Telus to invest USD69.6 million to upgrade network on Vancouver Island

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: CAD70 million (USD69.6 million) will be invested by Canadian full-service telco Telus to upgrade its Vancouver Island fixed network. The aim of the up gradation is to offer higher Internet speeds and high definition TV (HDTV).

The company also aims at offering a more tempting package of services to users than cable-based competitor Shaw Communications.

According to the company, by the end of 2010, 98% of Victoria residents will be able to access its new super-high speed and IPTV-based HD services. A fibre-optic cable stretched along 450km and more is also planned to be laid down by Telus in Greater Victoria.

Telus to invest in IPTV and HSPA+ (British Columbia)

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: Plans for the investment of CAD650 million (USD649 million) in British Columbia in the year 2010 has been outlined by telecom operator, Telus Corp. Last year, the company spent CAD700 million in the province.

Expansion of the company’s broadband reach, particularly with regard to Telus TV is one of the areas were the operator will make the expenditure. In 2005, Telus soft-launched its IPTV service and at the end of 2009 it had 170,000 subscribers in British Columbia and Alberta, double the number from a year earlier.

According to the telco, it will continue to expand its wireless broadband network across the province, building on its November 2009 deployment of HSPA+ technology with theoretical downlink speeds of up to 21Mbps. Meanwhile, CAD650 million will also be spent by the telco in Alberta to extend its wire line and wireless broadband services in that province.

Video calling interoperability completed by Canadian telcos

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: Two-way mobile video calling trials has been successfully completed by Canada’s big-three mobile networks – Bell, Rogers and TELUS. With the launch of inter-carrier mobile video calling, video calling will be possible across multiple carrier networks and will create North America’s largest two-way mobile video calling community.

According to Stephen Howe, chief technology officer for Bell Mobility, by breaking down the barriers between video calling clients in Canada, the company anticipates strong demand for the service as it saw with past inter-carrier initiatives such as text and picture messaging.

Video calling handsets that support the internationally accepted open 3G-324M Video Telephony standard are offered by Bell, Rogers and TELUS, ensuring compatibility with other systems and carriers supporting the standard.

Canadian telco Telus records 45% drop in Q4 profits

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: Fourth quarter 2009 financial results has been released by Canadian telecoms network operator, Telus Corp which showed a slight decrease of CA$11 million in the revenue. The fall reflects continued declines in traditional voice services, which offset growth in data and wireless revenues.

EBITDA decreased by 16 per cent because of higher restructuring costs from ongoing operating efficiency initiatives and higher defined benefit pension plan expenses.

Net income for the quarter also decreased from CA$253 million for the same period a year ago to CA$146 million. Wireless ARPU declined by 7.7% to $57.38 compared to the same quarter a year ago. Meanwhile, TELUS added 105,000 net new customer connections in the fourth quarter.

According to Darren Entwistle, TELUS president and CEO, there is no question that the last year was a challenging one economically, but also one where the company progressed game-changing capital projects and made significant investments in operational efficiency to improve the cost structure

Wi-LAN sued by Telus over patent ownership

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: Wi-LAN Inc’s relation with patent-litigation suit is not vey new but this time it is at a receiving end as Telus Corp. and Telus Communications Inc. have filed a suit in Calgary alleging ownership of some of its patents. The suit was filed on filed on April 23, 2009; however, Wi-LAN hasn’t yet been formally served with the claim.

.S. Patent Nos. 5,369,670 and 5,570,305 and Canadian Patent Nos. 2,067,436-9 and 2,108,103 collectively, known as the “Channel Estimation patents are the four patents over which Telus also claims an ownership interest.

Even patent Nos. RE37802 (the “802 patent”) and 5,282,222 (the “222 patent”), for which Wi-LAN filed a suit in 2007 alleging infringement by 22 major companies, has been claimed by Telus.

Earlier, litigations were initiated by Wi-LAN in New York against LG Electronics Inc. and LG Electronics U.S.A. Inc., claiming fraud, breach of contract, and infringement of Wi-LAN’s V-chip technology as disclosed in U.S. Patent No 5,828,402.

DAVE ready to be launched in early 2010

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: Test on the 3G network built by Ericsson was successfully conducted by Canadian mobile start-up Data & Audio Visual Enterprises Wireless  or DAVE Wireless. The network is schedule for a commercial launch in early 2010.

