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Videotron set to launch wireless in Quebec

Videotron set to launch wireless in Quebec

By:  Greg Meckbach  On: 08 Sep 2010 For: Network World Canada Creator

Quebecor Media Inc’s Videotron subsidiary is expected to offer wireless cellular service to its cable and telephony customers in Quebec. They could stoke the flames of wireless competition in Eastern Canada, an IDC analyst says. It will be the fourth new wireless entrant to launch in Canada

Videotron Ltd., which plans to announce its cellular wireless service on Thursday, will be a viable competitor to Bell Canada Enterprises Inc., Rogers Communications Inc. and Telus Corp. in Quebec, a Canadian telecommunications analyst says.

Montreal-based Videotron, which is owned by Quebecor Media Inc., was one of the new entrants in Canada’s Advanced Wireless Spectrum (AWS) auction in 2008. It paid $555 million for its cellular licences but three other new entrants launched service already.

 

Globalive Wireless Management Corp., which uses the Wind Mobile brand name, has been offering service since December.  The other new entrants who are operating right now are Mobilicity, owned by Data Audio and Visual Enterprises (DAVE) Wireless Inc., and Public Mobile Inc. All three cater mainly to consumers.

A Videotron spokesperson would not say Wednesday whether its service will actually be up and running this week, which handsets it will offer or whether it will have any plans for corporate customers, but analysts expect Videotron will offer bundles comprised of wireless, cable television, phone and wired Internet service.

“I think we can expect to see them position their new service with the other suite of consumer services,” said Lawrence Surtees, research vice-president for communications at IDC Canada. “They’re building  a very comprehensive network and have been for almost two years now. (Quebecor CEO Pierre Karl) Peladeau was on the record that they were not going to do it in a hurry. They want to roll it out right.”

Videotron initially announced in December it would launch this summer. In January, a Videotron spokesperson said it would not launch service in Toronto.

Surtees said the corporate market is a “tough nut to crack” for wireless carriers because national companies want all their telecommunications services on one bill and are looking for providers who can guarantee quality of service.

“The greater opportunity is to move up the value scale with wireless data and position it as ready for prime-time as a business offering,” Surtees said.

Videotron’s network will use High Speed Packet Access (HSPA), which has peak data transfer rates of seven megabits per second (Mbps).


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Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach is editor of Network World Canada and has worked for ComputerWorld Canada, Communications & Networking and Computing Canada.

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