The youth of America may be fickle, but if U.S. wireless carriers want to tap into this lucrative market, they must adopt some unconventional business models, according to IDC.
New Cell Phones Aim to Connect Standards
MiTAC Set to Launch F
New Cell Phones Aim to Connect Standards
Cell phone maker
Kyocera unveiled its first handset Tuesday that uses Qualcomms GSM1x
technology, which is used to bridge two cell phone standards that are not
interoperable. Qualcomm created GSM1x so cell phone carriers that use the
worlds most popular standard, Global System for Mobile Communications
(GSM), could also install Qualcomms cell phone technology in their
networks. GSM and Qualcomms "1x" cell phone standards are usually
incompatible. Short for CDMA20001xrtt, 1x is built on the CDMA standard.
The handset, based on Kyoceras KZ850 model, will "immediately" become
part of Chinese carrier China Unicoms ongoing GSM1x trial, Qualcomm said. Read the full story on:
CNET News.comMiTAC Set to Launch First Intel-Based Mobile Phone
Personal computer heavyweights Microsoft and Intel will have their first
jointly designed mobile phone hit the market this autumn, as shown to
consumers by Taiwans MiTAC on Tuesday. It will be the first mobile phone
to use a chipset by Intel, the worlds largest semiconductor maker. MiTAC,
a computer maker expanding into handheld devices, showed the new model
8380 on its Mio Web Site. Mio is the
brand name MiTAC uses. It will play music and video, send email, snap
pictures and keep a diary, alongside the ability to make voice calls. Read the full story on:
Yahoo! NewsNew Protocol Helps Boost Wi-Fi SalesThe
market for IEEE 802.11 wireless LAN equipment continued growing in the
second quarter, driven in part by users embracing the recently
standardized 802.11g technology. Worldwide unit shipments of 802.11 gear,
also generally known as Wi-Fi, grew 6 percent from the first quarter,
though falling prices limited revenue growth to 2 percent, according to
Greg Collins, an analyst at DellOro Group, which compiled the quarterly
figures. The market as a whole generated revenue of $419 million in the
quarter, the market research company said. Read the full story on:
InfoWorldNumber Portability a Cash CowSome cell phone
companies appear poised to profit off a new fee that covers the cost of
enabling customers to switch wireless services without giving up their
phone numbers. The fee, permitted by the federal government, is already
being levied by four national carriers and is generally less than $1 per
month. And in certain cases, the money being collected appears to exceed
the actual cost of meeting a November deadline set by the Federal
Communications Commission for "number portability". Although costs surely
vary among the different companies, government officials and industry
analysts say there is little reason to expect those expenses to vary
widely as the carriers upgrade systems and create verification processes
similar to those that long-distance phone companies use when a customer
switches from one service to another. Read the full story on:
MSNBCCarriers Must Think Young, Study SaysThe
youth of America may be fickle, but if U.S. wireless carriers want to tap
into this lucrative market, they must adopt some unconventional business
models, according to IDC. The research firm estimates that overall
consumer growth will dissipate from 7.6 percent in 2003 to 0.3 percent by
2007, but the next frontier in growth could be youth and young adults
(ages 13 to 24). The youth market is virtually untapped, with only 28
percent of consumers ages 13 to 19 having their own wireless devices.
Leading the pack, according to IDC, are Virgin Mobile and Boost Mobile.
Virgin was one of the first companies to offer pay-as-you-go plans,
without a contract to sign. Read the full story on:
WirelessWeek.com