SFR Deploys Nokia MSC Server Mobile Softswitch in France

ESPOO, Finland, September 14 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ — Nokia (Nachrichten/Aktienkurs) and SFR have signed a contract for the turnkey supply of the Nokia MSC Server (MSS) mobile softswitch to enhance the French operator’s network coverage and capacity. The network modernization deal upgrades SFR’s current circuit switched core network with a Nokia solution that fully enables fixed mobile convergence and the rapid growth of 3G-traffic.

The Nokia MSC Server System, including the Nokia Multimedia Gateway, will enable SFR to manage the demands of its growing traffic while reducing its operational expenditure (OPEX). Nokia has now deployed its MSS to over 100 mobile operators worldwide, a strong sign of the success of the mobile softswitch solution initially specified by 3GPP Release 4. Since mid 2005 the MSC Server has accounted for over 75% of Nokia’s switching deliveries.

The turnkey nature of the deal with SFR means that Nokia will manage all activities related to network roll-out from adaptation works on site to integration, re-hosting the radio equipment and operating the network. Also included is the multitechnology Nokia NetAct(TM) network and service management solution.

“Nokia’s impressive track record and the proof of its ability to deliver extended services, as well as the long-standing, successful relationship between SFR and Nokia made it easy for us to choose Nokia for this ambitious network modernization project,” says Paul Corbel, Chief Technical Officer, SFR. “The change of our existing MSCs to Nokia’s integrated 2G/3G MSC Server mobile softswitch will enable SFR to now offer a whole suite of innovative services to our customers in the most cost efficient manner and enable convergence.”

“We are very happy to be continuing our long-term collaboration with SFR setting the stage for even stronger cooperation in the future,” says Roberto Loiola, Vice President, Networks, Nokia. “And we’re doubly pleased to be providing SFR the industry’s leading mobile softswitch, bringing significant cost savings and a clear evolution next generation networks.”

Nokia is creating seamless user experiences in converging networks thanks to mobile softswitching and IMS for fixed and mobile. With over 100 customers for its mobile softswitching and over 50 live networks, Nokia is clearly the most experienced mobile softswitching supplier worldwide.

Nokia is also the front-runner in IMS for fixed and mobile networks, with over 120 references. Nokia’s IMS for fixed and mobile has been in commercial use since 2005. With 20 convergence trials, enabling personalized VoIP and multimedia, Nokia is paving the way for the renewal of fixed networks and the usage of access technologies like WLAN.

About SFR

With 17.4 million customers and 8,000 employees, SFR is the second largest mobile telecommunications operator in France and has been the market leader in terms of net sales (new customers) since 2003. Operating its own GSM/GPRS and UMTS/HSDPA networks, SFR is able to provide a complete range of mobile telephony and multimedia services, as well as mobile data solutions to its personal, SOHO and business customers. SFR has become the operator of choice for new uses of mobile phones, having been the first operator to launch 3G and 3G+ services on the French market, and now boasts more than 1.5 million exclusively 3G customers. The company is also a player on the fixed telecommunications market through its 40.8 % interest in neuf cegetel, the leading alternative operator on the French market. SFR benefits from a stable ownership structure, with two major shareholders, Vivendi (56%) and Vodafone (44%).

About Nokia

Nokia is a world leader in mobile communications, driving the growth and sustainability of the broader mobility industry. Nokia connects people to each other and the information that matters to them with easy-to-use and innovative products like mobile phones, devices and solutions for imaging, games, media and businesses. Nokia provides equipment, solutions and services for network operators and corporations.

Source- http://www.finanznachrichten.de

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Nokia, Sweden’s Sapio in mobile printing services agreement

HELSINKI (AFX) – Nokia said it has signed an agreement with Sweden”s Sapio AB in which the latter will develop and promote mobile printing services in the Nordic region.
Under the agreement, Sapio will aim to upgrade the service providers” existing printing infrastructures to support and offer direct mobile printing services to Nokia Nseries users.
The users will be able to select and send the photos to the service provider and receive the print-outs by mail or from an associated retailer.

