News
Virgin brings WiMAX to Russia
19 May 2008
A Swiss based telecom holding company, Trivon, has formed a partnership with Richard Branson's Virgin Group to bring WiMAX services to Russia under the Virgin Connect brand.
Over the weekend, Trivon, which operates the network, launched services in 32 Russian regions including Moscow, St. Petersburg and the 20 largest cities where it holds the required licences and frequencies for WiMAX-based services.
Virgin Connect will provide broadband internet connectivity, voice and value added services to residential, SME and larger corporate customers.
"We offer Russian consumers high quality of service, a differentiating feature of the Virgin services worldwide, and we really care about our customers. We also give easy access to our services with simple and transparent tariffs", said Istvan Kovacs, COO of the Trivon Group. Virgin Connect said it plans to gain a market share of 10 per cent within five years of launch.
Co-investors in the project are two private equity companies, Delta Partners and Eurasia Capital Management. All three firms own stakes in Trivon.
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Qualcomm to shake up UK mobile TV market
19 May 2008
US chip shop Qualcomm has got its hands on a 40MHz chunk of L-Band radio spectrum in the UK, presumably with the intention of pushing its own mobile TV platform in the market.
The Big Q said Friday that it had paid £8.3m for the 1452-1492MHz spectrum recently auctioned by UK comms regulator Ofcom.
There was no word on what the company intends to do with the spectrum, except it will "allow Qualcomm, in collaboration with its partners, to bring a variety of innovative wireless technologies to the UK market".
The L-Band spectrum licence covers the entire UK and is technology neutral. The most likely reason for Qualcomm to acquire it is to give its own mobile TV technology, MediaFLO, a toehold in the market.
When speaking to telecoms.com at Barcelona in February, Andrew Gilbert, executive vice president of Qualcomm and president of Qualcomm Internet Services, MediaFLO Technologies and Qualcomm Europe, expressed his frustration at the European mobile TV situation. "Mobile TV could be the next WAP because existing formats aren't that great." Users are unwilling to accept a mobile TV service that degrades from their domestic television experience, he said.
Unsurprisingly, Gilbert argued that MediaFlo offers a superior user experience, pointing to what he said were typical usage figures in the US of 80 minutes a day.
But since then, the European Commission has made the controversial decision to add the DVB-H mobile TV standard to the EU List of Standards, moving the EC closer to its goal of ensuring that the technology is adopted by all operators in the region.
Although that doesn't mean there isn't room for an outside contender. Both Orange and T-Mobile UK are backing NextWave Wireless' TDtv technology, originally developed by IPWireless.
UK broadcaster, British Sky Broadcasting Limited (BSkyB), has also completed a technical trial of the MediaFLO System in the UK. Unlike in the US, where Qualcomm operates its own MediaFLO network and rents capacity to carriers, it seems likely that the company would only build a MediaFLO network in the UK in partnership with the operators.
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