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T- Mobile Outlines Strategy

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3GSM World Congress
In its keynote presentation at the 3GSM Congress in Cannes today, T- Mobile called for a new approach to the challenges and opportunities facing mobile; pressed for changes to the subsidy model and approach to tariffs; called for a reduction of roaming rates; gave further details of its broadband mobile strategy and its strengthened lead in Wi-Fi; announced new mobile data devices and tariffs; and called for the industry to align on the growing needs for interoperability and standardisation.

The myth of mobile maturity : T- Mobile denounced the notion of maturity, even in voice services. Global mobile users are forecast to double from 1 billion at Cannes last year to 2 billion by end 2005. US customer growth was around 14% last year. (T- Mobile US customers increased 32%). In European countries, penetration is moving beyond 100%. More important, uses and usage of mobile are immature everywhere, and mobile is just now entering the broadband revolution.
 
“We need to ban the word maturity from the mobile dictionary; but we also need to adopt a new approach to mobile growth.” said René Obermann, Chief Executive of T-Mobile.
 
Change the subsidy model. Change tariff structures. The need for fairness and simplicity: The focus of mobile has to shift firmly to encouraging new uses and new usage, and to building customer loyalty and customer lifetime value. To do this, mobile should become simpler. Tariffs should be fairer. Pre-pay subsidy should go. Roaming rates should be simpler and more attractive.
 
“Subsidy drove penetration. Now pre-pay subsidy is subsidising low cost competitors. And it’s making tariffs too high.
 
“We are at the crossroads between device cost and usage cost. Drop subsidy and we can cut tariffs. Customers want lower tariffs. They drive usage and loyalty. Pre-pay subsidy needs to be cut, then removed.
 
“Roaming rates today are still perceived by customers as a usage barrier. Last year, T-Mobile cut the cost of holiday roaming by up to half. We will extend our leading position with simple, fair transparent and attractive offers. The whole industry should support this path into the future and should act now.” said René Obermann.
 
“Internet in your Pocket.” “Office in your Pocket.” : T- Mobile gave further details of its broadband mobile strategy to deliver the internet to customers, estimating 1 in 5 Western European workers are already mobile, and citing Analysys’ forecast of total Western European mobile business data being worth some ?1 billion a year by 2009.
 
Hamid Akhavan, Chief Technology Officer of T- Mobile said: “Now there is no reason why our access to the office information and company IT infrastructure should be less while on the road. Plus, the convenience of having the Internet in our pockets will have a bigger positive impact on our lives than the internet itself has had to date.
 
“We as an industry pack more and more features into our phones and launch more and more services. The problem is most customers don’t know how to use the features and in many cases are not even aware of the services.
 
“Our approach is simple. Open internet access. Worry free tariffs. Devices that customers can instantly use, because they’re already familiar with the operating system – they already use it on their PCs.
 
“While mobile voice will remain the “killer application,” our customers will adopt our mobile data offer for its “killer experience” – it will offer our customers the same experience as a good DSL connection they enjoy at home or office, for all their favorite data needs – e-mail, messaging, real-time multimedia, browsing and downloading.”
 
21/2G, 3G, Wi-Fi. Integrated network strategy : “3G will become the work-horse technology of mobile, just as GSM is today. The customers will migrate to 3G over time, as they did with analogue to digital voice. We will enhance its speed significantly with HSDPA,” said Hamid.
 
“The pace of adoption will grow rapidly. We are planning to double our sales of data-centric devices and cards in Europe this year, compared to 210,000 last year.”
 
“Usage is growing rapidly – 10 terabytes of Wi-Fi data in T-Mobile US this January alone. This is the equivalent to half of the 24 million volumes of books, photographs, recordings and other information available at the United States’ Library of Congress, the largest library in the world.
 
And we are extending beyond airports, hotels, destination spots to trains – with the introduction of Wi-Fi on trains in the UK.”
 