Source- http://www.euro2day.gr

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MoviStar Puerto Rico Chooses Comptel Mediation for its CDMA Mobile Network

HELSINKI, Finland, September 19 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ — Comptel Corporation (OMX Helsinki: CTL1V), a leading OSS software vendor for convergent mediation, charging, provisioning and network inventory, announced today that MoviStar Puerto Rico, a mobile operator in which Telefonica Moviles has an equity participation, has selected Comptel EventLink® mediation solution for its CDMA network. Comptel EventLink® will collect and process MoviStar’s usage information required to bill for its voice, SMS, and advanced data services.

As demand for mobile services grows, MoviStar Puerto Rico realised that its existing in-house mediation solution would not cope with the increasing complexity in the mediation layer. Furthermore, as MoviStar rolls out new data services, it required a convergent solution that could cope with the variety of event types used to charge customers for these services.

Carlos Ortiz, MoviStar Information System Director, says: “After a thorough investigation of the mediation market, we came to the conclusion that Comptel’s mediation solution offered the best combination of functionality, performance, reliability, flexibility and cost to adapt to our evolving needs. Comptel’s solution is proven as it has already been successfully deployed at so many operators. For an operator like us, such a track record is always a key deciding factor.”

Comptel EventLink® manages the collection and transformation of network events to billable records. It provides a consolidated mediation platform for reducing the costs of usage-based charging. Comptel EventLink® will handle voice and data events from MoviStar’s CDMA network and forward them to billing, interconnection and a data warehouse system. It will also be processing roaming records from partner networks.

Reed Sandridge, Comptel Vice President in charge the Americas region, concludes: “MoviStar Puerto Rico joins our growing list of customers in the Americas. Puerto Rico is a very competitive market for mobile services, so efficiency and ease of quickly introducing new services is fundamental to the success of an operator here.”

About MoviStar:

MoviStar Puerto Rico, is a wireless communication carrier leader in developing new services and a pioneer in the wireless market. For more information about our products and services, contact us at 787-530-6684 or visit our website www.movistarpr.com

About Comptel Corporation:

Comptel is a world leading OSS software product vendor for convergent mediation, charging, provisioning and network inventory solutions. Comptel is listed on the Helsinki Stock Exchange (CTL1V) in Finland. For more information, visit www.comptel.com.

Source- http://biz.yahoo.com

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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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GSM firms see big sales, user revenue down

NEW DELHI, SEPTEMBER 5: India’s private GSM carriers posted a 49-per cent rise in first quarter revenue as rockbottom local call rates helped boost usage and attract new users in the world’s fastest growing wireless services market.

India, Asia’s fourth-largest economy, is adding more than 5 million new telecom users each month — roughly equal to the population of Finland.

Even though the combined sales of seven carriers shot up to 56.21 billion rupees ($1.22 billion) during the April-June period, the monthly average revenue per user declined 11 per cent to 347 rupees due to falling tariffs.

“The decline in APRU is a strong evidence of the ever improving affordability of GSM mobile services,” said T.V. Ramachandran, director general at the Cellular Operators’ Association.

The data covers seven operators including Bharti Airtel Ltd., India’s top mobile services provider which is 30.8 per cent owned by Singapore Telecommunications Ltd. It also covers Hutchison Essar Ltd. and Idea Cellular Ltd.

It does not include the financial performance of state-run telecom firms Bharat Sanchar Nigam Ltd. and Mahanagar Telephone Nigam Ltd.

GSM carriers also compete with CDMA-operators like Reliance Communications Ltd. and Tata Teleservices Ltd.

The nine GSM firms had at total of 82.41 million mobile users at the end of July, more than three quarters of the market.

Source- http://www.financialexpress.com

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Razr takes market share from top competitor Nokia

STAMFORD, Conn. — Motorola Inc. took market share from larger competitor Nokia in the second quarter, helped by sales of the Razr, Slvr and Ming phones, according to a study released Thursday.Motorola’s market share rose to 21.9 percent, the highest level in more than five years, from 20.3 percent in the first quarter, researcher Gartner Inc. said. Finland-based Nokia’s share fell to 33.6 percent from 34 percent.

