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MTS pens signalling agreement with BICS

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MTS (OJSC Mobile TeleSystems), the largest mobile operator in Russia, Eastern Europe and Central Asia, is now using BICS as signalling provider for its group companies.

Starting in July this year, MTS began using BICS as the global signalling gateway for its daughter companies in Russia, Ukraine, Armenia and Uzbekistan, in order to ensure continuity of services for its 95 million strong mobile subscribers while travelling and using their mobile phones all around the globe.

“We are very proud to have been selected as MTS’ signalling partner, providing the necessary global reach to their customers with the best in class voice and mobile data capabilities while roaming,” said Nicholas Nikrouyan, Chief Commercial Officer at BICS. “We are confident that BICS will add significant value to MTS’ growth strategy and ambition to provide their customers with the highest level of customer experience wherever they are around the world. This new agreement is indicative of the commitment both companies have to further enhance and strengthen our partnership for years to come.”

“We are keen to have a strategic partnership with BICS to enhance our roaming relations and to be in touch with future trends. Also we hope that our business relationships will proceed to prosper in the same fruitful and mutually beneficial manner”, said Evgeny Moskalev, Director of Interconnect, Roaming, Internet & Data services at MTS.

Openwave Takes Legal Action Against Apple and RIM

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Company says mobile devices, including Apple’s iPhone, iPod Touch and iPad; and RIM’s Blackberry Curve and Blackberry PlayBook, have repeatedly infringed upon Openwave’s patents

Openwave Systems has filed complaints against Apple and Research In Motion Limited at the International Trade Commission (ITC) in Washington, DC, requesting that the ITC bar the import of smartphones and tablet computers that infringe Openwave patents, including, but not limited to, Apple’s iPhone 3G, iPhone 3GS, iPhone 4, iPod Touch, iPad and iPad 2; and RIM’s Blackberry Curve 9330 and Blackberry PlayBook. Openwave also filed a similar complaint in federal district court in Delaware.

“Openwave invented technologies that became foundational to the mobile Internet. We believe that these large companies should pay us for the use of our technologies, particularly in light of the substantial revenue these companies have earned from devices that use our intellectual property,” said Ken Denman, Chief Executive Officer of Openwave. “Before filing these complaints, we approached both of these companies numerous times in an attempt to negotiate a license of our technology with them and did not receive a substantive response.”

Openwave said in a statement that it was the first company in 1997 to enable operators to deploy mobile Internet browsing, and the first in 2001 with technology that enables photo messaging. The company said that it owns approximately 200 patents that support its software business with telecommunications operators worldwide.

“In the end, litigation is the only way we can defend our rights against these large companies that have effectively refused to license the use of the technologies we invented, are using today, and are continuing to develop for our customers,” Mr. Denman said. “We are proud that our technology is helping deliver such a rich mobile internet experience to consumers around the world.”

The Openwave complaints specifically allege that Apple and RIM infringe upon five Openwave patents. These patents cover technology that gives consumers access to the Internet from their mobile devices:

·         Openwave’s 212 patent generally allows a user to use e-mail applications on a mobile device when the network is unavailable – such as when a user is on an airplane. For more information, please refer to the complaint, page 8.
 
* Openwave’s 409 patent generally allows the mobile device to operate seamlessly, and securely, with a server over a wireless network. For more information, please refer to the complaint, page 10.
·         Openwave’s 037 patent generally allows access to updated versions of applications on mobile devices. For more information, please refer to the complaint, page 9.
·         Openwave’s 447 patent generally allows consumers to experience an improved user experience in navigating through various pages of information without delay. For more information, please refer to the complaint, page 12.
·         Openwave’s 608 patent generally relates to cloud computing.  For example, the 608 patent enables data to be accessed or shared by different devices such as mobile handsets or computers. For more information, please refer to the complaint, page 6.

