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FMC will find a home

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If last year's promises of fixed-mobile convergence deployments are to be believed, 2007 will be the year FMC finally finds a home. European carriers like the U.K.'s O2, British Telecom and France's Orange have already announced some details about their planned FMC launches this year. O2 has even made the bullish move to deploy femtocells to extend 3G coverage in the home, in lieu of using a technology like Kineto's UMA to make the connection. Femtocells used for FMC could have an added bonus: Current Analysis has suggested that carriers with cable MSO partnerships, like Sprint, are more likely to deploy femtocells in the home because the extended 3G coverage will make using multimedia services far more fluid. Femtocells, after all, would offload traffic onto the DSL provider, sometimes a cable MSO, so an inexpensive network licensing deal with them would be necessary to make the pricepoints work.

While I don't expect any of the big four U.S. carriers to deploy an FMC solution this year, we should see plenty of trials by year-end. Agressive MVNOs like Helio are also likely to launch FMC services this year, but the majority of deployments for 2007 will be in Europe.  

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Re: FMC
Just a historical note:
When US WEST launched its wireless services it included a single number service for both the land-line and wireless, called the wireless link; the two lines also shared a voice mail. Calls from either to the common (land-line number) would automatically be routed to the other. When an external caller called the land-line number, the call was first routed to the wireless if the set was on, if unanswered (or handset off) it would then be routed to the land-line and eventually to voice mail.

T-Mobile has already deployed a UMA solution, albeit in a limited area. Given that and the fact that Nokia, Motorola, and Samsung have UMA handset offerings, isn't there a good chance we'll see something more widely deployed this year? And let's not forget Sprint Nextel's attempt at an FMC solution.

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