Qualcomm chips promises 1GHz speeds in ‘mainstream smartphones,’ simultaneous HSPA+ / LTE support

Qualcomm’s Snapdragon has brought about a new wave of possibilities for smartphones, but evidently those chips are just too exclusive to slip into so-called “mainstream smartphones.” In order to remedy such a tragedy, the outfit has today introduced the MSM7x30 family of solutions, which uses an 800 MHz to 1GHz custom superscalar CPU based on the ARM v7 instruction set. The chips support 720p video encoding / decoding at 30fps, integrated 2D and 3D graphics (with support for OpenGL ES 2.0 and OpenVG 1.1), 5.1-channel surround sound, a 12 megapixel camera sensor and built-in GPS. In related news, the outfit also announced that it is sampling the industry’s first chipsets for dual-carrier HSPA+ and multi-mode 3G / LTE, which ought to make those champing at the bit for a speedier WWAN highway exceedingly giddy. Hit the links below for all the technobabble.

Read – MSM7x30 solutions
Read – Dual-carrier HSPA+ and Multi-Mode 3G/LTE chipsets

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Qualcomm chips promises 1GHz speeds in ‘mainstream smartphones,’ simultaneous HSPA+ / LTE support originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 12 Nov 2009 12:36:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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LTE Connected Car redefines the ‘mobile’ in mobile broadband (video)

If you think cellphones have become overbearingly complex, look away now. A partnership of tech companies and content providers, known as the ng Connect Program, has revealed a prototype “LTE Connected Car,” which, as you might surmise, combines 4G mobile broadband connectivity with a bunch of cloud-sourced facilities, such as video on demand, audio libraries, and multiplayer gaming. It can also serve as a Wi-Fi hotspot, connect directly to home automation or monitoring systems, and probably cook you scrambled eggs if you ask nicely. A Toyota Prius serves as the guinea pig for this new concept, and we’ve got video of the whole shebang after the break.

Read – ng Connect Program Puts Connectivity in the Fast Lane with the LTE Connected Car Concept Vehicle
Read – ng Connect Program Reveals the Long Term Evolution (LTE) Connected Car

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LTE Connected Car redefines the ‘mobile’ in mobile broadband (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 06 Nov 2009 04:53:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Global Telcos Agree on LTE Voice and SMS Standards

usb1000.jpgThis one is big: numerous big telecoms around the world have finally agreed on a standard for voice and SMS communication over upcoming LTE 4G networks.

Dubbed One Voice, the new initiative defines an optimal set of
existing 3GPP-specified functions for designing compatible LTE devices. AT&T, Orange, Telefonica, TeliaSonera, Verizon, Vodafone, Alcatel-Lucent, Ericsson, Nokia, Nokia, Samsung, and Sony Ericsson are all in on the new standards.

The point is to ensure that next-generation LTE devices don’t just offer faster Web browsing and data services, but also work together properly for voice calls and text messaging. Otherwise, the entire market could fragment–and would make the U.S.’s GSM-versus-CDMA problem look like nothing.

Verizon is widely expected to be first with LTE deployments in the U.S. sometime in the second half of 2010.

Coalition of carriers, manufacturers settles on voice standard for LTE

As much fanfare and support as it’s been getting over the past couple years, LTE’s dirty little secret is that there’s been no unified stance on how to ferry voice services over the technology; the concentration has been on data alone so far. Sure, the occasional carrier has raised concerns — and a variety of solutions have been proposed, ranging from VoIP to repurposing legacy networks for voice alone — but until now, voice has been an afterthought that everyone’s been procrastinating on solving. Fortunately, a veritable who’s-who of industry players from both the manufacturer and carrier sides of the fence have congealed this week to announce the One Voice initiative, which basically just hand-picks existing 3GPP-defined standards for voice and SMS services over LTE. Strangely missing is T-Mobile, one of the loudest voices in demanding a voice standard for LTE up until this point — but considering that AT&T, Orange, Telefonica, TeliaSonera, Verizon, and Vodafone are all on board along with Samsung, Nokia, Sony Ericsson, and others, we think they’ll have no option but to fall in line in the long term. For consumers, this means we can all breathe a sigh of relief that LTE handsets won’t be arbitrarily compartmentalized by supported voice standard, so it’s a big win any way you slice it.