“As it became clear that these large companies would not substantively cooperate with us, the Company carefully evaluated its legal position and litigation prospects. We believe that our legal position is strong and our prospects of prevailing are very good,” said Mr. Denman. “In our analysis, this is our best option to unlock the substantial value of our intellectual property. The ITC process typically results in judgments within 15-18 months. We anticipate that a favorable judgment will lead the companies to negotiate licensing agreements with us.”

Zinwave provides first class in-building coverage for prestigious Westfield shopping mall

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Zinwave’s in-building wireless solution maximises flexibility for multi service, multi operator coverage

Westfield Sydney is a premium retail and office complex operated by the Westfield Group and is located in the heart of the city beneath the Sydney Tower. In 2007 Westfield received approval to redevelop its existing Centrepoint mall and integrate it with the adjoining Imperial Arcade, Skygarden and Sydney Central Plaza. The development represents an A$1.2 billion investment for Westfield with the aim to create a world-class facility that will showcase the best retailers from Australia and around the world.

Stage 1 of the Westfield Sydney redevelopment opened on Thursday October 28 2010 with approximately 130 specialty stores. Stage 2 was opened in April 2011 and the retail component is scheduled for completion in December 2011. The completed facility will have more than 330 stores with over 88,000m2 of retail space.

The Zinwave 3000 system was selected to provide in-building coverage for this prestigious facility as it had the unique ability to carry all major mobile carriers, Telstra, Optus and Vodafone, covering the following services, WCDMA at 850MHz, UMTS at 2100MHz, DCS at 1800MHz as well as the PMR systems for the mall staff.

Westfield Sydney is one of a growing list of buildings, which include airports, hospitals and corporate facilities, to take advantage of Zinwave’s unique support for multiple services over a single common infrastructure and wideband hardware platform. The Zinwave 3000 easily accommodates the specific services offered by all operators and required by the thousands of visitors from around the world. Cellular sectorisation is uniquely supported by a built-in switch matrix that, by simple software configuration, selectively routes services to specific areas of the building as required.

The Westfield implementation was carried out by one of the world’s leading distributors of wireless infrastructure products RFI, a major Zinwave partner in this region with over 30 years experience in the in-building market.

“RFI has been involved in many high profile roll-outs, and we are particularly proud of the results achieved in this Westfield project using the Zinwave 3000 system in-building coverage solution. This is a fantastic opportunity to showcase the Zinwave product in a high profile, multi-service environment” commented Steve Jacques, Managing Director of RFI.

“This was an exciting, high profile project for us and an ideal setting to showcase Zinwave’s unique 3000 system.” said Colin Abrey, President of Zinwave International. “Our 3000 DAS provided a unique solution that had the ability to carry all major operators and also provide PMR services all on one hardware layer. The system offers ease of installation and scalability with the ability to add in services in the future with no additional hardware cost”

Why VoLTE and Why Now?

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Free Webinar – Join EXFO’s team of experts on 2 November, 2011 to learn everything you need to know about VoLTE.

LTE promises greatly accelerated data rates — even when mobile users are travelling at hundreds of kilometers per hour. However, as LTE moves from the labs into actual deployments, debates over the glaring gap in delivering voice over an LTE network are growing. Voice is the major revenue generator for operators, and voice-over-LTE (VoLTE) is now being touted as the technology of choice for delivering voice to LTE networks.

In this webinar EXFO’s LTE experts will examine the benefits of VoLTE, and the challenges (both pre-deployment and post-deployment) faced by manufacturers and operators developing and deploying VoLTE networks.

 

Join us on 2 November 2011 to learn more about:

Why VoLTE and why now?

  • How operators can guarantee call quality that meets and exceeds expectations of end-users
  • The challenges of interoperating with legacy networks (UMTS, GSM, CDMA, etc.)
  • The co-existence of data and voice over a shared network
  • Monitoring, troubleshooting and analyzing a deployed VoLTE network

Host: Keith Dyer, Editor, Mobile Europe

EXFO Presenters:

Murat Bilgic, Director of Wireless Technology, CTO Office
Uvaiz Ahmed, Wireless Product Line Manager
Wayne Davis, Service Assurance Product Manager

Click here to register: https://www1.gotomeeting.com/register/321108553

 

 

 

AdaptiveMobile launches anti-spam app for operators

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Mobile security company AdaptiveMobile has designed an app that operators could offer to their customers to allow them to report spam messages, and block the senders.