The need for a new approach : “Mobile is changing and T-Mobile is changing,” said René Obermann. “Through our Save for Growth programme, we are simplifying our structure and processes; sharpening our focus; improving our quality and speed to market; and aiming to increase our operating investment in growth by ?500 million a year by the end of 2006. We will gain competitive advantage.
 
“We’re committed to a new approach to mobile both in the voice and the broadband worlds.”
 
World’s first 21/2G, 3G and Wi-Fi mobile device : T- Mobile presented a range of data devices and tariffs, including the world’s first pocket-size MDA combining 21/2G, 3G and Wi-Fi; large, high resolution screen; integrated Qwerty keyboard; video telephony and conferencing; Pocket Word, Excel, Outlook, Internet Explorer; Bluetooth and infrared; send and receive faxes; voice activated phone dialling.

QUALCOMM and Openwave Announce Agreement to Drive Global Advancement of 3G WCDMA (UMTS) Handsets

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Solution Enables Faster Time to Market for Feature-Rich Devices

3GSM World Congress
QUALCOMM Incorporated, pioneer and world leader of Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) digital wireless technology, and Openwave Systems Inc, the leading provider of open software products and services for the communications industry, today announced that QUALCOMM and Openwave have entered into a licensing agreement that will further promote the rapid advancement of 3G WCDMA (UMTS) handsets.

Under the agreement, QUALCOMM and Openwave will work together to port Openwave mobile browser and messaging software to select QUALCOMM Mobile Station Modem (MSM) chipsets, enabling a phone solution that builds on the capabilities of QUALCOMM’s Launchpad suite. Openwave’s software will be integrated directly on top of QUALCOMM’s BREW solution to shorten design timelines and costs while providing an enhanced end-user experience across key applications. This solution will be available starting with QUALCOMM’s MSM6250 chipset solution to initially target WCDMA markets.

“With the industry-leading feature set of Openwave’s client software, handset manufacturers will be able to provide operators with flexible applications,” said Simon Wilkinson, senior vice president and general manager of the client software group at Openwave. “Openwave and QUALCOMM have a shared commitment to deliver the best possible solutions and leverage our combined expertise to enable consistent and high-quality user experiences for next generation devices.”

“We are pleased to work with Openwave to provide an integrated client solution that addresses the rapid adoption of new 3G services and takes full advantage of the Launchpad features of our chipsets,” said Luis Pineda, senior vice president marketing and product management for QUALCOMM CDMA Technologies. “This phone solution streamlines development efforts and accelerates time to market to significantly reduce the costs of 3G device development.”

QUALCOMM will offer select components of Openwave Phone Suite Version 7 (V7), including Openwave Mobile Browser, with operator specific service extensions, along with Openwave SMS, EMS, MMS, PoC and IM clients. QUALCOMM has also commissioned Openwave to develop BREW extensions, providing ease of development and design re-use across multiple handsets. Openwave clients will build on the Launchpad engines to deliver applications that provide operators with the flexibility to design customized user experience specifications — providing end users with an easy-to-use format that encourages increased usage of wireless multimedia.

The MSM6250 chipset supports QUALCOMM’s Launchpad suite of advanced multimedia, connectivity, position location, user interface and removable storage functionality, including QUALCOMM’s gpsOne solution, the world’s most broadly deployed assisted-GPS handset technology.

QUALCOMM’s chipsets also support QUALCOMM’s BREW ecosystem, which enables the development and monetization of advanced applications and content, allowing operators and OEMs to differentiate their products and services and increase revenues. QUALCOMM’s chipsets are also compatible with the Java runtime environment; J2ME can be built entirely on the chipset as an extension to the BREW solution.

Qpass Continues European Expansion with Acquisition of Encorus Software Business

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Qpass Strengthens Commitment to the European Digital Marketplace and Simpay

Qpass, whose software powers the marketplace for digital media and services, today announced the acquisition of the Encorus mobile payments software business, which includes the PaymentWorks product line. The acquisition furthers the company’s global expansion and strengthens its position as the vendor of choice for digital payment software in the European mobile market. The acquisition further demonstrates Qpass’ support of Simpay, the consumer m-payment scheme formed by Orange, Telefonica Moviles, T-Mobile and Vodafone.

