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3G services on trial run in 8 cities
Beijing—China Mobile, the
country’s largest cellphone operator, will next week launch the
pre-commercial service of third generation (3G) mobile phone telephony
based on a home-grown standard. The roll-out of the pre-commercial
service, which is seen as a prelude to the formal licensing of 3G mobile
technologies in the country, means the government might be able to
fulfill its promise of providing 3G services during the upcoming
Olympics, which provide faster downloading speed and mobile Internet
access.
TD-SCDMA competes with Europe-initiated WCDMA and US-backed CDMA 2000.
Unlike the two rival foreign standards, TD-SCDMA has yet to be
commercially deployed. It has been tested by the government and
operators for a long time, which is believed to have continuously
delayed 3G licensing in the country.The latest pre-commercial launch
could be crucial to Chinese technology, which industry observers believe
still needs a lot of technical improvements to compete with WCDMA and
CDMA2000.
“I think China’s TD-SCDMA still has at least one year to go before it
becomes a mature technology,” said Wang Yuquan, president of Frost &
Sullivan China, a marketing consultant. “There are many technical
defects and problems to be solved during the pre-commercial tests.”
Although the government has yet to decide when to license the 3G
technologies and which standards operators should adopt, there have been
growing signs China Mobile could be mandated to adopt TD-SCDMA though
fixed-line carriers China Telecom and China Netcom are also running TD-SCDMA
trial networks.
Gao Songge, spokesman for China Mobile Communications Corp (CMCC),
parent of Hong Kong-listed China Mobile Ltd, said a newly-established
subsidiary will take over the pre-commercial services and network tests,
noting that it will not affect the business performance of the mobile
operator.
China Mobile started building its first TD-SCDMA test network in Xiamen,
Fujian province, in 2006. Last year it expanded the network into
Beijing, Shanghai, Tianjin, Shenyang, Guangzhou, Shenzhen and
Qinhuangdao with an investment of over 20 billion yuan ($2.85 billion).
Gao said the current TD-SCDMA trial network could support up to 8
million users. But he declined to disclose how long the pre-commercial
service will last or how many users are expected to sign up for the
service.—Xinhua |