Ciaran Bradley, VP Handset Security, said that the company wants to give users more ability to block and report spam, and operators the means to gain a wider view of the spam messages that users are experiencing on their network.

In time, Bradley would like to see operators share information on spam messages with each other, so that knowledge can be shared across the industry. He said that AdaptiveMobile see the app working “to complement” the GSMA’s pilot Spam Reporting Service (powered by Cloudmark), but also that it adds user controls to the SRS’ quite operator-centric approach.

“It’s not competitive to the SRS,” Bradley said, “it’s just another way of doing it.”

The app will be made available for operators to offer through their own portals and channels to users, rather than for wider download. All the major OS are support, apart from iOS. Bradley said this is because the security architecture on Apple devices would not allow the app to function with the “richness” AdaptiveMobile would like.

Bradley said AdaptiveMobile would offer the app free to operators for operators to brand as they see fit. Adaptive’s main business is as a provider of network-level security solutions to mobile operators — by giving operators a crowd-sourced, broader view of SMS spam attacks, the company aims to help operators tailor their network protection solutions to match current and future threats.

How the app works

A user installs the app. Then every time that user receives a message from a sender who is not already in their address book, a prompt will appear asking that user if they want to report that user for spam, delete the message and block that user from sending any more messages. AdaptiveMobile hopes that it will provide a one click way for users to build their own black lists.

Encouraging sign for Blackberry – 9900 and 9300 seeing strong demand?

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I’ve had a note from phoneLot.com saying that the new Blackberry’s 9900/9300 smartphones, built on its Blackberry 7 OS, are holding up well on one online trading platform. Dan Quinn of for wholesale and retail exchange phoneLot.com said that demand for the 9900 and 9930 has been high, “outstripping supply and helping the seller community to maintain an average premium price of €460 since its launch last week.

Quinn said that this is better news for Blackberry than it saw after its Playbook launch in April.

“The Playbook caught many traders by surprise as  them found themselves holding stock or selling off for a loss after the anticipated demand for the new tablet failed  to materialise. Reports from many sources suggested that some traders failed to shift any of their original stock creating a unplanned fire sale which saw prices drastically dropped across the three models over the following month,” he writes.

So there we are, just one small indicator from the open market that there is demand out there for these two devices.

 

Comptel sells Axioss fulfilment software to Cisco

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And says deal means “No change to fulfilment strategy”

Comptel has sold to Cisco the fulfilment software it acquired when it bought Axiom Systems in 2008.

Cisco, a partner of Comptel, is buying the Axioss fulfilment software that forms part of Comptel’s Fulfilment Solution. Axioss assets are related to fulfilment software for operators’ IP services such as VPNs.

Olivier Suard, Marketing Director, said that the company would retain IP fulfilment capability after the sale. A release from the company said that it is building its next release of the Comptel Fulfillment Solution on a new technology platform that will be released in the first half of 2012. Comptel will also retain its existing Axioss customer relationships and will continue to support these customers.

“The message is that we are still very much in the fulfilment business, and it is [stated] in the deal that we can continue to support customers in that area,” he said.

Suard’s comments reflected that of Juhani Hintikka, CEO, who was quoted in Comptel’s press release as saying: “This does not change our fulfilment strategy, which is to achieve growth and the market-leader position for convergent telecom service providers.”

 

In 2008, Comptel paid €8.9 million for Axiom Systems Holdings Limited. Today it is selling the Axioss software business for €21.3 million.       
Suard, who desribed the deal as “a good one”, said that the money would be invested in the continued development of products and services, including fulfilment.

“Our CEO is very much of the view that we need to invest to grow,” Suard said, “and this deal gives us both the incentive and the resource to invest even more.”

