Mobile Broadband Market Dynamics
Transcription
Mobile Broadband Market Dynamics
Mobile Broadband Market Dynamics BV Raman CDMA Development Group October 3, 2007 Key Lessons Learned Migration from 1G to 2G to 3G It took 2G technologies the better part of a decade to find widespread adoption.* Over optimism and growing pains are often intrinsic to the process that informs the introduction of any new technology.* The migration to newer technologies takes longer, and is never as simple as it may seem. 2 *Source: “Past as a Guidepost to the Future: Reflections on the Continued Growth of the Mobile Communications Industry”, IDC, September 2007 www.cdg.org Key Lessons Learned Evolutionary Change Mobile network operators, like others engaged in network-based enterprises, prefer a graceful evolutionary change to a disruptive revolutionary change.* Graceful evolutionary change is preferred over disruptive revolutionary change. 2 *Source: “Past as a Guidepost to the Future: Reflections on the Continued Growth of the Mobile Communications Industry,” IDC, September 2007 www.cdg.org Key Lessons Learned Compatibility and Interoperability The coordination endeavor requires an appropriate inclusive arena — usually a standard-setting body — in which industry players can meet to discuss and resolve their concerns and build consensus in a productive and expeditious manner.* The process of ensuring compatibility and interoperability across multiple industries requires efficient standardsetting bodies, network maturity and business predictability. 2 *Source: “Past as a Guidepost to the Future: Reflections on the Continued Growth of the Mobile Communications Industry”, IDC, September 2007 www.cdg.org India’s Targets set by DOT 2005 2007 2010 Telecom Subs Internet Subs Broadband Subs (In Millions) (In Millions) 6 18 40 (In Millions) 3 9 20 250 500 While we are well on the way to achieve our Telecom Subscriber Targets, we are way off the mark on Internet & Broadband Subscribers. 2 www.cdg.org India Internet & Broadband Subscribers 10 6.7 8.1 7.7 6.9 Millions 5 0.9 1.3 1.6 2.1 1.8 9.3 8.6 2.3 0 Dec'05 Mar'06 Jun'06 Broadband Subs Targets Broadband Internet 2005 3 Mln. 6 Mln. Sep'06 Dec'06 Mar'07 Internet Subs 2007 9 Mln. 18 Mln. 2 www.cdg.org Limitations to Internet & Broadband Penetration in India Limited Amount of Copper Deployed by Fixed Line Operators Including the incumbents, BSNL & MTNL. According to TRAI the Maximum number of Subs that can be accomodated is 9 Million. So What is the Solution? The Solution is to DEPLOY High Speed networks on diverse competing platforms. Need a Cogent Technology Agnostic Spectrum Management Policy Grow the emerging Advance Wireless Systems. 2 www.cdg.org CDMA2000: Evolution of Services Wireless Broadband Evolution CDMA2000 is leading the evolution to next generation mobile broadband services Network Evolution All-IP Network For Fixed-Mobile Convergence (VoIP & data) Co-existence of Different Access Networks for Various Needs y Coverage, Mobility, Capacity,QoS, Data Rates Mobile Device Evolution Convergence of Communication, Computing & CE Platforms Multi-mode Devices Connect Service Evolution User Behaviors Trend from Wired to Wireless Same Rich IP Apps and to Various Access Networks Services in all Environments y Service Requirements, Availability, Cost … y Ubiquitous & Consistent Experience Desired 2 www.cdg.org