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Nortel joins others in publishing its LTE royalty rates

Nortel joins others in publishing its LTE royalty rates

By:  Howard Solomon  On: 06 May 2008 For: Network World Canada Creator

Nortel's move to publish its royalty rates for manufacturers wanting to use its LTE patents is aimed at helping mobile device manufacturers nail down their costs

Part of the industry’s response is forming a 4G patent pool called Next Generation Mobile Networks, an alliance of 18 network operators and 28 manufacturers, including Nortel, to push 4G technologies and set standards. However, Nortel has so far refused to join seven companies – including Alcatel-Lucent, Ericsson, Nokia and Nokia Siemens Networks – that in April announced a framework for establishing single-digit costs for licencing intellectual property rights. Locklear said that while Nortel agreed with the group’s goals, “we had some concerns with the way the framework was set up.” In particular, he said, “we believe not all patents are created equal. Some are more valuable [than others] and should be treated that way.”

Meanwhile, Nortel and others continue to trial LTE both privately and at shows like the recent GSM Mobile World Congress.

Verizon, a CDMA carrier, has selected Nortel as an equipment supplier for LTE trials that will hopefully start later this year, Locklear said.

Full deployment of an LTE-enabled network could start in 2010, he said. On the other hand SeaBoard believes LTE won’t be deployed by operators until 2012.

Also in the news, WiMAX, a competing technology, got a boost with the announcement Wednesday that a consortium led by wireless carrier Sprint and fixed wireless Internet provider Clearwire are promising to build a U.S. network based on WiMAX.










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Howard Solomon Howard Solomon I'm assistant editor of ComputerWorld Canada covering network infrastructure, communications and government IT issues. An IT journalist  since 1997, I've written ... more

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