“Encorus has engineered world-class Simpay technology, and we are pleased to be in a position to deepen our Service Management Platform and Payment Server product line with this strategic asset,” said Chase Franklin, CEO, Qpass. “This acquisition demonstrates our commitment to providing mobile operators with the most advanced and proven Simpay solution.”

“We are constantly reviewing the needs of our business and make adjustments as needed to successfully execute our long-term growth strategies,” said Nandita Bakhshi, president, Encorus Technologies. “Qpass was an obvious strategic fit for our mobile software business.”

Qpass has acquired the Encorus PaymentWorks intellectual property as well as the Encorus name and other assets. Qpass will assume the customer relationships of the Encorus’ PaymentWorks software business including its relationship with T-Mobile International. The Encorus software team of employees in Stuttgart and Budapest will become part of the Qpass Europe team and continue to provide continuity and enhance the PaymentsWorks technology. Encorus is part of eONE Global, a majority-owned subsidiary of First Data Corporation. As part of the transaction Qpass and FDC have agreed to co-market and coordinate with one another as preferred providers of each company’s respective solutions. Additional terms of the deal were not disclosed.

With this acquisition, Qpass grows to approximately 250 full-time employees, serving more than 27 customers, including 16 mobile operators in North America and Europe, which together have more than 140 million mobile subscribers.

Alcatel and QUALCOMM initiate interoperability testing for HSDPA

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3GSM World Congress
Alcatel has today announced that it is initiating interoperability tests between its Alcatel Evolium multi-standard mobile network infrastructure solution and QUALCOMM’s HSDPA (High-Speed Downlink Packet Access)-enabled MSM6275 chipset.

QUALCOMM’s  Mobile  Station  Modem  (MSM) MSM6275 chipset for WCDMA with support for HSDPA, part of QUALCOMM’s Enhanced Platform, delivers peak data rates  of up to 1.8 Mbps, allowing faster transmission of larger data files and  improved  file  transfer  capabilities  to  drive  commercial wireless multimedia,  enabling  advanced gaming, music distribution services and the faster streaming of multimedia files.

Alcatel’s  Evolium-based  HSDPA  solution will provide mobile operators and mobile  users  alike with the maximum benefits of HSDPA, as Alcatel’s HSDPA solution, on top of the QPSK modulation (up to 3.6 Mb/s) which is mandatory according  to  3GPP  specifications,  will  also deliver the optional 16QAM modulation  (up  to  14.4 Mb/s). When in commercial use, the actual average data  throughput  of  Alcatel’s  HSDPA solution will reach from 2 to 3Mb/s, i.e.  from  five  to  eight  times  more  than the current 3G/UMTS 384 kb/s maximum throughput.

Based  on Evolium’s natively multi-standard architecture, the deployment of Alcatel’s  HSDPA  solution will require a simple software-only upgrade, all Alcatel’s Node Bs already being fully HSDPA-ready. An additional benefit of Alcatel’s  Node  Bs  is  that  they  are  perfectly suited to manage indoor traffic  and  solutions,  which  will  match the growing needs of corporate users  working  from  their  office for easier and faster access to e-mails with bulky attachments, corporate networks and intranets.

“Positioned  correctly,  HSDPA  will  further  improve  the  success of 3G, delivering  increased capability necessary to accommodate the market uptake of  high-speed  mobile  applications such as content downloads,” said Jason Chapman, Principal Analyst, Mobile Infrastructure at Gartner.

“HSDPA  is  at  the  center  of Alcatel’s user-centric broadband strategy,” declared   Marc  Rouanne,  chief  operating  officer  of  Alcatel’s  mobile activities.  “This  IOT  program  with  QUALCOMM  for  HSDPA reinforces the technological  leadership  of  Evolium multi-standard solutions that permit the cost-effective introduction of HSDPA thanks to a software-only upgrade. Our  collaboration with an innovative chipset manufacturer such as QUALCOMM will  definitely  allow  us  to  stand  at the forefront of the forthcoming 3G/HSDPA evolution.”

