China Telecom mulls over acquisitions abroad

China Telecom is considering opportunities for overseas acquisitions and is in discussions with three Indian telecommunications firms to set up a cable connection between China and India.

According to reports, China Telecom is in anticipation of approval from the Indian government to establish a representative office in New Delhi.

The company is currently cooperating with Bharti Airtel, Reliance Communications, and Tata Communications to set up a cable connection over land between the countries. The company will further closely examine opportunities to expand through acquisition in Asia Pacific.

Celcom to start LTE Trials with Huawei and Ericsson

Celcom, Malaysian mobile network has started trials of LTE network gear supplied by Huawei and Ericsson. As per reports the government has not yet outlined any plans to give any other radio spectrum for LTE services. It is presently trying to take back idle spectrum from some operators.

According to Celcom chief executive officer Datuk Seri Shazalli Ramly, Celcom has clear reasons for doing these trials and find out what the technology can do for the company. Ericsson and Huawei are doing the trials for the company. The company would invest US$322.32 million a year over the next three years in capital expenditure. This would be funded by internally-generated funds.

Maxis, the opponent network of Celcom has also carried out LTE trials in alliance with Alcatel-Lucent and Huawei.

According to Pyramid Research, Malaysia will be among the fastest-growing markets in Asia Pacific due to operators’ aggressive Capex plans in broadband – fixed and mobile – urged in part by the government’s plans for a high-speed broadband network.

Celcom, Malaysian mobile network has started trials of LTE network gear supplied by Huawei and Ericsson. As per reports the government has not yet outlined any plans to give any other radio spectrum for LTE services. It is presently trying to take back idle spectrum from some operators.

According to Celcom chief executive officer Datuk Seri Shazalli Ramly, Celcom has clear reasons for doing these trials and find out what the technology can do for the company. Ericsson and Huawei are doing the trials for the company. The company would invest US$322.32 million a year over the next three years in capital expenditure. This would be funded by internally-generated funds.

Maxis, the opponent network of Celcom has also carried out LTE trials in alliance with Alcatel-Lucent and Huawei.

According to Pyramid Research, Malaysia will be among the fastest-growing markets in Asia/Pacific due to operators’ aggressive Capex plans in broadband – fixed and mobile – urged in part by the government’s plans for a high-speed broadband network.

Inside Contactless appoints Boon Heong as general manager

Inside Contactless, a leading provider of advanced, open-standard contactless chip technologies has appointed Lin Boon Heaong as General Manager for its Asia Pacific region.

Boon will be responsible for establishing and managing the company’s sales strategy. He has an experience of over nine years of working at Gemplus Technologies Asia, based in Singapore, first as Asia Pacific Technical Manager, then as Regional Marketing Director and then Head of the Telecom Business unit.

According to Inside Contactless CEO, Remy de Tonnac, Boon Heong has shown outstanding initiative and drive as Director of Marketing and Business Development for INSIDE’s NFC business line in the Asia Pacific region, and so he was the natural choice to fill the general manager position.

Mobile Marketing Association launches Rich Media Ad Whitepaper

A whitepaper has been launched by the Mobile Marketing Association on Rich Media Mobile Advertising.  The aim of this whitepaper will be to educate the mobile marketing industry about the rich mobile media ad units.

The whitepaper will be containing definitions, attributes and examples of Rich Media advertising in the market place. The MMA has created a definition for Rich Media Mobile Ad Units with this document which is interactive or non-interactive ad units displayed on a mobile web page or in a mobile application. It offers the following: inclusion of streaming video content or animated GIF within the ad unit, inclusion of sound, and a richer interactive feature set than basic mobile click-through.

The whitepaper has been created by MMA member companies serving on the organization’s Mobile Advertising Committee including Quattro Wireless, Crisp Wireless, Eyewonder, Millenial Media, Greystripe, GOGII, JumpTap, Medialets, Rhythm NewMedia and The Weather Channel.

According to Rohit Dadwal, Managing Director, APAC, MMA, the 2009 Asia Pacific Smartphone market is estimated to be 52 million devices, which indicates a tech-savvy consumer group that wants to get the most out of their mobile experiences. And with the increasing penetration of these feature-rich Smartphones, marketers have now started to increase mobile ad capabilities and provide richer content on mobile devices.

Samsung unveils new Samsung Jet 2

www.WirelessFederation.com/news A new mobile phone has been added by world No.2 handset maker, Samsung in its Jet series roster, the Samsung Jet 2.

An enticing 3.1-inch 16M WVGA AMOLED display that offers users the most vivid and colorful touch experience is one of the unique features of this handset.

A powerful 800MHz application processor provides unprecedented speed and unrivaled performance while an English dictionary and an advanced Media Browser enables users to close several widgets at once through motion control.

Google Push Email is an additional feature and it also allows media content sharing technology among DLNA certified devices.

3G penetration to reach 40% in Asia-Pacific region by 2014

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: 3G services has already become a huge hit in the Asia-Pacific region and its penetration rate will reach to nearly 40% in the Asia-Pacific region by 2014. The factors behind the shifting of 3G subscribers to emerging markets are government initiatives, opex benefits and steadily declining device ASPs.