CDMA2000 Service Evolution Same Rich IP Apps and Services in all environments User Trend: Shift from Wired to Wireless y Ever increasing demand for more and higher quality video y Users sharing content within a traditional fixed environment (wireless through the home) y Place-shifting of content now accessible at all times and places with wireless Individuals becoming content creators y Handsets now becoming media generation and storage devices y Wireless connection to social networks allows users to express themselves anytime, anywhere 2 User Generated Content on Social Networks www.cdg.org EV-DO Rev. A: Leading wireless broadband The first All-IP, low-latency, broadband multimedia, multicasting and mobile VoIP network to be commercially deployed, with speeds over 3 Mbps Telcel (Venzuela) Movilnet (Venzuela) Arobase Telecom (Cote d’Ivoire) Bermuda Digital Communications (BDC) Mobilkom (Czech Rep) EOCG (Caribbean) Telesystems or Ukraine Skytel (Mongolia) MTS First Wireless (Nigeria) Telefonica O2 (Czech Rep) Dozens of Rev A networks will be deployed in 2007 2 Logo Not Shown: Broadband Everywhere (Philippines) www.cdg.org CDMA2000 All-IP Deployment Scenarios A Packet-based network for unified voice, broadband data, and multimedia services PSTN • Centralized or Distributed network configuration • Local Exchange is not required • Cost-effective service even in very remote areas • Efficient usage of bandwidth • Can operate cost effectively over satellite links Media Gateway Ring Centralized Centralized Server Server Media Gateway PSTN Local PSTN Media Gateway Media Gateway PSTN Star Distributed Distributed Server Server PSTN Chain Media Gateway 2 Media Gateway PSTN Although Althoughbackhaul backhaulof ofremote remoteRF RFnetwork networkelements elementswill willremain remainaasignificant significantcost, cost,with with fewer sites, an all-IP CDMA2000 solution can significantly reduce the overall system fewer sites, an all-IP CDMA2000 solution can significantly reduce the overall systemcost. cost. www.cdg.org CDMA2000 Device Selection CDMA2000: The Largest Selection of 3G Devices Over 1700 CDMA2000 devices have been introduced to the market Entry-level Personal Voice-centric Messaging Handsets Mobile Phones EV-DO PC Cards EV-DO USB modems Fixed Wireless Phones WorldModeTM Global Roaming Phones PDAs EV-DO Fixed Wireless Terminals Television Phones Watch TV on a large screen from your mobile phone using TV Out cables 2 including 469 CDMA2000 1xEV-DO devices from 92 Manufacturers Interactive Multimedia CE Devices EV-DO PCexpress Embedded Modules for PC Notebooks www.cdg.org CDMA Fixed Wireless Devices Across 450, 800 and 1900 MHz bands Aiji Systems AP-210 Aiji Systems F20 AnyData AXW-P1900PCO Axesstel P830 DowTel WS-6110 LG 2 LST-3000 * CDMA450 Axesstel AXW-T450/ 800/1900 Axesstel PX110/120/130 Hantel HTP-1901 Huawei CP800 1X AnyData AWL-200C AnyData AXW-P1900 • Aiji Systems • AnyData • Audiovox • Axesstel EVEV-DO Rev. A EVEV-DO Rev. A DowTel WS-2100 LG LST-250 Huawei ETS2000 AnyData AWR-E100C DowTel WS-8000 LG LST-2500 Huawei SYF 005 EVEV-DO Rev. A Sierra Wireless Digi MP 595 GPS Connect Port WAN Axesstel Ruggedized In-Vehicle LinkSys MV410*/420/430/440 Modem Wireless G 3G Broadband Gateway Wi-Fi Router EVEV-DO Rev. A • Samsung design • Hantel Telular Phonecell XP4P • Huawei • Hyundai Curitel Axesstel L-450/800/1900 EVEV-DO Rev. A Telular