News & Analysis
Qualcomm outlines aggressive plans for LTE chips
John Walko
12/3/2008 12:02 PM EST
If it achieves this, it could be one of the first chip designers to have such a part.
However, Enrico Salvatori, senior VP and general manager for Qualcomm Europe, speaking at the company's inaugural European Innovation Summit Wednesday (Dec. 3), cautioned that commercial availability of an LTE/HSPA+ multimode device, dubbed the MDM9000, "still depends on a number of very uncertain factors, many of which are dependent on mobile network operators' plans and investment priorities about how and when to roll out this next stage of wireless technology."
Salvatori said there are still many uncertainties regarding the timelines for the 3GPP (Third Generation Partnership Project) promoted upgrade to current third generation networks, "almost all of which are pretty much out of our control."
He noted there are still major standardization issues to be resolved, even though the important Rev.8 standard is due to be finalized next week, that there is still uncertainty about which spectrum ranges LTE would be deployed, and noted there are many important choices to be made on network topology.
Qualcomm's view of the latter is that operators will, at least initially, address high data traffic urban areas with LTE implementations that will work in tandem with HSPA and HSPA+ enabled networks in rural areas.
Qualcomm was one of the late converts to LTE technology and for long promoted its own Ultra Mobile Broadband (UMB) specification for next generation mobile broadband. But the company recently revealed it had abandoned development of UMB and has also raised concerns over the other 4G alternative – mobile WiMAX.
"We need to be opportunistic in this emerging area, and decided that since the market was calling for a 3GPP backed solution, that is what we would put our efforts into as well. UMB was, still is, a great technology, but we did not succeed in getting sufficient backing from the 3G network operators," Salvatori told EE Times Europe .
As to mobile WiMAX, he suggested this will not deliver the same performance as LTE, has some major drawbacks when it comes to spectrum efficiency, and the volumes and economies of scale will not be as favorable as is likely to be from Long Term Evolution technology.
And he stressed for the short to medium term, the company is focusing on chip sets to power terminals and dongles that meet the current generation HSPA and HSPA+ 3G specifications.
A recent market research report suggested that despite the increasing backing for LTE, HSPA and HSPA+ will still support 54 percent of wireless broadband users by the end of 2015.
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