Issuing 3G licenses provides the governments and regulators an opportunity to increase competition.

Low fixed-line broadband penetration and inefficient mobile market competition- the two issues prevalent in most emerging markets, if dealt properly can provide a greater broadband coverage along with standard voice and messaging services enticing.

Motorola’s Zander Banks on Thin Phones to Catch Nokia (Update2)

Aug. 22 (Bloomberg) — Motorola Inc. Chief Executive Officer Ed Zander is betting a new generation of super-thin, low-cost phones will help him boost profitability and break the dominance of industry leader Nokia Oyj in China and India.

“This is our chance to go after them,” Zander said in an interview this month in Schaumburg, Illinois, where Motorola is based. “We know where the No. 1 gets its numbers. It’s these emerging markets, and we have to go in there and go meet them.”

Motorola, the world’s second-largest maker of mobile phones, will start shipping the 1/3-inch-thick Motofone, its thinnest product yet, next month as it seeks to build on the success of the half-inch Razr. The first of the Scpl (pronounced “scalpel”) line, Motofone uses fewer parts, multiple-function chips and more efficient software to cut manufacturing costs.

The Motofone design means as many as 15 phones roll off the production line every second, up from five a second for the Razr. Zander needs that increase in productivity to reach an operating margin of 13 percent to 15 percent, a goal he has failed to meet since taking over in 2004. He declined to say when he might hit his target.

Even after selling more than 50 million phones in the Razr line, Motorola’s 11.2 percent operating margin — or percentage of net sales left after subtracting the costs to make and sell products — lags behind Nokia’s 16.7 percent.

Toward 15 Percent

“The Scpl Motofone will be the quickest-to-manufacture product in the world,” Ron Garriques, president of Motorola’s mobile unit, said in an interview. “This platform will bring us toward that 15 percent profit number.”

Boosting profit margins and the company’s share of emerging- market business at the same time may be tough, said Inder Singh, an analyst at Prudential Equity Group Inc. who rates Motorola shares “neutral” and doesn’t own them.

“Entering emerging markets and looking for margin expansion is somewhat challenging,” said New York-based Singh. “Most new entries to emerging markets are tagged with higher initial costs, and Nokia being an entrenched competitor in many of those markets makes it harder.”

Shares of Motorola, up 3.2 percent this year, declined 31 cents to $23.32 at 4:01 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. Shares of Espoo, Finland-based Nokia, up 8.6 percent this year, gained 25 cents to 16.78 euros in Helsinki.

While the Scpl line will have some high-priced models, it will start with an inexpensive phone to capture market share in faster-growing regions. The introduction strategy contrasts with the first Razr phones, which targeted customers willing to spend more for a camera and other features.

Working Up

“We launched the Razr platform at the $800 price point and worked our way down,” Garriques said. “With the Scpl we’re using it to work up. We’ll have more scale faster than we had on the Razr platform.” Motorola already has orders for 2 million Motofones in India, Pakistan and Bangladesh, he said.

Zander said he expects to sell phones as cheap as $35 in emerging markets. Total handset sales in the Asia Pacific region gained 52 percent in the second quarter, compared with just 9.5 percent in North America, according to research firm Strategy Analytics in Milton Keynes, England. Motorola hasn’t yet priced the Motofone.

“The opportunity in this market is the unconnected,” said Zander, 59. “It’s giving billions of people the capability to make a phone call, and you eventually get to sell all this other cool stuff.”

Motorola had a 16 percent share of the Asia Pacific market in the second quarter, trailing Nokia’s 35 percent. Motorola has a 22 percent share of the global market, compared with 33 percent for Nokia, Strategy Analytics said in an Aug. 15 report.

Trimmed Costs

In the same quarter, Motorola’s profit from continuing operations rose 47 percent to $1.35 billion, and Nokia’s net income jumped 43 percent to 1.14 billion euros ($1.5 billion). Both companies were helped by demand for phones in India and China, as well as pricier models.

Garriques, 42, trimmed costs and production time for the Motofone by integrating multiple functions into each electronic component to cut the number of parts. He also increased the number of parts used across the Scpl range, allowing Motorola to command lower prices from suppliers.

The company designed new software that requires less memory, new battery technology and a one-piece casing design to keep costs down. The phones have features tailored to emerging markets including displays for bright environments and longer battery life.

Next Generation

Razr sales will exceed the Scpl through 2008 as Motorola develops clamshell and keyboard Scpl models and introduces new Razrs with the goal of selling 300 million to 500 million of the current generation before the end of the line, Zander said.

He said teams are already working on the successor to the Scpl, which may arrive as soon as 2010. Motorola must keep introducing products to remain ahead of competitors in the same markets who copy elements of Motorola’s most popular designs, said Prudential’s Singh.

“In a world in which it’s easy to become the victim of copycats you have to run faster than the competition,” Singh said. “It’s not a sprint, it’s a marathon.”

Source- http://www.bloomberg.com

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