­Ericsson has signed a managed services contract with Japan’s EMobile, which follows on from a recent HSPA+ network upgrade contract.

No financial or timeline details were provided.

According to Fredrik Alatalo, President of Ericsson Japan, he is honored that EMobile has chosen to extend its managed services partnership with Ericsson and also expand it to include the fixed broadband network. With global scale and experience, proven tools, methods and processes, they aim to further improve the efficiency in EMobile’s networks for the benefit of their subscribers.

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Softbank Corp’s mobile arm added 324,900 new subscribers in December 2010, recording the largest gain of any of the country’s operators for the ninth month in succession.

According to data published by the Telecommunications Carriers Association of Japan (TCA), Softbank Mobile ended the year with a total of 24.399 million subscribers, with strong uptake reportedly being driven by sales of Apple Inc.’s iPhone 4 smartphone.

NTT DoCoMo stood second in terms of net gains, gaining 169,600 subscribers for a total of 57.210 million users; its December gain was nearly double the November figure thanks in part to strong sales of Samsung Galaxy S smartphones. KDDI Corp’s au brand took third spot with a net gain of 95,400 subscribers, lifting its total to just over 32.527 million.

eMobile logged the least net gain of 71,400 for a month-end total of just over 2.923 million, while PHS operator WillCom lost a net 43,500 users for a total of 3.647 million.

EMobile is reportedly planning to roll-out 3.9G LTE services in 2010 and upgrade this to 4G LTE services in 2012. The company rolled-out HSPA+ services in July’09 and provides mobile download speeds of up to 21 Mbps and upload speeds of 5.8 Mbps.The telco has a 26.9% share on the 3G mobile data market in Japan, following to this is Softbank Mobile (33.3%) and NTT Docomo (27%).COO Eric Gan said the company expects to break-even by the end of this year.

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: EMobile is reportedly planning to roll-out 3.9G LTE services in 2010 and upgrade this to 4G LTE services in 2012. The company rolled-out HSPA+ services in July’09 and provides mobile download speeds of up to 21 Mbps and upload speeds of 5.8 Mbps. The telco has a 26.9% share on the 3G mobile data market in Japan, following to this is Softbank Mobile (33.3%) and NTT Docomo (27%). COO Eric Gan said the company expects to break-even by the end of  2009.

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The rollout of Japan’s newest W-CDMA nationwide mobile network by eMobile, the new mobile subsidiary of leading DSL wholesaler eAccess Ltd, is gathering pace and causing not a few surprises and disappointments among vendors.
eMobile announced late in July that it had selected Huawei Technologies from 15 global vendors as a second prime network vendor to work alongside Ericsson, which in March was awarded the contract for the nationwide core network and the 1.7-GHz radio network in Tokyo, Osaka and Nagoya.

Huawei will start by deploying networks in Sapporo and Sendai. This is the first contract for Huawei or any Chinese network vendor in Japan, and it means that Japanese vendors have completely lost out on this pioneering 3.5G network business worth $3 billion to $4 billion. “The choice of Huawei was an extraordinary shock to Japanese vendors,” eMobile and eAccess CEO Dr Sachio Semmoto told Wireless Asia.
Japanese vendors are not the only shocked and disappointed vendors. Lucent Technologies was passed over yet again. One year ago Lucent appeared to be in pole position with eAccess after working on apparently successful trials combining HSDPA and Lucent’s IMS. Lucent was presented as eAccess’ partner in several high profile PR social and events.
Among the reasons cited for the selection of Huawei by eAccess are its strong product development skills, quality management systems in IP technology and small base stations.
eAccess has done an impressive job of fundraising for the new venture. eMobile now has equity and debt financing totaling 363 billion yen ($3.16 billion). The companies are planning to offer seamless IP-based fixed and mobile services with data services starting in March 2007 and voice services following in Spring 2008.
Putting up a state-of-the-art nationwide mobile network, of course, is costly and eAccess will struggle to reach the 85% coverage required by the government within five years under its present business-financing plan, even though the network will be IP-based.
NTT DoCoMo spent $20 billion on its W-CDMA network and Vodafone Japan around $10 billion on its latest network. From this perspective, it is easy to understand the decision to partner with Huawei, which has risen quickly by combining advanced technology with low prices.
eMobile’s ambitious strategy contrasts sharply with IP Mobile, Japan’s other mobile start-up, which announced that it has secured just over 4 billion yen to build its network. Non-Japanese vendors have also secured a significant part of the contracts so far awarded by IP Mobile.

Source- http://www.telecomasia.net.

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