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Coalition of carriers, manufacturers settles on voice standard for LTE originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 04 Nov 2009 11:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung LTE USB modem winds up in FCC database

Samsung’s made some lofty boasts regarding its LTE support before, and here we go with some official documentation of US-bound products care of the FCC. The agency’s database lists device A3LSLCU100 (catchy name, eh?) as a pre-production LTE USB modem from the company — and that’s about it. As for the usual fun of looking at over-saturated internal / external photos, good ol’ Sammy’s got a window of 180 days of confidentiality that started September 24th, so by our count, we’ve got potentially quite a while before we see something. The best we get now is this label outline above — one more, equally nondescript shot after the break, if you’re curious.

Continue reading Samsung LTE USB modem winds up in FCC database

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Samsung LTE USB modem winds up in FCC database originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 24 Oct 2009 09:09:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung and TeliaSonera bringing LTE to vikings in 2010

Scandinavian folks tend to be a pretty cheerful bunch during the summer, and now Swedes and Norwegians will have reason to smile through the cold dark winters as well, with Samsung announcing an agreement to provide TeliaSonera with “mobile broadband devices for commercial service next year.” This agreement relates to Sammy’s Kalmia 4G USB modem and adds to the Swedish operator’s LTE push, which already counts Ericsson and Huawei among the contracted hardware providers. So that’s 100Mbps mobile broadband, coming to a snow-covered nation near you within the next dozen months or so. All we would ask of our viking friends now is that they remember their world-conquering ways of the past and start spreading that goodness globally. Come on, it’s our right! Full press release after the break.

Continue reading Samsung and TeliaSonera bringing LTE to vikings in 2010

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Samsung and TeliaSonera bringing LTE to vikings in 2010 originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 22 Oct 2009 09:06:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Why the FCC’s Got AT&T and Verizon Scared Shitless

Remember net neutrality? Over a year after Comcast’s torrent-killing ways turned it into a rallying cry for chest-slapping geek solidarity, it’s back. But this time, it’s got AT&T and Verizon scared shitless—and it might actually screw us over.

A quick refresher: Net neutrality is, simply, the principle that all data gets treated the same by an ISP or service, whether it’s incoming email or HD videos of dudes getting socked in the nuts by a 4-year-old on YouTube. A real-world example of very non-neutral behavior would be what got Comcast slapped by the FCC: specifically sabotaging torrents.

Theoretically, this could go beyond policing piracy, for instance if, say, Time Warner competitively blocked or slowed down Hulu, or if Verizon struck a deal with Google to give its data priority over traffic from Bing, so people using Google would get a way better experience than people using Bing. Streaming video is a not-so-coincidental theoretical example, since the explosion of video traffic is what the ISPs say is swallowing up all of the internet.

The end result of the threat of government-mandated net neutrality regulations for ISPs was a mixed “win” for consumers: AT&T, Comcast and Time Warner all responded with monthly data caps on their internet service in at least some of their markets. (Comcast limited it in all markets.)

As for the FCC telling ISPs to be more explicit about network management practices, Comcast started straight-up telling people heavy internet users would have their entire connections slowed down. While they suck for consumers, these are all “net neutral” practices, since no particular kind of data is discriminated against. The net neutrality debate fizzled down, though in some ways people were worse off than before.

With a new president, comes a new FCC chair, Julian Genachowski. Unlike his predecessor, who regularly reamed the cable industry but was a little too snuggly with the telecoms and against “hard and fast” net-neutrality rules, Genachowski is all about rules for everybody. Including the wireless carriers.

As you’re probably well aware, mobile broadband is treated way differently than the internet that’s piped into your house. It’s considered fragile. There’s far less of it to go around, with a less developed infrastructure and limited wireless spectrum to use. The rules for using it are tighter, like dating a nun. Restrictions abound, like no p2p. You don’t want the network to break, after all. That’s why, for instance, AT&T previously blocked Skype and SlingPlayer from running on 3G on the iPhone—and continues to block Sling—and why Apple rejects every torrent app that even tries to cross into the App Store.

In the past weeks, Genachowski has made it clear that he thinks that should change, that openness should “apply to the Internet however accessed.” He’s not saying they shouldn’t be able to manage the network to make sure it runs smoothly, to be clear. But if you were scratching your head about why AT&T conceded and opened their network up to VoIP on the iPhone, look no further than this nugget from Genachowski, from a speech he gave three weeks ago:

We’ve already seen some clear examples of deviations from the Internet’s historic openness. We have witnessed certain broadband providers unilaterally block access to VoIP applications (phone calls delivered over data networks)…”

AT&T very much does not want the government to tell it how to run its networks, particularly the mobile one. AT&T Mobility CEO Ralph de la Vega this week responded pretty clearly to the FCC’s plans:

“Before we begin ‘fixing’ what isn’t broken, we need to be thoughtful about the consequences. We believe the marketplace today is vibrant, and there is no need to burden the mobile Internet with onerous new regulations.”