Phonecell SX4T Telular Phonecell SX5P Kyocera KR1 Router • Westech • DowTel • Kison • Kyocera • LG • Motorola • NEC • RWT • Synertek • Standard Telecom • Sewon (Maxom) Maxom) Telular Phonecell SX4e Huawei ETS2051 LG LSP-3000 Huawei ETS1000/1200/1500 Huawei ETS2077 RWT FCT-CDMA Telular SX6P-200C Huawei ETS2200/2288/2500 Westech DTT-810/1910 Cypress Solutions CTM-140 LG LSP-340E Westech DTP-810/1910 • Telular • ZTE Note: Above devices are representative samples. This is not an all inclusive list Novatel Wireless Ovation MCD3000 ZTE WP520B/560/920B ZTE WF520F ZTE WP960 www.cdg.org CDMA2000 1xEV-DO Rev A Devices 26 Rev A devices –as of May 2007 - offer increased data speeds in both directions Novatel Wireless Expedite E720 PCI Express Mini Card Toshiba W47T Huawei EC 360 2 Novatel Wireless Merlin S720 Kyocera KR1 Mobile Router * CDMA450 Pantech PX-500 Sierra Wireless AirCard 597E Digi Connect Port WAN Toshiba DRAPE Sierra Wireless AirCard 595 UTStarcom 5800 (HTC Libra) Axesstel MV110*/140 USB Modem Sierra Wireless MC5725(V) PCI Express Mini Card Sierra Wireless AirCard 595U USB Modem Axesstel Sierra Wireless MV410*/420/430/440 MP 595 GPS 3G Broadband Gateway Ruggedized In-Vehicle Modem Novatel Wireless Ovation MCD3000 LinkSys Wireless G Wi-Fi Router www.cdg.org CDMA2000 WorldModeTM Devices Global roaming enabled with CDMA2000/GSM/GPRS multi-mode/multi-band devices Samsung SCH-A790/W109/A795/IP-A790 Motorola A840/A860 LGE W800 CDMA2000 1X/EV-DO/GSM/GPRS WorldMode Devices Samsung SCH-i830 2 (EV-DO) LGE KW-9200 (EV-DO) Amoi CMA8301 (EV-DO) Amoi V810 (EV-DO) Samsung SCH-i819 LGE W810 Yulong Telecom Coolpad 728 Samsung Samsung Samsung Samsung Samsung Samsung Samsung SCH-W219 SCH-W379 SCH-W399 SCH-W531 SCH-W569 SCH-W579 SCH-V920 Yulong Telecom Coolpad 728B UTStarcom T66 CECT C828 Yulong Telecom Yulong Telecom Coolpad 858T Coolpad C288 Daxian C8000 Hisense D806 ZTE H500 www.cdg.org CDMA2000: Strong Evolution Path CDMA: Time-to-Market Leadership in 3G and beyond CDMA CDMA/TDM OFDM OFDM/OFDMA/MIMO/SDMA MIMO CDMA2000 Evolution Path VoIP CDMA2000 CDMA2000 EV-DO EV-DO 1X 1xEV-DO Rev A1 Rev B1 DL: 2.4 Mbps UL: 153 kbps (1.25 MHz) DL: 153 kbps UL: 153 kbps (1.25 MHz) DL: 3.1 Mbps UL: 1.8 Mbps (1.25 MHz) DL: 6.2 – 73.5 Mbps2 UL: 3.6 - 27 Mbps2 (2.5 – 20 MHz) UMB3 Requirement: DL: 140 - 291 Mbps4 UL: 34 – 79 Mbps (10 – 20 MHz) WCDMA Evolution Path VoIP Rel-99 Rel-5 Rel-6 WCDMA HSDPA HSUPA DL: 384 kbps UL: 384 kbps (5 MHz) DL: 1.8 - 7.2 Mbps UL: 384 kbps (5 MHz) DL: 1.8-14.4 Mbps UL: 5.72 Mbps (5 MHz) Rel-7 Rel-8 HSPA+ HSPA+ Phase 15 Phase 25 Target: DL: 14 - 42 Mbps UL: 11 Mbps (5 MHz) VoIP LTE6 Requirement: DL: 150 Mbps UL: 50 Mbps (20 MHz) 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Note: timeline depicts initial commercial availability of each technology. Those introduced beyond 2008 are under standardization and are subject to variability 1 EV-DO Rev A and Rev B incorporate OFDM for multicasting. Data rates are based on 64 QAM and a 2x20 MHz FDD band allocation and are scalable with the number of carriers assigned. Up to 15 carriers, up to 4.9 Mbps per carrier. 3 Multiple modes supported: CDMA, TDM, OFDM, OFDMA, LS-OFDM. New antenna techniques used: 4x4 MIMO and SDMA. Leverages EV-DO protocol stack. 4 Data rates are based on 2x20 MHz FDD band allocation and 4x4 MIMO. Data rate depends on the level of mobility. 