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    Belgacom Global Mobile Village

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    People’s new ability to communicate has changed the world. Mobility and global reach are shortening distances, constantly breaking down barriers and irreversibly collapsing entire continents, nations and cities into communities of nomads spanning across the globe. Our planet has indeed evolved into a  Global Mobile Village.

    Since its creation, Belgacom Carrier & Wholesale has been at forefront of International Communications, acting as catalyst for growth in terms of traffic and reach. The mission of Belgacom Carrier & Wholesale has not changed: enabling global interworking among networks across all possible communication standards. As the world of communication is turning mobile, Belgacom Carrier & Wholesale renews its commitment to the world of communication, having developed a comprehensive value proposition for Mobile Operators.
    “Belgacom Global Mobile Village” is the brand name of a distinctive portfolio of Carrier Services tailored upon Mobile Operators’ needs. It comprises a wide variety of service capabilities and building blocks encompassing infrastructure, global connectivity and value added services, all designed to provide real benefits in terms of increased contribution from traditional services, such as voice, and in terms of key competitive advan-tage from a faster and more cost effective international coverage for new data services, such as MMS and GPRS roaming.

    Belgacom Global Mobile Village helps Mobile Operators to reach their growth target while improving profitability. This is because our product and services are cost effective multilateral platforms, designed to deliver quality, while managing complexity and reducing time to market.

    Belgacom Voice First Class Mobile with its unique assured CLI feature allows for increased inbound and outbound roaming revenue, as well as facilitating retention of value customers. The assured CLI feature is an out of band two-way CLI transmission between Mobile Operators and Belgacom.

    Belgacom STP/SCCP Transit enables high-quality Voice and SMS roaming to more than 400+ mobile networks worldwide, including ANSI IS41 networks. Customers benefit form dedicated project team for implementation, round the clock pro-active monitoring and highly skilled technical support backed by industry standard SLA. Several new pricing models are available to lower Mobile Operators cost of ownership with existing International SS7 providers.
    Belgacom GRX connects more GPRS networks that ever before. Its number of directly connected GPRS network has doubled in recent months, so has the number of peering agreements (17), bringing the total number of reachable GPRS networks to 120+. New Mobile Operators in Europe, Asia and Africa have chosen Belgacom GRX for its reliability, its competitive pricing as well as for its  on-line performance monitoring tool with its unique AS2AS reporting features that allows mobile operators to monitor real time traffic patterns by roaming partner.

    Belgacom SMS/MMS Transit is the ultimate answer to Mobile Operators’ needs for extended international messaging coverage to benefit from the expected growth in messaging while gaining competitive advantage. SMS Transit, and its future MMS evolution, offers unrivalled international coverage with 600+ destinations across all wireless standards, mobile number portability support, delivery receipt integrity and last but not least advanced SMS firewalling capabilities which, in combination with SCCP Transit filtering, provides bullet proof protection against spamming and unsolicited messages.

    Company profile

    Belgacom Carrier & Wholesale is the carrier division of the Belgacom group. It is a major global carrier, dedicated to serving the needs of fixed, mobile and Internet operators. Belgacom Carrier & Wholesale has the right credentials to be a trusted partner of mobile operators thanks to its unique financial stability, its potential for growth and its extended experience in transit business.

    Olympic challenge

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    Greek operator Cosmote is gearing up for a major promotional campaign when the Olympic Games come to the country next year.

    As it prepares for a mass influx of visitors during the 15 days of the games, the operator has signed 280 roaming agreements in 130 countries and hopes to have GPRS roaming available later this year. 3G services are planned for 2004 in time for the event.
    As an official sponsor of the games, the operator is hoping to cash in both on roamers and on increasing the number of subscribers in Greece.
    “The Olympic brand is the best known brand in the world,” said Katerina Koutsaftike, Cosmote’s products expert. “We want to participate actively in all the Olympic activities, including things that have already started.”
    These include a roadshow touring Greece at the moment with a booth that lets people send SMS messages to the athletes and a contest with top prizes of trips to the games including tickets, travel and accommodation. The operator is also doing co-promotions with handset maker Samsung.
    “Though we are doing specific services for the event,” said Koutsaftike, “we are concentrating on reusable services. We are putting a lot of effort and we don’t want this just operating for 15 days.”

    Location service to rival GPS

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    Verilocation, an automatic mobile phone location service, which uses information from the UK’s mobile networks to locate users, has gone live and already has over a thousand users.