So what’s going to happen?

Well, the FCC is clear about what it thinks. This week, at a wireless telecom conference, Genachowski reiterated that net neutrality should apply to mobile broadband too. If those regulations pass, we’ll likely see the same thing we saw with the landline providers: Caps (not just on 3G cards like there are now) and “transparent” network management. Goodbye unlimited mobile broadband like the iPhone has. You will pay for every ounce of data that you use. And if you’re “crowding” the network by downloading a bunch of stuff, you’re gonna get slowed down because that’s the easy “net neutral” way to keep users in check. How much better is that, really?

So iPhone users, enjoy your “unlimited” wireless connections now. Pay-per-byte data—for both wired and wireless broadband networks—may well be the road we’re going down. Verizon is the last major landline broadband provider who has held back from capping or throttling its services (looove my FiOS), but even its CTO says that eventually, “we are going to reach a point where we will sell packages of bytes.”

Hopefully those packages will come cheap.

FCC says there’s a ‘looming spectrum crisis’

“What happens when every wireless user has an iPhone, a Palm Pre, or a BlackBerry Tour?” Speaking at CTIA Wireless IT & Entertainment in San Diego today, FCC head Julius Genachowski has said that he wants to “close the spectrum gap” — the difference between the spectrum it’s making available for wireless data versus enormous usage projections (400 petabytes a month by 2013, he says) that’ll be brought about by smarter, easier-to-use devices and ubiquitous high-speed data through a handful of initiatives including the promotion of the smart use of existing spectrum through the use of femotcells, WiFi, and smart antennas, and — more importantly — reallocation of existing spectrum. Genachowski says there are “no easy pickings” for reallocation, but the Commission is aggressively pursuing additional airspace that can help keep 4G rollouts on track. He’s gone on to say that they’ll be adopting the widely-discussed “shot clock” policy for placement of new towers, giving locales a limited window to protest placement of cell sites that’ll help spread 4G services over wider footprints. The guy seems genuinely concerned about keeping 4G rollouts rolling, so let’s see just how far the guys in Washington are willing to go to do that.

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FCC says there’s a ‘looming spectrum crisis’ originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 07 Oct 2009 13:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Verizon: LTE rollout to be ‘as close to all-at-once as possible’

Historically, wireless rollouts have been miserably long, protracted affairs that take countless years to complete, but Verizon’s talking in some really aggressive terms as it moves to LTE. The company wants to be at or near 100 percent overlay with its legacy CDMA footprint by 2013, but a ton of major markets will be covered and commercially well before then — up to 30 in 2010. Speaking in an interview this week, Verizon Wireless CTO Tony Melone has reiterated that the company is still on track with its LTE deployment — music to our ears — and that they’re not looking to “tease” customers at length with trial deployments that would require moving cross-country to enjoy. They’re looking to establish a “significant footprint” out of the gate, which is allegedly made possibly in part by the LTE equipment’s ability to share some infrastructure (backhaul equipment, for instance) with the CDMA network it’ll be joining in cell sites around the country. Now, how about those USB LTE modems, Verizon?

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Verizon: LTE rollout to be ‘as close to all-at-once as possible’ originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 25 Sep 2009 15:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen sells LTE spectrum to AT&T

Here’s one straight from the depths of left field. If you’ll recall, Microsoft’s co-founder Paul Allen was considering buying a bit of spectrum from the 700MHz auction after founding Vulcan Spectrum LLC. Evidently, the guy’s bid ended in a win, but he’s obviously not so keen on getting in on the flagging MVNO business. According to a document filed with the FCC, Allen has agreed to sell the licenses he owns — which cover sections of Oregon and Washington — to AT&T, though the carrier isn’t disclosing financial terms. According to AT&T spokesman Michael Coe, the company is making the purchase to “meet customer demand and to support its transition to LTE.” Unfortunately, Mr. Allen wasn’t available to say what he was planning to do with the proceeds, though we did hear that one Kayne West was available to reiterate his belief that LTE was the best of all time.

[Via phonescoop]

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Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen sells LTE spectrum to AT&T originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 17 Sep 2009 14:17:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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