2 5 Upper range of DL peak data rates for Release 7 and Release 8 introduce enhancements is based on 64 QAM, 2x2 MIMO. 6 Initial requirements are based on OFDMA in the DL and SC-FDMA in the UL, FDD, 64 QAM, 2 TX MIMO in DL, and 16 QAM single TX stream in UL. 2 www.cdg.org EV-DO Rev A: Enhanced Mobile Broadband Higher spectral efficiency, faster data rates, greater symmetry, and lower latency Higher broadband data rates y 3.1 Mbps peak data rate on forward link y 1.8 Mbps peak data rate on reverse link Greater symmetry y Designed for symmetric traffic y Improves user experience for UL intensive applications (sending email, pictures, etc.) Higher spectral efficiency y Increased rate quantization on both forward and reverse link enables more efficient use of air link resources y 1.2 times Rel 0 forward link sector capacity y 3.4 times Rel 0 reverse link sector capacity Reduced latency y Support for delay sensitive applications such as VoIP, push-to-talk, video telephony, instant multi-media (IMM), video conferencing, and low-latency network gaming Optimized Quality of Serivce (QoS) y User-based (based on subscription), application-based, and flow-based prioritization DO Platinum Multicast y Economical delivery of rich content to the mass market. y 1.5 Mbps capacity with > 98% coverage Backward compatibility y Continued support for existing 1X and Rel 0 devices 2 www.cdg.org EV-DO Rev B: Multi-carrier Broadband Higher performance with greater spectrum flexibility Aggregates multiple EV-DO channels for higher performance y Software upgrade to existing Rev A channel cards y Allows deployment in “hot-zones” with high data demand Higher broadband data rates y Peak data rates are proportional to the number of carriers aggregated - 2 RFs = 6.2 Mbps, 3 RFs = 9.3 Mbps y Initial carrier bandwidth is 2.5 MHz (standard supports up 20 MHz) Increased (wider) bandwidth y To support more users per sector or lower cost per megabyte y To encourage longer usage Network flexibility y Allocation of bandwidth for new devices depends on application and network availability Higher capacity y Improved spectral efficiency on both FL and RL due to multi-carrier transmissions y Better user experience throughout the cell coverage area Backward compatibility 2 y Co-existence of 1X, Rev A and B devices in the same network y 1xEV-DO Rev A channel cards can be utilized www.cdg.org Ultra Mobile Broadband (UMB) A technological breakthrough in next generation broadband services Combines the best aspects of CDMA, TDM, LS-OFDM, OFDM, and OFDMA into a single air interface using sophisticated control and signaling mechanisms and advanced antenna techniques: y Multiple Input Multiple Output (MIMO) and Space Division Multiple Access (SDMA) Will deliver ultra-high mobile broadband performance*: y Forward link: up to 291 Mbps y Reverse link: up to 79 Mbps y Average network latency: 16.8 msec y Voice over IP (VoIP): up to 500 simultaneous users Will enable the convergence of IP-based voice, broadband data, multimedia, information technology, entertainment and consumer electronic services Commercial availability is expected in early 2009 2 *Based on 2x20 MHz FDD band allocation and 4x4 MIMO. Latency is based on a 32-byte Return Trip Transmission (RTT). VoIP capacity is dependent upon the feature set enabled and network load. www.cdg.org CDMA2000 Performance Site Count Comparison By Technology CDMA2000 requires