More 4G and WiMax

January 25, 2010 by admin  
Filed under Uncategorized

4gfinal More 4G and WiMax

In a recent article in EE Times, the author is stressing that “Mobile opportunities will be the next big growth engine for personal broadband and next-generation cell phone vendors and for the in general“. A good point raised though is that there are many people who have comitted to :

In US, carriers like Sprint have announced plans to deploy large-scale mobile services by mid-2008. In some cases, entire countries have committed to as their fourth-generation standard of choice. Two such examples are Korea, with the early WiBro to mobile , and Taiwan, with the “M-Taiwan” .

What other thing the author is trying to stress is that is 4G but i do not agree.

Sony Ericsson logo.svg More 4G and WiMaxSony Ericsson is another high that recently announced joining of WiMax forum. According to MacNN, no or new products have been announced, but it’s likely that will begin to upgrade their products to take advantage of faster speeds.

According to another article in ARN today:

Unlike 3G, no specific standards spell out what a 4G service, network or technology is today. Analysts say these specifications are to come, but today “4G is more of a ,” says Phil Redman, a at .

There is a mobile standard — the IEEE’s 802.16e standard — on which Sprint is basing its US$3 billion investment. But Redman says mobile is not 4G, “although the folks would love for that label to catch on.”
Still, and other technologies may be part of a forthcoming . “There’s that existing technologies like and other technologies such as [Orthogonal ] and [multiple input multiple output] will be included in 4G,” Redman says. “But no one technology will be 4G.”

“These things tend to run in 10-year cycles,” Redman says. “2G came out in 1995, 3G in 2004. There will not be a 4G standard before 2015.”
In the meantime, a number of players have attempted to spell out what 4G should look like. The World Wireless Research Forum (WWRF) says 4G will run over an IP infrastructure, interoperate with Wi-Fi and , and support fast speeds from 100Mbps to as high as 1Gbps.

It’s also key that next-generation wireless includes QoS metrics and the ability to prioritize traffic, says Lisa Pierce, a vice president at consulting firm Forrester Research. “Lack of prioritization is preventing businesses from using current EV-DO services as their primary data connection.”

WWRF expects 4G will be a collection of technologies and protocols, not just one single standard. That’s similar to 3G, which today includes many technologies such as GSM and CDMA that meet specific criteria.

To help move the standards process along, WWRE — whose members include Ericsson, Huawei Technologies and Motorola — contributes to standards work done within groups such as the International Telecommunications Union (ITU), the group that defined 3G wireless specifications, and the IETF.

4G’s , 3G wireless, is still taking off. The fourth-largest wireless-service provider, T-Mobile,launched its 3G network this year. So if 3G is just getting going, what does that mean for 4G?

Opinions on when 4G services might be available differ. The Next Generation Mobile Networks (NGMN) group says commercial services beyond 3G could launch as early as 2010. KPN Mobile, Orange, Sprint, T-Mobile International, Vodafone, China Mobile and NTT DoCoMo make up NGMN. The goal of the group, similar to the WWRF, is to work with standards bodies in developing next-generation specifications.

But if standards don’t come before 2015, as ’s Redman predicts, true 4G services could come only after 2015.

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