Schaumburg-based Motorola, whose unit sales growth has outpaced that of Nokia for five straight quarters, was the fastest-growing handset-maker in the most recent quarter.

Its Motofone, shipping next month, will help Motorola challenge the dominance of Nokia in markets such as India and China, said Carolina Milanesi, a Gartner analyst.

“Motorola gained across the board,” Milanesi said. “The Razr is coming down in price and broadening its target market, and the Motofone combines usability and design at an affordable price.”

Global mobile phone unit sales rose 18 percent in the second quarter, to 229 million units, from a year earlier, Gartner said.

Motorola sold 50.2 million phones, a gain of 46 percent from the year-ago quarter, Gartner said. The Razr and Slvr lured buyers in the U.S. and Europe, while the Ming camera phone boosted demand in China, Milanesi said.

Source- http://www.sun-sentinel.com

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Motorola’s Zander Banks on Even Thinner Phones to Gain on Nokia

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 4.6 percent this year, declined 17 cents to $23.63 yesterday in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. Shares of Espoo, Finland-based Nokia, up 7 percent this year, slipped 2 cents to 16.53 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.

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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Ericsson Bags $550 China Mobile Contracts, Emerges as Nokia Challenger

Move over Nokia, here comes Ericsson. Nokia (News – Alert) may believe that “Ni hao Wo-duh ming-d’zih Nokia (Hello, my name is Nokia)” has become a catch phrase in China, but Scandinavian competitor Ericsson (News – Alert) is quietly making as much headway in the world’s most populous country. The Swedish company today announced that it has bagged contracts worth $550 million with China Mobile during the first half of 2006. In a statement, Ericsson said the GSM expansion contracts include projects in 17 regions of
China. Ericsson has already started deliveries of network equipment which it claims will be able to support nearly 200 million subscribers across the 17 regions. Under the contracts, Ericsson will provide China Mobile with core and radio networks, together with related technical support and services. It will also deploy its Mobile Softswitch Solution in the contracted regions.

The statement said the expansion projects will not only allow China Mobile to boost network capacity while enhancing operational efficiency and cutting costs, but will also pave the road for future network evolution.

Mats Olsson, president of Ericsson Greater China, said: “We are very proud to be selected by China Mobile, once again, to expand its networks. China Mobile also recently named us ‘Best Partner of China Mobile GSM Target Network Upgrade Project’.” Olsson continued: “This is a clear recognition of not only our advanced technologies and solutions, but more importantly our efficient engagement with China Mobile. The expansion contracts are yet another demonstration of our commitment and capabilities in helping our customer achieve sustained business growth.” Ericsson first entered
China in 1987 when it deployed the first analog mobile communications systems in
Guangdong and
Hebei provinces. It has since become China Mobile’s long-term strategic partner in providing technology, solutions and expertise for advanced voice, data and multimedia services.
China is the world’s fastest growing telecom market. The country’s telecom market has opened up since it joined the World Trade Organization. It has more than 400 million cell phone subscribers and about 100 million mobile phones have sold in the past year. The number of subscribers is expected to rise to at least 600 million within the next three years.
Finland’s Nokia also has made quite a splash in the country, bagging major GSM and GRPS contracts despite legal problems over trademark infringements. Now, Ericsson appears to have become a major challenger.

In late July, Nokia signed an agreement with Hunan Mobile Communication Co., a local arm of China Mobile in
Hunan province, for GSM expansion.

Under the terms of the agreement, Nokia will provide Hunan Mobile Communication with a mobile softSwitch system and services-including network integration, trial operation, and training that will cover the four major cities of

Hunan
Province. Earlier in July, Nokia also signed a $150 million contract to expand GSM and GPRS networks for Henan Mobile in
Henan province. The proposed expansion is meant to significantly increase network coverage and capacity for mobile phones in the province’s rural areas. Nokia said it is deploying its NetAct network and service management system in
Henan. Under the contract, Nokia will also provide network planning, implementation, commissioning, training and care services.The company said it will start deliveries immediately and the network would be operational by the end of September.

Source- http://ipcommunications.tmcnet.com

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