Dave has the license in ten of the country’s 13 largest cities to offer wireless services in the 2GHz frequency range. The company recently launched a campaign that urged potential subscribers not to limit themselves into long contracts with established operators such as Bell and Telus.

Both the operators jointly launched a commercial nationwide HSPA network last month.

Telus files suit against Rogers over ad claims

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: A legal action has been launched by Telus Communications against Rogers Communications for allegedly misleading ads claiming Rogers provides Canada’s fastest network.” As per the complaint, since a Nov. 5 upgrade, a network run by Bell and Telus offers faster and more reliable service than the Rogers network.

Rogers introduced the advertisement in 2007 and continued after November 5. Rogers claim of Canada’s most reliable network,” has also been declared as false by Telus.

A declaration has been seeked from Rogers by Telus confirming that its advertisements breached Canada’s Competition Act, in addition to injunction from distributing the ads, damages and compensation.

Telus, Bell and Rogers control about 90 per cent of Canada’s wireless telecommunications market.

Big scope seen in data service expansion for Canadian mobile phone operators

(CP) -

‘s mobile-phone industry has vast room to grow in data services for businesses and consumers, the president of the country’s biggest cellphone operator said Tuesday.

Nadir Mohamed of Rogers Communications Inc. (TSX:RCI.B) told a BMO Capital Markets media and telecom conference that at business forums such as Tuesday’s event 95 per cent of those present typically have mobile-e-mail devices, mostly BlackBerrys made by Research In Motion Ltd. (TSX:RIM). But he estimated only five per cent of businesspeople who could profit from constant e-mail access have it.

“There’s lots of room for e-mail connectivity and applications on the business side,” he said.

“On the consumer side it’s been fuelled by SMS (short message service),” he added.

“Both sides of the equation are growing and in my mind will continue to grow significantly.”

In terms of transmitting video to mobile devices, “the noise we’re making is more about the brand,” Mohamed said, and “video is some time away from being a meaningful contributor” to revenue.

In the wake of Monday’s announcement by Telus Corp. (TSX:T) that it will become an income trust, Mohamed said Rogers has no similar plans – primarily because it won’t have to pay income tax in the foreseeable future thanks to almost $4 billion in accumulated tax losses.

He added that paying a high dividend is not a priority for Toronto-headquartered

‘s largest cable-television operator as well as the biggest wireless provider.

“Clearly the focus is paying down our debt – that’s goal No. 1,” he said. “We’re not going to go from a growth company to a yield company anytime soon.”

Meanwhile, the country’s largest telephone company,

(TSX:BCE), continues to struggle with “service issues in the consumer segment,” George Cope,

‘s new president and chief operating officer, acknowledged at the meeting.

Bell has geared up for competition from cable-TV operators and others in local telephone service after generations as a monopoly and it has “an unbelievably reliable local access service,” he declared, but it remains hamstrung by “ridiculous” federal regulations.

“The last time I looked I don’t think

needs our help in terms of their financial position by the regulator,” he said.

Still, he acknowledged, “our customer service has to improve, and it’s a very tricky balance as you’re taking costs out there.”

Cope, the former president of Telus Mobility who joined Bell in January, said it’s too early to know whether erosion of Bell’s local access line business has hit bottom, but “now for the first time (competitors) have churn, not just us,” while Bell remains “the clear leader in the enterprise segment.”

Asked about the income trust issue, Cope noted that rural phone operations were spun off this summer in the Bell Aliant Regional Communications Income Fund (TSX:BA.UN) and he repeated a previous statement that “management and the board continue to review the suitability of the income trust structure” for the rest of the enterprise.

“That’s all I’m saying.”

Also at Tuesday’s conference, Marc Tellier, president and CEO of Yellow Pages Group (TSX:YLO.UN), said the trust’s “big focus is really to integrate one national platform” after a series of acquisitions ranging from the Trader Canada group of advertising publications to the MTS Media phone-book operation in Manitoba.

“It’s not that it’s difficult work, it’s just that there’s a lot of wood to chop” in such tasks as consolidating eight accounting and human resources systems, Tellier said.

Yellow Pages is also working to expand its clientele by attracting more national advertisers, which “typically don’t come to us in droves,” he said.

Tellier added that the trust now has “a much more compelling value equation for national advertisers” such as automotive companies which he said account for one-fifth of all advertising in the

.

Source- http://money.canoe.ca

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