3G? 4G? WiMAX? 802.20? Do We Need Them All?

7/28/2004  

http://www.wirelessdesignonline.com/content/news/article.asp?DocID=%7b51233B4F-DEFD-4EC1-AE3A-720A2B013C88%7d&Bucket=Current%20Headlines&VNETCOOKIE=NO

Oyster Bay, NY -- Last week, AT&T Wireless debuted
UMTS services in Detroit, Phoenix, San Francisco, and
Seattle. Based on technologies shared with Japan's NTT
DoCoMo, these are, says the company, the first
commercially available 3G UMTS services available in
the United States.

That's good news, but is it the whole story? The
wireless industry is basing its market strategy on the
assumption of an evolution to 4G services, possibly
based on orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing
(OFDM). NTT DoCoMo expects to roll out its first 4G
services in Japan within three years.

Smooth high-speed video and other forms of high-speed
data are among the central benefits 4G proponents are
touting, and are important reasons for its
development. Yet, there are 3G networks delivering
them already. WiMAX promises to do the same. So is the
need for 4G inevitable?

According to ABI Research's VP of research, Edward
Rerisi, it's all about subscriber numbers and demand.
Compared to present-day 3G, fourth generation
technologies, he says, will be able to provide many
more customers with these rich-media experiences at
the same time.

It's all a question of the level of demand for
data-based services, and there will be a wide variety
to choose from. Some users may want video; some may
transfer multi-megapixel images and still others might
find location-based services, enterprise applications,
or any of the other sophisticated data-based offerings
more compelling.

"In any case," adds Rerisi, "when consumer demand
accelerates, the true value of '4G' will be revealed."

ABI Research's report "Broadband Wireless -- Last Mile
Solutions" examines the technical features of these
technologies and the complex dynamics of this market.

Source: ABI Research 




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