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chokia
10-13-2006, 08:25 AM
Nokia: WiMAX Mobile Phones in 2008
By Scott M. Fulton, III, BetaNews
October 11, 2006, 3:26 PM

At a WiMAX technology conference this morning in Boston, representatives from Nokia told the press that consumers should expect to see WiMAX capable mobile devices from Nokia sometime during 2008. This news came as the company rolled out a WiMAX-enabled version of its lightweight base station, previously used just for transmitting HSDPA and W-CDMA third-generation cellular signals.

Nokia's timing is pretty much on target, since mobile carrier Sprint Nextel announced last August it intends to roll out a 4 Mbps WiMAX network by the fourth quarter of next year, as a complement to its existing W-CDMA and EV-DO services.

To that end, Intel helped out tremendously today, by formally announcing the availability of a key WiMAX system-on-a-chip (SoC), previously known as "Rosedale 2," now as WiMAX Connection 2250.
http://www.mobilewhack.com/wimax-diagram.gif
Installed in a mobile radio that includes a broadband modem, the SoC enables high-speed broadband handsets to connect to both fixed WiMAX networks, and mobile ones like those enabled by Nokia's new Flexi base station model.

At WiMAX World today, Intel executive vice president Sean Maloney touted that the number of carriers currently providing wireless broadband service worldwide now numbers 40, with the number performing trials has risen to 225. Intel will be partnering with Motorola and Clearwire to conduct a mobile WiMAX transmission test throughout the city of Portland, Oregon, throughout next year.

While carriers tend to cast WiMAX as a kind of high-speed data carrier that can be paired with existing cellular service, it’s easy to mask over the fact that a single WiMAX connection could conceivably take over the whole mobile circuit. Intel says its 2250 SoC is capable of handling a discrete WiMAX channel of up to 10 MHz bandwidth. Couple that figure with the WiMAX Forum’s recent independent estimate of spectral efficiency at 1.9 bps per hertz, and you have a system with a theoretical maximum throughput approaching 19 Mbps (WiMAX Forum admits the perceived maximum throughput today is more like 14 Mbps).

By comparison, 3x EV-DO -– which is two generations hence from what most Americans and a good chunk of Europeans consider “mobile broadband” today -– has a perceived maximum of about 4.2 Mbps, with a spectral efficiency of less than half that of WiMAX.

Intel’s news today didn’t mention Nokia, which is unusual, though perhaps just an oversight. The two companies have had a standing agreement since June 2005 to collaborate on WiMAX, and Intel SoC chips will very likely be powering Nokia WiMAX handsets. Though while Nokia has stakes in HSDPA, EV-DO, and WiMAX for wireless broadband, Intel is mainly concerned with just the latter, as the champion of that technology and perhaps the most prominent advocate in favor of its IEEE standardization.

Source:http://www.betanews.com/article/Nokia_WiMAX_Mobile_Phones_in_2008/1160593019

Needless to say Samsung already ahead of everyone else with H1000
and M8000 wiBRO phones (wibro=korean version of wiMAX)

http://img138.imageshack.us/img138/4581/l1114yy2.jpg
Source: http://www.samsung.com/PressCenter/PressRelease/PressRelease.asp?seq=20051114_0000214752

chokia
11-05-2006, 07:40 AM
London to get 'true Wimax' in January 2007

The UK Internet Service Provider Urban WIMAX has said it's planning to launch London's first 'true WIMAX' service in January next year.

Aimed primarily at small and medium-sized businesses who need to upload large amounts of data to the Net, the company is seeking to raise £3m in funding to develop its 802.16d standard service.

The service has been on free trial since April, and was due to launch this year, but has now been pushed back. They claim it will cost 30-50% less than BT's wholesale SDSL service.

The City of London Corporation had already planned a Square Mile Wi-fi mesh similar to the Norwich scheme but this sounds more akin to the Milton Keynes trial. The scope of this project is currently unknown.

Source: http://techdigest.tv/2006/11/london_to_get_t.html

chokia
11-08-2006, 10:51 AM
Nokia is looking for WiMAX ASN GW(Senior) System engineer (http://careers.nokia.com/nokia/hr/recrsyst.nsf/WB2RR/7AA304E7150A285AC2257108006194CD?OpenDocument&Lang=Global)

Position Description:

-By cooperation with system architect,product architect and system engineers ,define product architecture for ASN Gateway Control and Mgmt planes,and User plane.
-Follow the WiMAX Standardization (architecture & Protocols).
-Analyze customer requirements and make technical solutions.
-Translate technical solutions to software designs and provide technical leadership and guidance to software developers.
-Participate in the Technical Management Team of ASN GW, Drive the long term technical product strategy

Requirements:

3-5 years of experience in telecom system design & architecture, mobility applications
3 years(and above) technical leadership experience in SW design and product development
Knowledge of mobility control protocols (i.e. 2G, 3G, CDMA, WiFi,WiMAX…)
Good understanding of Broadband wireless.
Experience developing/programming complex telecom systems.
Knowledge of network and element management.
Good communication skills, good command of English.
BSCS/EE or equivalent.
Flexibility of taking international trips(<30% worktime) , participating to global workshops and events.


Business Group: Networks

Primary Function: R&D System

Location: China / Hangzhou

More Information: Yi Tony Zeng
Bryan Bajema

Click Here To Apply (http://careers.nokia.com/nokia/hr/recrsyst.nsf/)

On different note, another Wimax Slider Phone from Samsung SPH-M8100

http://image.aving.net/img/2006/11/08/20061108080840.jpg

http://image.aving.net/img/2006/11/08/20061108080841.jpg

http://image.aving.net/img/2006/11/08/200611080808417.jpg

http://image.aving.net/img/2006/11/08/200611080808418.jpg

http://image.aving.net/img/2006/11/08/200611080808419.jpg