Since  September  2004,  Alcatel  has been successfully showcasing an HSDPA solution  in  its  3G  Reality  Centre  (3GRC)  located in Vélizy (France), together with Fujitsu, its partner in the Evolium SAS joint venture.

When an opportunity is not a problem

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By Keith Dyer at the 3GSM Congress in Cannes

The old motivational handbook had it that there were no problems, only opportunities. But when does an opportunity become a problem?

The answer may have been evident at Nokia’s headline press conference at 3GSM in Cannes, where several speakers from the Finnish mobile totem reinforced several buzzwords with the ruthless efficiency of an on-message New Labour MP with a direct feed to Alistair Campbell’s thought processes.

First among these was, yes, “opportunity”, where Nokia have decided their future lies. Here, the network equipment, handset and mobile services giant has decided that opportunity lies in emerging markets, which is fair enough, but also in mobile music, multimedia convergence and peer to peer video “sharing.” All of which may well represent several opportunities, but incredibly hard ones. Hard enough, almost, to be regarded as problems. 

One indicator of how hard Nokia has been thinking about stitching this together is the announcement of a partnership with Microsoft to integrate its Windows Media Player PC technology with Nokia’s OMA DRM and mobile compression  technologies. It was just as well that by this stage the picture of the handsome gent with what looked suspiciously like iPod headphones, used to illustrate the wonders of mobile music, had been erased from the big backscreen. Because, of course, the success of the iPod and, more importantly iTunes, has shown that mobile music download services are chiefly accessed and managed from PCs (and Macs). So now the (still, just) leading handset vendor and the PC giant have buried several hatchets over mobile OS to attack the problem of differing formats and systems between the online and mobile world.

This opportunity, the chance to crack mobile music, is proven, Nokia says, by the success of 3UK’s video jukebox service, which saw 10 million full track downloads in the six months since its launch. 3, of course, is a Nokia customer.

Another “opportunity” that has been giving Nokia plenty of pause for thought is customization. Scoring well over a dozen mentions in a speech from the head of the handsets division, Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo, customization means Nokia giving operators the chance to brand phones, and the software and applications on them. Of course, this “opportunity” for Nokia has also been a huge bloody problem for them, as ODMs fully geared only for customization have been the provider of choice for many 3G operators, including within the hallowed smartphone market. So Nokia is addressing this “opportunity” by providing one-off customizable versions of new generic phone releases. Example, the 6101, a new release from Nokia has been provided to China Mobile as the 6102, with the words China Mobile written on the plastic cover of the phone, as well as offering a branded user interface to China Mobile’s own specification.

It kicks against the grain a bit to see Nokia as an ODM, and that is because of course it isn’t, but it is making the move towards the customization “opportunity” that it sees only after years of resisting precisely that move. The process was set in chain last year when Nokia announced it would be producing Vodafone live! Themed handsets, the lack of which had kept them of that operator’s roster for 3G handsets. This trickle seems to have become a flood, and now the message of the moment is that if you are an operator and you want your own bespoke handset then why, the boys in the backroom will be only too happy to knock one up for you.

Final buzzword, and one intended to convey the new infrastructure which the new Multimedia services from the new customized handsets will exploit, is convergence. We had to stop counting the number of ‘convergence” mentions during Anssi Vanjoki, Multimedia general manager’s speech. But believe it, convergence is the key to the mobile future, and Nokia, from the handsets to the service platforms, is behind it.

For Vanjoki, the idea of convergence is an “opportunity”, but it is still a problem for the mobile world, because there is an underlying assumption that the operators and their suppliers will be able to keep the Internet genie corked. But why should they, and how could they? Nokia and Microsoft can announce all the joint ventures they like to allow users to get exactly the same customer experience on a mobile as on their home PC but the experience of internet service providers is that they then become access providers, providing and extracting little of added value. So converged, customized, devices and services may well offer a series of opportunities for Nokia, but more than a few headaches along the way as well.

