3GSM ASIA: GSM group backs LTE for mobile broadband

November 15, 2007, 11:28 AM —  IDG News Service — 

The board of the GSM Association voted to back LTE (Long-Term Evolution) as the
mobile broadband standard to succeed HSPA (High-Speed Packet Access), the CEO
of the group said Tuesday.

The vote is an indication that GSM operators are united in their support for
LTE, and gives them a unified front as LTE competes with Qualcomm Inc.'s UMB
(Ultra Mobile Broadband) and with WiMax, backed by the computer industry, to
become the next mobile broadband technology.

LTE is several times faster than HSPA and could help spur demand for more downloading
over cellular networks. Japan's NTT DoCoMo may become the first operator to
widely deploy the new technology, which is expected to be ready by the end of
this decade.

LTE is now part of the GSMA push to promote the use of mobile broadband on
cellular networks.

Rob Conway, CEO of GSMA, announced the association's backing of LTE during
a speech at the GSM Association's Mobile Asia Congress in Macau, China, and
called on the International
Telecommunication Union
(ITU), the leading United Nations agency for communication
technologies, to ensure the industry wins the spectrum needed to offer mobile
broadband.

GSMA said it will work with other companies and organizations developing LTE
technology, and start working with the NGMN (Next Generation Mobile Networks)
initiative.

NTT DoCoMo is pushing aggressively ahead with plans to speed up its mobile
broadband services in Japan, and is looking to LTE to take care of the job.
The company counts over half of Japan's mobile subscribers as its customers
and has already started running tests on LTE technology to become its "Super
3G" offering. One advantage to LTE is that it can be used on existing 3G
networks.

Download speeds on Super 3G could reach up to 300M bps (megabits per second),
Masao Nakamura, the CEO of NTT DoCoMo, said in a speech, a huge improvement
over HSDPA. A 500-page magazine, for example, takes 3 minutes to download on
HSDPA. On Super 3G it takes only three seconds, he said.

That means people will be able to download larger file sizes, including videos,
music and more over their mobile phones.

A problem for NTT could ultimately be government allocation of the radio spectrum
that operators need to deliver wireless broadband. There may not be enough bandwidth
available on some of the spectrum the Japanese government is considering for
mobile network operators, said K. Jay Miyahara, corporate chief engineer of
the mobile network operations unit at NEC Corp.

"What technology [DoCoMo] ultimately uses depends on the spectrum they
get," he said. Certain technologies, including HSPA and LTE, can be used
only in certain spectrum. The 800MHz spectrum would be ideal, but most Japanese
companies expect to be allocated 700MHz, Miyahara said.

DoCoMo hopes to attract users by allowing them to pay a flat rate for speedy
downloads. "We want people to use their mobile phone for everything, but
we think that if they worry too much about their bill then they won't use this
download feature," Miyahara said. "So the answer is to offer a flat
rate service, and then people won't worry about their phone bill."

NTT DoCoMo is Japan's largest mobile phone service provider, with 53.7 percent
of the nation's 99 million mobile users subscribing to the company. Nearly 80
percent of DoCoMo subscribers have already switched to 3G (third generation
mobile telecommunications) service from 2G, Nakamura said. The nation is considered
a world leader in 3G and mobile phone services.

DoCoMo is also researching 4G (fourth generation) mobile technology. When it's
commercialized, 4G will promise 1G bps (gigabit per second) download speeds,
said Nakamura, but in testing DoCoMo has achieved speeds as high as 5G bps.

Testing on LTE is expected to be finished by 2009, said Matthias Reis, head
of the LTE business program at Nokia Siemens Networks. Operators are currently
using HSPA, and starting to roll out HSPA+ and IHSPA (Internet-HSPA). By 2009,
testing will be done and operators will be able to start rolling out the technology,
he said.

Meanwhile the GSMA continues to back current generation wireless technologies.
Separately Tuesday, in partnership with Microsoft, it announced a contest to
design laptop PCs with HSPA-enabled chipsets to make it easier for the average
user to access the Internet via a mobile network. The hope is that users will
begin to use mobile phone networks to download information to more devices other
than just handsets, such as laptops, digital cameras, digital music players,
and more.

IDG News Service

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