4G prices again reduced by Sprint

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: Prices for the mobile 4G service have been reduced by Sprint again. CDMA/WiMax mobile service is put at $59.99. Reduction in the prices also cuts into the revenue benefit of that early entry advantage.

The 4G service of the Sprint is seen through Clearwire Corp. This gives it a competitive advantage over larger rivals Verizon Communications Inc. and AT&T Inc. However, none of them have rolled out a fourth-generation service.

$1m offered by Nokia & YTL top apps

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: $1 million has been offered by handset giant Nokia and Malaysian startup YTL to create winning apps. Nokia launched its Growth Economy Venture Challenge at CES in Las Vegas, with the hope t encourage innovators to create a mobile product or service that raises the standard of living or enhances the lives of those in growth economies.

According to Nokia CEO Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo, mobile solutions can be quite profitable, but not exploitive”, leading to financial win-win scenarios for both innovators and consumers.

Meanwhile, Malaysian Wimax operator YTL Communications also announced a $1 million Global Developer Challenge at CES.

Saudi Arabia mobile subscription reaches 41.1m

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: Mobile phone subscriptions in Saudi Arabia reached 41.1 million in the 3Q 2009, from 33.6 million a year earlier. The announcement was made by Saudi Arabia’s Communications and Information Technology Commission (CITC) which also said that the mobile penetration gas exceeded by 160%.

85% on the total subscription were to pre-paid deals. These deals allowed the consumers to own multiple SIMs and patronise whichever of the country’s three operators represents the best deal at any given time.

Meanwhile, the broadband recorded 1.98 million customers at the end of September 2009. 1.24 million of the total broadband customers were contracted to DSL-based services and the remainder were subscribed to WiMAX and HSPA networks.

With 4.1 million accesses in service and teledensity at 16.3%., fixed line subscription remained stable in the nine months ended 30 September 2009.

India’s 3G license auction to take place on time

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: The much awaited 3G license auction in India will now be held as planned on January 14, 2010. Earlier, due to certain issues with military radio spectrum and  postponement in sending out the formal notifications, further delays were reported.

According to Telecom Minister Andimuthu Raja, the auction will take place on time and allotment of spectrum to maintain the level playing field will be by August 2010. Through this auction, the government is expected to gain US$1.5 billion.

A separate auction for the WiMAX license will start two weeks after the completion of the 3G license.

Wimax trial started by Yota in Nicaragua

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: Wimax network deployment of Yota de Nicaragua, the local subsidiary of Russian state-owned corporation Rostejnologuii has been completed.  A mobile Wimax pilot in the Nicaraguan capital of Managua has also been rolled out by Yota in partnership with Samsung Electronics. The network is scheduled for commercial launch at mid-2010

The operator is planning to concentrate on high-quality voice services provision and increase the number of services provided on the Nicaraguan market. VoIP devices and netbooks with embedded Intel Wimax/Wi-Fi module would soon be launched by the company.  USB modems and routers will be provided by Yoto to individual and business users in Nicaragua.

The company has set the capex for 2010 at USD 1.5 billion in 2010, mainly directed towards international expansion projects. Yota’s planned investments funds for international expansion in 2009 top USD 500 million.

Apart from Nicaragua, Yota also operates on markets in Latin America, CIS countries, Asia and Africa.

Indian telco BSNL goes live with Wimax Network

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: India is set to become the biggest base on earth for Wimax by 2012, with the state-owned carrier BSNL going live with the country’s first Mobile Wimax network. The company already has deployments using fixed Wimax but now plans a major national rollout based on 802.16e.

Out of two parallel projects, one for rural areas and other for metro areas, the former has already been launched by state minister for communications and IT, Sachin Pilot. Initially, access will be delivered to Common Service Centers since few people in rural districts will have personal computers or even power supply.

BSNL is planning to work with partners to enable several key applications in order to help to meet the Indian government’s targets to lift the country’s woeful levels of broadband penetration. 1,000 rural districts, 32 in Rajasthan, which will involve 11,500 Common Service Centers, will be covered in the first half while the second half will cover system across the nation, covering 50,000 CSCs.