Orange hails 3G results

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Says more to come

By Keith Dyer at the 3GSM Congress in Cannes

Thankfully the corporate image presented by Orange at its headline press conference, five middle aged men in dark suits and Orange ties, and one woman, is not yet imprinted on the personalities and thought processes of all its staff.

For those bred on the antics of the volcanic dust-munching Dutch founder and ceo Hans Snook, current Orange press conferences are stultifying. But between the France Telecom-speak there were a few announcements that should give suppliers and competitors pause for thought.

On the network side Orange is pushing ahead with the idea that it can be a converged broadband provider, offering users seamless access to content and services whether they are at home or out on the move. Of course, in France its home fixed network and 6,500 WiFi hotspots help in that instance. But they have also been pushing on in the UK, exploiting the Wanadoo ISP property, to integrate services between the Orange World portal abd the ISP.

It also announced that, following EDGE rollouts in Slovakia and Romania, it will be introducing EDGE in France this year, with perhaps five to ten dual mode EDGE, WCDMA handsets available by the end of the year. EDGE will give the operator “better than GPRS” coverage of 80-85% of the population by the end of the year.

Then there is HSPDA, and the operator could give no timelines but it was prepared to say it was currently trialling with Nortel an HSDPA network.

There was also emphasis on the amount of fantastic content available on the Orange World portal. This includes the Live TV service in France, which has been upgraded to include 21 channels. The success of Live TV has rather taken the operator by surprise, as it accounts for 55% of all 3G data sessions, and has proved very popular. The operator is also currently working on a DVBH version of mobile TV. Other finding of the first few tens of thousands of 3G customers in Orange also proved a very high take up of MMS and Orange World content.

So there is still much that is innovative at the operator, but the question remains how operators that provide seamless broadband connectivity will be able to control the behaviour of their users when it comes to content. The fear for operators is that they become dumb pipes, mere access providers. Having exclusive on-site content gives them a way out of this. Sanuv Ahuja reacted aggressively to the hint that Orange has a closed garden policy. “Unlike other operators’ portals, Orange World is an open ended site,” he said, “Orange absolutely does not have a walled garden philosophy. Any content can be openly accessed from our portal.” And he also pointed to Orange’s commitment to Simpay, a payment mechanism to allow users to purchase off-portal content, as evidence of their commitment to open content access.

QUALCOMM Announces Tri-Band RF Solution to Deliver Global WCDMA Roaming

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Travel the World With a Single WCDMA Device

3GSM World Congress

QUALCOMM has today announced a tri-band WCDMA (UMTS)/HSDPA and quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE (EGPRS) radioOne solution to enable true global roaming between WCDMA markets in Europe, North America and Asia. The introduction of the RFR6220(TM) receiver for 850 MHz markets adds to QUALCOMM’s commercially available RTR6250 transceiver and RFR6250 receiver.

The complete solution will provide global support for WCDMA 850/1900/2100 MHz and EGPRS 850/900/1800/1900 MHz. This integrated solution also includes support for QUALCOMM’s gpsOne position location technology. QUALCOMM’s Mobile Station Modem (MSM) MSM6255 chipset for WCDMA/EGPRS and MSM6275 chipset for WCDMA/HSDPA/EGPRS are optimized for the RTR6250, RFR6250 and RFR6220 solutions. Handset manufacturers can implement one of two RF configurations for market-specific devices: RTR6250/RFR6250 for quad-band EGPRS, dual-band WCDMA 1900/2100 MHz and gpsOne support or: RTR6250/RFR6250/RFR6220 for quad-band EGPRS, tri-band WCDMA 850/1900/2100 MHz and gpsOne support.

Engineering samples of the RFR6220 device are expected to ship in the second quarter of calendar 2005.  The RFR6250 and RTR6250 devices are commercially available today.

