Contract awarded for higher speed wireless network


Tuesday, February 14th, 2006

Ericsson tapped to supply new technology

Province

TORONTO — Rogers Communications Inc. said yesterday it has awarded Ericsson Canada the contract to supply wireless network technology that will be faster than anything currently operating in this country.

Financial terms of the contract weren’t disclosed.

The Toronto-based company that owns Rogers Wireless, Rogers Cable and a host of other businesses, disclosed last week along with its latest financial results that it will deploy its next-generation network sooner than anticipated.

Yesterday, Rogers said its long-time supplier — the Canadian subsidiary of Swedish telecom equipment vendor LM Ericsson — would supply the UMTS/HSDPA network (Universal Mobile Telephone System/High-Speed Packet Access.)

Rogers Wireless president Rob Bruce said the new technology will be eight to 10 times faster than the EDGE (Enhanced Data for Global Evolution) network that Rogers has deployed to cover 94 per cent of Canada’s populated areas.

“More importantly, it will be leap-frogging the competition, delivering speeds of 1 1/2- to two-times faster than the new EV-DO networks that Bell and Telus have recently been touting,” Bruce said in a phone interview yesterday.

“Customers, we think, will see the same kind of quantum increase in utility and benefit that they did when they moved from dial-up on their computers to high-speed Internet.”

The HSDPA wireless network, working with new hardware that customers will have to get, will enable new applications such as video conferencing, interactive multi-player gaming, and dynamic content to navigate the mobile Internet.

The company expects that by the end of 2006, there will be five to seven HSDPA-enabled devices on the market for its customers, including two AirCards — made by Sierra Wireless for use in laptops — and three to five handsets.

Rogers Wireless, Canada’s largest cellphone company since it acquired the Fido network in late 2004, said it will begin deploying the UMTS/HSDPA technology immediately for first commercial launch in the fall.

© The Vancouver Province 2006



Comments are closed.