    Accurate to within 100 metres Verilocation allows businesses to have a ‘GPS type’ location capability without the need for specialist equipment, contracts or software. Provided as a simple pay-as-you-go Web service, companies pay an initial registration fee and thereafter UKP0.20 per search, purchased by buying credits online.
    Verilocation is primarily aimed at companies with staff or assets travelling out and about but for whom GPS is not viable.
    According to Verilocation, the service offers a ‘much more cost-effective solution than GPS.’ It links the mobile phone user to the underlying road network and displays the information in an easy-to-understand visual format using the on-screen map. The service is accessed via the web.
    The basic service plots the position of the mobile phone, whilst more advanced applications involving resource allocation, automatic despatch, routing and activity analysis, are also under development.

    Retailer becomes service provider

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    One of Scandinavia’s largest retail groups, Reitan Group is to acquire the region’s largest mobile service provider Sense Communications following agreement by the respective boards on the terms of a final cash offer.

    Reitan Group believes it can strengthen Sense Communications’ existing share of the Scandinavian mobile phone market, principally by using Reitan’s 2,109 stores as increased distribution opportunities and greater branding focus. In addition, Reitan’s channels of distribution are expected to reduce customer acquisition costs, while its existing pre-paid services will  now be complemented by a post-paid offering.
    Commenting on the offer, Magnus Reitan, Chief Financial Officer of Reitan Group, said, “Sense Communications is an established business with a large and loyal customer base.  Reitan Group is confident that its existing infrastructure will provide an ideal opportunity to further expand the customer base and grow into new markets.  Reitan believes that the deal offers a good commercial opportunity both for Sense Communications shareholders and the Reitan Group. After completion of the acquisition Reitan’s mobile customer base will be in excess of 235,000, representing nearly 10% of the Norwegian market.”

    Content delivery toolkit

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    To meet the demands of a growing mobile content publishing market Nokia has launched an updated Mobile Internet Toolkit (version 4.0).

    This incorporates Open Mobile Alliance DRM version 1.0. Including the content publishing feature to protect the intellectual property value of applications and content is in line with a recent report from Zelos Group, which highlights integrated support for digital rights management as a crucial concern for developers and publishers.
    Other improvements to the toolkit include an update manager for new tools available through the Forum Nokia website and extra support for non-Latin character encoding for Oriental and Arabic language content creation. MMS wizards also further creation in different modes, including automatic generation from SMIL content and step-by-step part selection. Lee Epting, vp and gm of Forum Nokia, stressed the increased DRM would improve “ability to generate revenues” and “make it very easy to begin developing” content on wireless networks.

    GSM to take to the skies

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    The mobile phone and air travel have long been seen as mutually exclusive but this situation is set to change according to Mike Fitzgerald, ceo of Altobridge.

    The company has created a mobile management unit — a software platform which manages a mini, on-board mobile network made up specially designed base stations smaller than pico cells. Fitzgerald explained that the safety worries about EMC and interference come primarily from the power levels associated with public mobile networks. However, he said, “In GSM, the network dictates the power levels and therefore you need a solution that monitors and manages the RF and that is what our solution does.”
    Just exactly what power levels don’t interfere with the aircraft systems is still unclear.  The standard GSM level of around 2W is banned but Fitzgerald explained, the Altobridge management platform has operated at 100–200mW in tests, a level resulting from the comparatively small area and simple RF propagation involved. Unlike standard GSM, the signal does not need to, and in fact is designed not to penetrate the aircraft’s chasis and works on line of sight.
    In addition, Altobridge is working with the European and North American aviation authorities to create a system that is safe, something which, Fitzgerald suggested, is not the case today. Many phones are left on in error at the moment causing a safety risk, as could interference from terrestrial networks on the ground which the system also monitors, he claimed. Furthermore, the market is now right for the technology to take off.
    The mobile and airline industries have been through the most testing years in their histories and both are looking for ways to increase revenues in mature and competitive markets. According to Fitzgerald, this provides a compelling business case. “The business model is based on the fact that GSM volumes will drive the price down. Initially, the service will be offered in first and business classes, but everyone involved is working on the presumption of diminishing returns as volume increases…the goal is for prices around USD2 per minute.”
    These rates are significantly lower than those offered by the satellite phones currently installed in aircraft. Although the Altobridge system uses satellite for backhaul, Fitzgerald stated that the volumes GSM offers provides a bargaining position for lower backhaul rates, while the management platform minimises the satellite bandwidth used.
    Fitzgerald stated that Altobridge has a clear advantage over competitors looking to provide similar systems as it has a real product ready for trial, while he suggested the business case was fundamentally stronger than those of competitive technologies. “The WLAN connection being trialled by Boeing and Lufthansa is priced at around USD30 per subscriber, while for the cost of installing that system on a single aircraft, 7–10 aircraft could be equipped with our platform.”
    The system is being trialled in the US and Fitzgerald sees the business jet market in the US as the first target. However, he suggested that there was “no reason to delay entry into the European market,” and that the speed of rollout would be dictated by the availability of funding and the regulatory environment.