Gareth Senior, current Comptel CTO, will move to Cisco as part of the deal, as will some other staff. Suard said it has not been decided whether the office of CTO will be retained after Senior’s departure. Suard said that some of the functions of the office will move to Comptel’s Product and Solutions Unit.

Comptel said that the transaction is estimated to close in September 2011 and that Comptel and Cisco will continue their cooperation across other areas of OSS/BSS, including cloud mediation and charging.

The loss of Axioss would impact net sales by €2 million for the 2011, financial year, the company said. Comptel revised its full-year guidance, saying that in 2011 net sales are estimated to remain at the previous year’s level or to decrease slightly.

Swisscom doubles data limits and adds free EU calls, SMS to some tariffs

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From 1 September, Swisscom customers with Natel liberty primo and liberty medio subscriptions will be able to access more than twice the data volume for mobile surfing, while BeFree and BusinessOne flat-rate subscriptions will offer residential and business customers free calls to Europe and North America, and free SMS/MMS messages to all countries. The monthly subscription charges will remain unchanged.

Swisscom is defining a new automatic limit for Natel liberty primo of 250MB instead of 100 MB, and Natel liberty medio now offers 500MB instead of 250 MB. Customers who exceed the inclusive data volume will incur a CHF5 daily cost ceiling. Monthly basic charges will remain unchanged.

Call the EU and North America for free with flat-rate subscriptions
Swisscom is also expanding its BeFree and BusinessOne flat-rate subscriptions: from 1 September, up to 300 minutes’ worth of calls from Switzerland to the EU and North America duration are included and the cost of calls to more than 70 countries has been reduced. SMS and MMS messaging from Switzerland to every country in the world is now also free of charge, while calls, SMS/MMS messages and mobile surfing within Switzerland remain included.

Why Europe’s operators should fear patent wars

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“Apple’s anti-Samsung cases in the Netherlands and Germany hint that European operators could soon find themselves faced with actual bans.”

By David Meyer

Europe’s mobile industry experienced an unusual hiccup last week. Apple got a district court in Germany to ban Samsung from selling its Galaxy Tab 10.1 tablet across the EU, with the exception of the Netherlands where Apple has a separate anti-Samsung suit on the boil.

The court’s injunction, which was itself only preliminary ahead of a full hearing of Apple’s case, has since been temporarily lifted, after Samsung questioned the power of a local court in Düsseldorf to ban a foreign company from selling its product across Europe.

Although the ban has been stayed for now, the days in which it was in force saw Vodafone cancel UK pre-orders for the Galaxy Tab 10.1, which is one of the most high-profile Android tablets on the market and a direct competitor to Apple’s iPad 2. Apple’s Dutch case, it turns out, is also aimed at stopping Europe-wide sales by seeking a ban in the Netherlands, through which Samsung imports its goods.

Although the temporary injunction is still in force in Germany, Vodafone continues to sell a special variant of the device called the Galaxy Tab 10.1v there. That version is not named in the German case.

Operators are not willing to discuss the case in any depth, issuing only ‘wait-and-see’ statements. Vodafone says it “will review [its position] following the outcome of the legal proceedings between Apple and Samsung”, while O2 says it is “watching developments with interest”.

However, Apple’s attacks on Samsung in the EU have already proven that the frenzy of intellectual property litigation that has been in full swing over in the United States for the last couple of years has made it over to Europe in force.

“The industry has becomes more litigious than we have seen over past years,” Gartner mobile analyst Carolina Milanesi says. “Patent disputes have always been part of the mobile industry, but more so today because you have so many different players that are part of this industry now that have a different background, that haven’t been around in the cellular industry for long enough to have their own patents and to make their own [cross-licensing] agreements.”

The mobile market has become crucial for the likes of Microsoft, Google and Apple, as well as more traditional players. According to Milanesi, the rabid nature of mobile competition has led some to conclude that patent litigation is sometimes used as “a bit of a stalling mechanism”.

