You are here: silicon.com > Networks > Mobile & Wireless

Mobile & Wireless

Leader: Faith in the next generation?

3G paying off as 4G arrives on the scene

Tags: 4g, 3g

By silicon.com

Published: 25 August 2005 17:50 BST

In the early days of Hutchison Whampoa rolling out 3G networks in various countries - not all that long ago but at a pretty dire time for telecoms, if you remember - there were those who considered the ventures worthless.

And when we write worthless, we don't mean without merit but simply not worth a penny.

Granted, these types weren't necessarily working at other mobile operators or even within the telecoms industry. They tended to be financiers in the City and other financial centres.

Some people in the industry are talking about 4G meaning various things - meshing different types of mobile and wireless network together, even faster speeds... but there is no consensus.

Has that situation been reversed? Has 3 won critics over? Not all that many. Some might still consider the whole pureplay third-generation idea folly. Hutch's networks around the world have at times claimed pretty high Arpus (the all-important average revenue per user) but have had little significance for business customers.

That said, we could be at something of a turning point. The company's Italian network has hit break-even and the UK might follow. An IPO then looks like the next move, say those in the know - and that most definitely does involve having a value.

The long and short of this is it wasn't that long ago that there was a stigma around most things 3G. Now today we also hear that China and Japan are to sign an agreement for 4G technology. That's right, 4G. Know what that entails? Well, if you don't, you're not alone. Some people in the industry are talking about 4G meaning various things - meshing different types of mobile and wireless network together, even faster speeds, for sure - but there is no consensus.

Japan's NTT DoCoMo, which has been at the vanguard of 3G, has been talking about 4G for some time. And companies in neighbouring South Korea have been no slouches in the mobile and wireless stakes. But China isn't a leader in this area, despite for some time boasting more individual mobile users than any other country.

The point is that both China and Japan see next-generation technologies as key and clearly see advantages in partnering.

Hutch's 'great leap' (not trying to paraphrase Mao) may just yet pay off. Our heart tells us that looking to more cutting-edge technologies must be the way forward, even if a couple of years back our head said it's better to play it safe.

  1. Zones
  2. Management
  3. Networks
  4. Software
  5. IT Services
  6. Hardware
  1. Verticals
  2. Public Sector
  3. Financial Services
  4. Retail & Leisure
Read and write about internet access at the airports of the world at atlarge.com. Be the first to rate an airport, win champagne...


Next generation networks - Unix and C programming platform - URGENT

An end to end engineer role giving a systems administrator (Unix and C coding) experience in a niche telecoms market. Working within a specialist ...

Software Engineer - C / C++, Java, UNIX / Linux - London, South East

Software Engineer - C / C++, Java, UNIX / Linux - London, South East The area: Software Engineering Google's software engineers develop the ...

Software Engineer, Mobile Applications

As such, we've designated Google's London office as one of the company's centres of excellence for mobile development. Applications Our team is ...

CIO Agenda 2008
The exclusive silicon.com CIO Agenda 2008 survey looks at the CIO's tech shopping list for the year, examines whether IT budgets are rising or falling and reveals what the pain points are for tech chiefs this year. Find out more in our latest special report.





Quick Sitemap Links: