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View Full Version : HSDPA + Voda Hits the Bigtime!



Ben
24th January 2006, 11:39 PM
http://news.zdnet.co.uk/communications/3ggprs/0,39020339,39248703,00.htm

Dell to deliver Super 3G with Vodafone


Dell is to start selling laptops with HSDPA wireless broadband using Vodafone's network in the UK, France and Germany within the next six months.

It is believed to be the first major agreement on the HSDPA standard — which is set to supplant 3G — between a carrier and a computer supplier. The service should have up to four times the performance currently offered by 3G.

Up to now, take up of data services on mobile phones has been slow and analysts have argued that services like HSDPA have needed the backing of the major systems vendors before they will become popular. But systems vendors have been reluctant to commit to selling systems using the mobile standards because of the high cost of using mobile technology for data.

Dell will offer notebook computers with optional, integrated HSDPA capability that will be backwards compatible with 3G and GPRS phones. The new service will allow users access to email, the Internet and corporate servers through the Vodafone network.

"Dell's collaboration with Vodafone demonstrates Dell's on-going strategy to deliver innovative technology solutions to market to meet our customers' requirements," said Jeff Kimbell, director of business marketing at Dell. "With Dell and Vodafone working together, customers can benefit from built-in, easy-to-use technology which provides access to the 3G wireless network deployed broadly worldwide."

Dell had previously announced similar agreements with Verizon and Cingular in the US.

An HSDPA network can support download speeds of up to 1.4Mbps with incremental upgrades expected to raise this to 10Mbps by 2008. In tests carried out by ZDNet UK, peak download speed was measured at 1.29Mbps with an average over 10 minutes of 480Kbps. 300Kbps streamed video displayed perfectly.

The movement towards HSDPA as a standard is gathering momentum. In November, the first HSDPA network in Europe was launched on the Isle of Man by Manx Telecom, a wholly-owned subsidiary of O2. At that time O2 hinted that at least two "mystery vendors" were developing laptops with integrated support — one of them presumably Dell.

In December, Vodafone, Samsung and Qualcomm signed a deal to provide HSDPA networks in Europe, but only for handsets. The phones will be made by Samsung using a Qualcomm chipset. Also, T-Mobile is to start selling HSDPA networks in Germany.


I'm majorly excited about this one. Laptops from the worlds biggest computer manufacturer landing in peoples homes with built-in 1.4Mbps Internet access, bought to consumers via Vodafone's network that has so far proven to offer the best 3G data solution on the market. It just seems so unreal. I can't get my head around the prospect of a truly 'Internet Enabled' laptop!

@NickyColman
25th January 2006, 12:14 AM
In most ways this is great news, but i fear that the price of using the data this way will be so expensive that it will leave it out of reach of most users! An all-you-can-eat style payment system is needed if its to take off!

Ben
25th January 2006, 12:22 AM
I agree completely, though I'm optimistic that if Vodafone (the worlds largest network) and Dell (the worlds largest computer manufacturer) are getting together on HSDPA that they'll do so at a mass-market price. Lets face it, this collaberation isn't small potatoes - £53/month isn't going to cut it here - and with WiMAX looming now is the perfect time to strike with a strategy of ubiquitous availability via Dell and competitve pricing via Vodafone to ensure WiMAX simply cannot get a foothold.

I feel the move has massive implications, but as always we will not know the full extent of these until the completed products and tariffs come to market.