“We’ve added a tri-band WCDMA RF chipset to our extensive WCDMA portfolio to enable global roaming across Europe, North America and Asia,” said Dr. Sanjay K. Jha, president of QUALCOMM CDMA Technologies. “This is an industry first that further strengthens our WCDMA/HSDPA product portfolio.”

QUALCOMM’s latest radioOne configurations offer flexible design solutions to handset manufacturers developing devices for multi-tiered global markets. Handset designs that support tri-band WCDMA with the RTR6250/RFR6250/RFR6220 configuration can be reused to support single- or dual-band WCDMA by excluding the RFR6220 device — reducing parts count while maximizing development efforts to ensure cost-effective 3G solutions.

The MSM6255 chipset is a highly integrated solution for WCDMA and EGPRS networks worldwide and is optimized to deliver in-demand mainstream multimedia applications, including streaming audio and video, high-quality snapshots and location-based services.

QUALCOMM’s MSM6275 chipset solution for WCDMA/HSDPA and EGPRS provides increased processing power and graphics performance at low power consumption to enable the highest quality audiovisual and gaming graphics on cost-effective, multiband, multimode handsets with smaller form factors.

Price still our advantage, ZTE says

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Chinese vendor launches Euro tour and four WCDMA devices

By Keith Dyer at 3GSM in Cannes

Chinese manufacturer ZTE has said it will win deals with European operators in 2005 for handset supply and for 3G WCDMA and CDMA equipment

Although the vendor was unable to announce any contracts yet with European operators, aside from a trial in Spain with Telefonica, ZTE said it would be taking its 3G technology on the road, highlighting its three new W-CDMA handsets and v.3 WCDMA network infrastructure.

The vendor announced four new WCDMA products – three handsets and a PC data card. One of the these, the F808 was billed as the world’s smallest WCDMA handset. Not as trivial a differentiator as it might sound in a market which has seen consumers turned off by some clunky models.

Handset size apart it is still price upon which ZTE, like fellow country vendor Huawei, is competing in the market. Although the company played coy on the price of its handsets, it confirmed to Mobile Europe that it would be significantly cheaper than European and US rivals in terms of network equipment.

“We are very competitive,” spokesman Cheng Lin said, “It’s a native advantage of being a Chinese company that we are used to price competition.” There’s also the small matter of vastly lower labour costs, of course. But although Lin was happy to confirm that the company would make its first pitch on price, he said that cost alone would not be enough to win contracts. ZTE is well aware it needs to provide evidence of its ability to provide after sales service and support, and continuing product innovation, Lin said. But his conclusion that “Our main advantage is cost,” left it in no doubt as to what the message will be on that roadshow.

ZTE also confirmed the identity of its OEM partner for its CDMA radio technology. To no-one’s surprise the widely leaked news that Alcatel is to include ZTE CDMA technology within its CDMA solutions was confirmed by Sylvie Richir, vp of Alcatel’s broadband access product division. Richir also said that one of the first targets for Alcatel would be the 450MHz operators in the “emerging” markets in Europe. The old analogue 450Mhz band is providing a gateway for CDMA into central and eastern Europe, and Alcatel now has a play at the radio access level.

Nokia licenses Microsoft Exchange Server ActiveSync protocol for integration with Nokia’s business-optimized devices

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Nokia to provide easy wireless access to Exchange Server 2003 data, including wireless email, calendar and contacts in future mobile devices 

3GSM World Congress

Nokia’s Enterprise Solutions business group today announced that it has licensed Microsoft Corp’s Exchange Server ActiveSync protocol to enable wireless and direct synchronization between Microsoft Exchange Server, part of the Windows Server System and future Nokia enterprise mobile devices. The terms of the licensing agreement were not disclosed.