    Motorola’s code for GPRS success

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    As Europe’s incumbent 2G operators look to make the most of their investment in GPRS, Motorola’s decision to deliver infrastructure capable of supporting Coding Schemes 3 and 4 defined within the GPRS specifications, now looks like a prudent one and could provide the company with a significant market advantage.

    The point of CS3 and 4 is that they deliver faster throughput, the value of which becomes greater as many commercial rollouts of UMTS are pushed further into the future or into smaller geographical areas. Combined with Motorola’s compression techniques, CS4 delivers throughput at up to 21kbit/s per timeslot including overheads and around 16kbit/s when the overheads have been taken into consideration. This compares to 8–9kbit/s for CS2 (minus overheads).
    For many of the current GPRS terminals which offer four slot downstream transmission, CS4 equates to a realistic throughput of 64kbit/s (depending of course on cell capacity) which Laith Sadiq, director of marketing strategy for Motorola’s GTSS group suggested, “is a key speed. With this, GPRS can handle 90% of data requirements for the next few years.”
    Sadiq refuted the suggestion that Motorola’s interest in CS3/4 was due to its relative failure to make an impact on the European UMTS market, “It is in Motorola’s interests that 3G is launched in Western Europe,” he said. Sadiq further explained, “Operators expect more from GSM/GPRS than they thought two or three years ago. This is providing a rational business case for CS3–4 and we can deliver it now.”
    The software required to upgrade Motorola infrastructure for CS3/4 has been on the market for a year and so far has be delivered to six commercial networks in the Europe, Middle East and Africa region, with a further eight or nine trialling the system. However, those operators with infrastructure from other providers face a more difficult task. “We expect most vendors to support this functionality but a separate hardware upgrade may be required,” said Sadiq.

    Huawei identifies 3G opportunity in Europe

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    The second round of 3G contract awards and build outs will provide Chinese vendor Huawei with a real opportunity to break into the European market, according to the company’s assistant managing director, Soeren Puerschel.

    “Huawei has advanced 3G technology and is not behind as it was with GSM,” he said.
    Huawei, which has established a dominant position in its home market, has a broad communications portfolio within which it offers the full spectrum of 3G wireless technologies — W-CDMA, cdma2000 and TD-SCDMA.
    However, Puerschel identified the company’s expertise in other areas such as optical networking, data comms and value-added services, as central to Huawei’s market positioning. He explained, “Huawei has always been at the cutting edge of technology. The problem for us has been that we are not so established in Europe.
    “We have had to build this up first.  The slow down in the market has allowed us to develop and we are now very well positioned to deliver 3G infrastructure and service support in Europe.”
    He continued, “Europe is much more open to new vendors than it was a few years ago. We have proven interoperability with all other major vendors and are committed to providing operators with the right solution.”
    In concrete terms this means a W-CDMA product roadmap that saw a second version of the company’s Release 99 products launched in Q4 last year, while its first Release 4 products are soon to be released. Furthermore, Puerschel explained that Huawei has a strong hand when it comes to the new services that are now rolling out. The company has installed a national MMS platform for China Mobile designed for 100 million users, something which Puerschel explained gives Huawei “huge experience in high level, high volume MMS solutions.”
    Puerschel concluded that he expects Huawei to make concrete moves in Europe, in terms of contracts for its wireless network or services infrastructure before Telecom 2003 in October.

    Vodafone reports Live! data growth

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    Vodafone results for the year ending 31 March 2003 showed increased turnover, albeit including figures from Japanese operations.

    Losses slowed and 11% customer growth was reported, including the addition of over a million subscribers to the Vodafone Live! service. The revenues from data services also rose to UKP3,622million, as did mobile business propor-tionate EBITDA margins.
    Eight new partner network agreements, the launch of Mobile Office (secure, remote laptop connection using GPRS data cards and software) and new services like GPRS roaming elicited a confident assessment of operating performance from coo, Julian Horn-Smith.
    “We have laid the foundation for profitable growth and success in the years ahead,” he predicted, as outgoing chief executive Sir Christopher Gent handed over control.

    WLAN prices to free fall

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    The cost of 802.11 wireless LAN equipment is set for a dramatic fall following the announcement that the makers of the key chipsets will cut their prices by about 75% in the next year.

    The chipsets cost about USD16 today, but this could fall to only UD4 by this time next year, making the cost of manufacturing WLAN cards cheaper.
    John Kirby, vice-president for global wireless at IBM, said the fall in price was being caused by higher volumes rather than any technical innovation.
    “If you look at the volumes today they are very small, but look at the volumes you are going to see,” he said at the Mobile Enterprises exhibition in London in June. “Prices will halve within 18 months.”
    However, he said for WLAN to take off, issues such as the different ways to connect in different places had to be sorted out.
    “Technically this is not difficult,” he said, “We need to get the companies to agree. And to agree whether you pay by time or volume.”

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