gsm evolution to 3g

11
GSM Evolution to 3G Erasmo Rojas Director of Latin America and the Caribbean 3G Americas AHCIET Latin American Conference at CTIA Wireless 2005, March 16, 2005

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Page 1: GSM Evolution to 3G

GSM Evolution to 3G

Erasmo RojasDirector of Latin America and the

Caribbean3G Americas

AHCIET Latin American Conference at CTIA Wireless 2005, March 16, 2005

Page 2: GSM Evolution to 3G

1GAnalog Digital

Voice

2G

3G+2.5G

Voice

Greater Network Capacity

Improved Voice

Quality

Data Transmissio

n

Always-On Connectivity

via Packet Data Technology

GSM

EDGE

UMTS - WCDMA/HSDPA

GPRS

GSM Evolution Path to 3G

1984-1996+

1992-2000+

2001

Packet Data

Multimedia

Super High Speed Data

Increased

Capacity

2002-2005+

TDMA

Page 3: GSM Evolution to 3G

Source document: Rysavy Research Document, DATA CAPABILITIES: GPRS TO HSDPA, August 19, 2004

Data Capacity Comparisons

Peak Network Downlink

Speed

Average User Throughputs for File Downloads

Capacity Other Features

GPRS 115 kbps 30 – 40 kbps

EDGE 473 kbps 100 – 130 kbps Double that of GPRS Backward compatible with GPRS

UMTS - WCDMA

2Mbps 220 - 320 kbps Increased over EDGE for high-bandwidth applications

Simultaneous voice and data operation, enhanced security, QoS, multimedia support, and reduced latency

UMTS - HSDPA 14 Mbps 550-1100 kbps Two and a half to three and a half times that of WCDMA

Backward compatible with WCDMA

CDMA2000 1XRTT

153 kbps 50-70 kbps

CDMA2000 1XEV-Data Optimized (DO)

2.4 Mbps 300-500 kbps Optimized for data, VoIP in development

Page 4: GSM Evolution to 3G

Throughput wars are meaningless; the Customer Experience is what counts Customer Experience depends on:

The application design (e.g. chattiness, size of transfers) The product of throughput and latency of the network

Throughput

Latency

HighLow

Low

High

Applicatio

n Perform

ance

Equivalent Performance Contour

Mobile Broadband: Defining Performance

Page 5: GSM Evolution to 3G

The plot of the throughput and latency performance of the competitive technologies are shown

Throughput

Latency

HighLow

Low

High

GPRS20-40 kbps600 msec

The customer experience: wireless mobile broadband

UMTS delivers today a mobile broadband performance comparable to anything in the market

EDGE100-130 kbps600-900 msec

1xRTT40-70 kbps300-500 msec

EDGE R4100-130 kbps 300-500 msec

EDGE with R4 is equivalent in latency and superior in bandwidth to 1xRTT

UMTS220-320 kbps150-250msec

EVDO300-500 kbps250-350 msec

Page 7: GSM Evolution to 3G

Brazil 3/2004(America Movil)

Chile 10/2003

1st Launch 6/2003

Argentina 4/2004(America Movil)

11/03 Barbados, Cayman, Bermuda, Puerto Rico and US Virgin Islands (2004)

Canada, 7/2004

Mexico 7/2004

Venezuela 10/2004

10/04

Mexico 10/2004 (America Movil)

EDGE Launches in the Americas

23 operators 16 countries!

TIM Brasil 1/2004

02/05

Updated 2/2005

EDGE

Chile 08/2004

Colombia 03/2005

Paraguay 10/04Paraguay 06/04

Uruguay 01/05

Bolivia 08/04

Page 8: GSM Evolution to 3G

UMTS deployments in the Americas

July 2004

Launched in DetroitPhoenix

San FranciscoSeattle

Sept 2004Launched

in Dallas

San Diego

May 26, 2004Cingular Taps

Lucent for WCDMA/HSDPA

Trial Network

Cingular expected to launch HSDPA

End 2005 – Early 2006

Page 9: GSM Evolution to 3G

Cingular Wireless plans to launch UMTS/HSDPA in 15 - 20 markets

by end 2005Speeds

between 400-700 kbps! Twice the speed of UMTS!

Streaming High-

Definition TV to mobile

users

HSDPA PC Cards Available end

2005In 2006, 3% of all UMTS devices will support HSDPA

Over half of all UMTS devices will be

HSDPA-enabled by 2010

Source: Strategy Analytics forecast, Jan 2005

Page 10: GSM Evolution to 3G

Global UMTS Network StatusMarch 1, 2005

Networks in Service 64

Pre-Commercial 8

Planned/In Deployment 47

Trial 14

License Awarded 10

Potential License 23

Page 11: GSM Evolution to 3G

Erasmo Rojas

Director, Latin America & Caribbean

3G Americas

[email protected]

Office: 972 516 4213

Thank you!