2brasil  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 152472
 
A Finnish Internet operator applied for a cdma2000 mobile telephone license
based on US technology, turning a
domestic licensing decision into one with
global implications.

Saunalahden Serveri, a closely held
independent Internet operator, said its
subsidiary Clari Net was seeking a
nationwide CDMA 2000 license, a US
phone standard developed by Qualcomm.

The application is important for US
equipment makers since Finland -- Nokia's
home country -- will be the first in Europe
to choose third-generation mobile
technologies, and its decisions are likely
to be followed on both sides of the
Atlantic.

The parent company also applied for rival
European technology, so that the group
would have a chance to win a
home-market presence in either
technology.

"Our view about the third-generation is
that data will be important," Saunalahden
Serveri's managing director Harri
Johannesdahl told Reuters. "If we were to
be confined to fixed lines only, we would
lose."

Twelve other applicants sought
concessions to build third-generation
networks using wideband CDMA, or code
division multiple access, which has been
endorsed by the European
Telecommunications Standardization
Institute.

A senior official at the Ministry of
Communications said Finland had an open
mind about the technologies and could
accept both, although it may mean that
fewer than the intended four licenses
could be granted.

"If a system is good, we will give a
license. We are not setting trade
policies," said Harri Pursiainen, the head
of the ministry's communications
department. "We are not giving anything
to the industry. What we will be doing is
to give users a good technology."

If both technologies were to be used side
by side, some frequencies would have to
be excluded to prevent interference, and
that could mean that only three licenses
could be granted.

"But it is possible that four could be
granted regardless," Pursiainen said,
adding that the ministry did not yet know
how two technologies would work side by
side.

Saunalahden Serveri, which is far too
small to build a mobile-phone network by
itself, said it was confident that it would
find financing if its application went
through.

"We would seek financing from equipment
makers, banks, risk-capital investors, and
content providers -- and ourselves, of
course," Johannesdahl said.

Vodafone and Telenordia, which is owned
by British Telecom, Tele Danmark, and
Telenor, withdrew from the race for a
third-generation license.

Finland said it would make its decision on
the issue early this year.