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HSPA and LTE to dominate by 2012, says Ericsson CTO

Around 80 per cent of mobile broadband services will be enabled by HSPA and LTE technologies by 2012, with WiMAX only managing to gain a lowly 4 per cent of the market over the same period, said Ericsson's senior VP and CTO, Hakan Eriksson.

While mobile operators using W-CDMA, CDMA 2000 and TD-SCDMA are all expected by Eriksson to migrate to LTE-enabled services in the future, the Ericsson executive also claims WiMAX service operators, such as Clearwire, have also decided to adopt LTE. With WiMAX and LTE technologies compatible in some areas, Taiwan-based WiMAX equipment makers should accelerate their development of LTE-enabled products, leveraging their WiMAX expertise, Eriksson urged.

The latest figures from the GSA show more than 20 mobile operators around the world have already committed to LTE deployment, while 171 commercial HSPA networks are already in operation.

One of the key players affecting the speed of LTE adoption, Verizon Wireless, is set to announce the network vendors it will be working with at this week's Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. The company has been trialling the technology in conjunction with Vodafone, and is said to have told vendors the network needs to be running this year.

For more on this story:
itwire
, Digitimes and engadget 

Related stories:
AT&T reiterates: LTE a long way off 
24 million subscribers to use 3G LTE technology for mobile broadband services by 2012,
Vodafone head sees LTE as an umbrella standard 
Samsung developing own baseband for LTE and WiMAX

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Comments

Why do you persist in reporting the spin of this firm who has every incentive to mke sure that LTE in some fashion is positioned as the primary 4G vendor?
HSPA+ will give it major competition over the next few years as it (LTE) struggles to stabilize after a premature release forced by the success of WiMAX and AT&T commitment to stay with its successful HSPA line of product.
Lets get some input from others in the industry (analyst) who do not have to justify their singular investment in one technology.

Jim A

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