“You’re putting doubts in the heads of [retail and operator] customers around a particular product — ‘Is this the right time to get behind it?’ and so forth,” Milanesi said. “It has traditionally been more of a US phenomenon, but maybe the Galaxy Tab 10.1 instance has hit Europe a bit more.”

Apple’s case against Samsung in Düsseldorf is quite different from the patent-related tactics the two companies have been using in the US for more than a year. Compared to the US, the EU grants very few software patents, so Apple turned to a peculiarly European kind of intellectual property: the Community design.

Community designs are entirely to do with the look of an item, and are enforceable across the EU even when decided on by a single district court. Apple said the Galaxy Tab 10.1 looked like the iPad 2, and Düsseldorf’s local judges agreed enough to grant a temporary ban.

The only reason that ban was lifted everywhere except Germany was because Apple had gained injunctions against both Samsung Germany and Samsung Korea – it was this latter injunction that has been lifted, while the Düsseldorf  judiciary reconsiders whether it really does have the power to exact a ban across the continent when the defendant is not even based in the EU.

If Europe allowed software patents to the same degree as the US does, we might be seeing even more excitement. In the US, technology companies have often used the courts for patent cases, but are increasingly fighting their battles in US International Trade Commission (ITC) hearings.

The ITC is a quasi-judicial federal agency tasked with advising the US government on major international trade issues. As it has the ability to bar a company from importing a product into the US, many companies are seeing the tactical advantage in using it to attack their competitors.

Just within the mobile space during the last couple of years, HTC complained to the ITC about Apple; Apple did it to Samsung, HTC and S3 graphics (since bought by HTC); Nokia did it to Apple; Motorola did it to Nokia, Apple and RIM; InterDigital did it to Nokia and Huawei; and Sony did it to LG.

Yet, not a single ITC dispute between major mobile companies has actually resulted in a smartphone being banned from import into the US, despite every litigant calling for just that. Almost all the cases have been settled with licensing or cross-licensing deals, and operators have never seen device supplies significantly disrupted.

This is largely because, with sufficiently fundamental patents, not licensing such patents would stop the industry, so companies have to license them to comply with competition law, Milanesi says.

The analyst points out that fighting a rival’s offensive patent strategy is not necessarily about owning your own patents in that precise field. “It’s not like you have to have patents around UI to fight back against UI patents,” she says, suggesting that just having a weapon of equivalent or greater importance to the competitor can be enough to resolve a dispute.

This may be why Google, the company behind Android, just said it would pay $12.5bn for Motorola and its 24,000 patents and patents pending, many of which are fundamental.

Operators have to follow what the courts say but there has “never been an immediate danger that someone would be forced to stop selling immediately”, Milanesi says of the US situation. However, Apple’s anti-Samsung cases in the Netherlands and Germany hint that European operators could soon find themselves faced with actual bans.

“The Galaxy Tab 10.1 is the first time that we’ve seen that happening so quickly, but it was reversed quickly too,” Milanesi says. “Operators will follow this very closely. It is something they will have to keep an eye on.”

David Meyer is a freelance journalist specialising in communications and other aspects of technology. He can be found on Twitter using the handle @superglaze.

Vodafone announces in-app billing for Android Market

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Vodafone “first in Europe” with operator billing for Android Market

Vodafone developer has announced the first rollout in Europe of direct operator billing for Android Market.

Vodafone UK and Vodafone Germany will help consumers purchase their favourite apps and games on Android Market without the need to enter credit card details.

The operator said that this would give developers direct access to millions of Android users who can now charge their Android Market purchases straight to their phone bills or prepay accounts. Vodafone claimed that in some countries more than 90% of the market can be unwilling or unable to use credit cards.

In the operator’s view, 

this evolution in Android app payment greatly improves the user’s purchase experience & consequently their likelihood of completing a sale.

 

The service will initially be restricted to users who have purchased their devices through Vodafone online and retail channels.

Vodafone added that is has more information on operator billing in other markets coming soon.

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