The broadband tariffs will be very low, starting at INR140 ($3) a month and will aim to harness video to support telemedicine and remote education. Other utility will include utility bill payments, issue of official documents like land or vehicle registrations or birth certificates, state e-government processes and inter-village communications.

Samsung, LG face stalled mobile phone market growth

SINGAPORE/SEOUL: Wrestling with falling mobile phone sales and shrinking market shares, South Korea’s Samsung and LG yearn for the days when their high-tech, pricey phones were the talk of the town.

The South Korean makers face stalled volume growth whereas rivals Nokia Oyj and Motorola Inc are cashing in on trends to go slim and stylish in advanced markets or cheap in emerging markets, such as India.
Analysts say Samsung Electronics Co Ltd and LG Electronics Inc should shift their focus to low-cost phones to catch up, or take the lead, in next-generation technology phones or mobile TV handsets.
“Nokia, Motorola and Sony Ericsson have experienced tremendous growth globally over the last few years – much of this can be attributed to the low-cost handset market, an area where LG and Samsung are not particularly strong,” said Bengt Nordstrom, an analyst with wireless consultancy inCode.
Another issue has been their inability to establish a strong brand, analysts said. Nokia has the scale and brand to control the market, Motorola has achieved cult-status with its blockbuster ultra-thin RAZR, and Sony Ericsson has focused on music and photography, leveraging the Sony Walkman and Cybershot brands to enhance its appeal to younger users. “Samsung and LG’s lack of differentiation is holding them back,” Nordstrom said.
Just two years ago, Samsung was poised to overtake Motorola’s number 2 spot, but its market share is now half the size of Motorola’s, with 26.3 million phones sold against the US rival’s 51.9 million in the April-June quarter.
One reason is the RAZR. Take Chua Chin Yang, a 27-year-old Singaporean freelance writer, who ditched his Samsung C200 handset this year. “I switched to Motorola because its handset designs look better and feel better, compared with Samsung’s, which are bulky and so uncool,” said Chua. “I love the RAZR because it’s so slim, easy to carry and the materials used to make the phone are also hardy.”
Nokia saw a 29 per cent boost to 78.4 million phones, but LG yielded its number 4 position to Sony Ericsson, selling 15.3 million phones against its rival’s 15.7 million.
LG also saw Motorola and Nokia eating into its business with key operators Verizon Communications Inc and Hutchison Telecommunications, leading to losses in its handset business for the second quarter in a row.
“The two megatrends in GSM over the last two years are ultra-thins and smart phones. Samsung has underperformed in both markets,” said Strategy Analytics analyst Neil Mawston. “Samsung cannot afford to miss the next megatrend, whatever it may be.”
With a focus on advanced cellphones and a few low-cost models, Samsung and LG have also missed out on the boom in emerging markets.
“Both Samsung and LG have advanced in next-generation technologies, such as WCDMA, HSDPA, WiMax and multimedia, but these markets have not blossomed yet,” said Suran Seong, analyst with research firm Ovum. “The convergence trend where several technologies or functionalities are packed into a phone, which the Korean vendors have stressed, may not be what all users want,” she added.
LG also had a late entry into the GSM market – the dominant digital mobile standard. About 60-70 per cent of its revenues come from CDMA technology, which is facing shrinking demand. “Starting the GSM business late was one big mistake we made,” LG Electronics finance chief Y.S. Kwon told investors recently.
The world’s two 2G mobile standards are GSM and CDMA. GSM was advocated by governments of western Europe and by firms, including Ericsson and Nokia, while CDMA was backed by the US and companies like Qualcomm Inc.
“The core problem for LG is its limited GSM distribution network. It launches a cool device like the chocolate phone, but struggles to get them on operators’ shelves,” said Mawston. – Reuters

Source- http://www.btimes.com.my

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