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Manufacturers claim success in initial LTE tests

Manufacturers claim success in initial LTE tests By:  Howard Solomon On: 11 Nov 2007 For: Network World Canada Creator

Exploratory work on a next-generation wireless technology called Long Term Evolution (LTE) is making good progress, according to a consortium of telecom manufacturers. However, a Nortel official says there's a lot of work still to be done



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Initial laboratory and field tests of a next-generation wireless technology called Long Term Evolution -- or LTE -- has been successful, says a consortium of telecom manufacturers and network operators.

The news came in a press release that had no details but claimed the initial results “confirmed that the technology will deliver high levels of data throughput both for stationary and mobile devices.”

“The details are so nitty gritty,” said Maniam Palanivelu, senior manager for marketing a number of broadband technologies at Nortel Networks, one of LTE’s backers. “There was a lot of debate on whether it should be put into a press release. But it was felt it was too technical and the message would get lost.”

However, he stressed that unlike earlier computer simulations of LTE, the most recent round of tests were “based on real prototypes” of transmitting and receiving hardware. LTE, often hyped as a so-called 4G technology, is backed by a number of manufacturers including Ericsson, Alcatel-Lucent, Nokia and LG Electronics, as well as carriers such as T-Mobile, Vodafone, Telecom Italia, China Mobile and NTT DoCoMo.

Palanivelu said a number of carriers believe LTE will leapfrog over WiMax to become the mobile broadband technology of choice for delivering data and video to handsets as early as 2010.

Among LTE’s goals is to achieve download speeds of two to five times the spectral efficiency (bits per second per hertz) of today’s wireless networks, he said. Standards for the technology will be set by the Third Generation Partnership Project (3GPP)

“It’s great that they’re on track,” Iain Grant, managing director of the SeaBoard Group, a telecom consultancy, said of the LTE tests, but he cautioned that the value of the news of the early test depends on the conditions under which they were conducted.

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What does the collapse of Sprint's U.S.-wide WiMax partnership mean to LTE? Read and comment on our Ahead of the Curve blog.

On the other hand he believes telecom manufacturers looking to sell LTE hardware, not Canadian carriers, are the ones who care about this release. Neither Bell Canada nor Telus have wireless customers increase spending on data, despite the fact that over the past three months the carriers have radically lowered their rates. As a result, Grant argues, they aren’t anxious to spend on upgrading their networks. However, he acknowledged that if data rates continue to fall, that will change over the next year.

Palanivelu said the tests of what he called LTE’s physical layer were done over the past several months by several manufacturers independently and then examined by the group backing the technology called the LTE/SAE Trial Initiative.


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Howard Solomon Howard Solomon Howard Solomon is assistant editor of Network World Canada covering network infrastructure and communications issues. An IT journalist  since 1997, he has written for several of IT... more

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