The collaboration between the two companies will allow Nokia to build a direct over-the-air synchronization link between Nokia enterprise mobile devices running on Nokia’s Series 60 and Series 80 software platforms and Microsoft Exchange Server 2003 for email and other personal information management (PIM) data, such as calendar information and contacts. By integrating the Exchange Server ActiveSync protocol into Nokia devices, enterprise customers are provided with an easy-to-use, secure, wireless email solution that is cost-effective and can be deployed quickly and easily. Nokia will continue to support the OMA Data Synchronization protocol and its own Nokia PC Suite, a local connectivity solution that utilizes OMA Data Synchronization for PCs and Nokia mobile devices.
 
“Nokia is committed to answering the broader needs of enterprises across the world by giving them access to the widest possible choice of email and PIM solutions on the market today and tomorrow,” said Mary McDowell, senior vice president and general manager, Nokia’s Enterprise Solutions business group. “Licensing this protocol provides our customers with a seamless solution for integrating our mobile devices into their back-end.”
 
“Microsoft’s goal is to deliver flexible, integrated solutions that fuel innovation for our partners and provide our customers with a variety of options to enable secure, wireless and direct synchronization to their mobile device.” said Pieter Knook, senior Vice President, Mobile and Embedded Devices Division at Microsoft Corp. “The licensing of Exchange Server ActiveSync is an example of Microsoft’s drive towards interoperable technologies that will help to lower IT costs for our customers.”
 
According to leading IT market research firm IDC, 84 percent of businesses that either already have or are planning in the next year to integrate wireless devices with corporate systems will look to deploy email first, and then follow with personal information management, calendar applications and customer relationship management or sales force automation applications at the same time or soon after. To drive broader adoption of mobile email, Nokia will provide a combination of robust email and synchronization solutions giving enterprises the ability to deploy mobile email to a wider range of users within their company. Collaboration between emerging and established email solutions players will help to speed and facilitate the adoption of enterprise application mobility.

A new era, a new energy, a new Emblaze Mobile brand

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Emblaze Mobile Launches New Branding and Business Focus

3GSM World Congress

Emblaze Mobile Ltd., the handset design and manufacturing house and a member of the Emblaze Group, is unveiling its strategy and vision to lead a new era in customised handset manufacture on its stand at the 3GSM World Congress, Cannes.

“Emblaze Mobile is all about a bold, fresh and provocative approach to a market where monoliths have caused stagnation,” said Laurence Alexander, newly appointed CEO to Emblaze Mobile. “Similar to television, the biggest killer app in the new mobile generation is – the phone itself. Our philosophy is to move swiftly with devices that have been developed to appeal to a defined market with applications, content and customised user experience that will actually make people use the phone for more than just calls and SMS. We segment the customers of our phones  not by demographic, but by attitude, desires as well as functional needs.”

Emblaze Mobile’s new focus is to deliver stylish, individual lifestyle handsets to consumers in a sophisticated market place where handsets are no longer merely a functional piece of necessary technology, but rather a desired piece of lifestyle, coupled with applications and content enablement. Emblaze Mobile aims to reshape the market with its innovation for design and usability, and to provide cool, stylish mobile devices with leading user experience in all applications beyond mere voice calls. This confident new focus was reiterated in the strong and bold branding unveiled at the show.

Alexander continued: “In the coming months Emblaze Mobile will be investing greatly to build the Emblaze brand. We will be challenging the industry to take a fresh look at the way it operates. We want to lead the industry in evolving and becoming customer focused for next generation services.”

Following months of research and focus groups, Emblaze Mobile knows what its target market wants and has developed an ongoing strategy to attack the market in a targeted way; concentrating on developing lifestyle products and software for specific people and customer types.  In building the brand, Emblaze Mobile will be single minded and aims to fit a targeted ‘image-aware’ audience, without alienating those less brand aware. Emblaze has seen that the style conscious are brand champions who drive needs, so the primary focus for the Emblaze brand is to win this audience’s heart and mind.

Emblaze Mobile has expanded its international position with headquarters in London incorporating marketing, sales and management. The recently purchased handset design and manufacturing house in Korea provides volume manufacturing capabilities, top tier mechanical and hardware design while Israel remains the technology focus for software R&D, applications and content development.

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