the least number of cell sites for rural markets 133 Assumptions: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Coverage area = 1,000 sq. km. Subscriber density = 31 Subs/sq. km Available spectrum = 5 MHz Average voice traffic per sub = 200 MoU/month Average data traffic per sub = 5 Mb/month Wireless penetration = 50%, Carrier market share = 25% Voice usage = 100%, Voice BH = 10% Data usage = 100%, Data BH = 12% Simultaneous Calls/Sector/Carrier: EV-DO = 44, 1X = 35, GSM/EDGE = 6, WCDMA/HSDPA = 60, WiMAX = 25 Physical Layer FL data throughput (kbps): EV-DO = 1280, 1X = 350, GSM/EDGE = 86, WCDMA/HSDPA = 3600, WiMAX = 2300 75 66 15 22 EV-DO Rev. A (VoIP) @ 450 MHz EV-DO Rev. A (VoIP) @ 800 MHz 2 Source: QUALCOMM, March 2007 27 CDMA 1X @ 800 MHz WCDMA/HSDPA @2100 MHz GSM/EDGE @900 MHz WiMAX @2500 MHz (Capacity Limited) www.cdg.org CDMA2000 Enables Lowers Tariffs CDMA2000 1X and EV-DO enables the lowest cost per bit and Erlang Combined Voice and Data Network Expense (500 Minutes of Use) USD $25.00 Network Expense/User/Month GSM/GPRS $22.50 EDGE WCDMA $20.00 1X 1X / EV-DO Rel. 0 $17.50 The Lower the better! $15.00 $12.50 $10.00 $7.50 $5.00 $2.50 $0.00 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Megabytes per User Operators Operatorsprefer prefernetwork networktechnologies technologiesthat thatare areaffordable affordableand andevolutionary evolutionary Source: The Economics of Wireless Data, http://www.qualcomm.com/main/whitepapers/WirelessMobileData.pdf 2 Assumptions: On demand Traffic: a) 15% of traffic demand occurs at the busy hour, b) 7,600 kbps / sq km at busy hour, c) 5MHz Multicast Traffic: a) 2,000 subscribers / cell, b) 30 live streaming minutes / day at 128kbps data rate, c) 1.25MHz www.cdg.org Worldwide Average Revenue Per User (ARPU) CDMA2000 will sustain the highest average revenue per user on a global basis ARPU (USD) Data Usage drives higher CDMA ARPU for Leading Wireless Technologies $45 $40 $35 $30 $25 $20 $15 $10 $5 $0 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 GSM/GPRS/EDGE CDMA2000 2 Source: Strategy Analytics, September 2006 www.cdg.org Korea: CDMA2000 1xEV-DO Outpaces WiBRO When given a choice, Korean end-users chose 1xEV-DO over WiBRO Q3 and Q4 2006 subscriber net addition totals: y 1,057 WiBRO subscribers since WiBRO’s commercial launch in 2006 (KT and SKT) y 1.8 million EV-DO subscribers (KTF and SKT) Total WiBRO roll-out costs: W620 billion South Korean Wireless Broadband Subscriber Growth (Q3 & Q4 2006) 2,000,000 - SKT spent ~W170 billion - KT spent ~W450 billion 1,500,000 - Only available in select “zones” of the Seoul metro area y Total EV-DO roll-out costs: W300 billion - SKT spent ~W200 billion (26 cities) - KTF spent ~W100 billion (6 cities - ~80% POPs coverage) - EV-DO had close to nationwide coverage when launched 1,000,000 500,000 0 WiBRO EV-DO EV-DO cost less to roll-out over a larger area 2 Source: Wireless Intelligence (1xEV-DO subscribers), media sources (WiBro subscribers, WiBro & EV-DO roll-out expenditures) www.cdg.org Conclusion CDMA2000 offers affordable telephony, Internet and multimedia access to large coverage areas that have a low population density y Rural Services: CDMA2000 addresses India’s national objectives by increasing telephony, Internet penetration, enterprise productivity, and improving vital services such as: - Telemedicine, remote learning, public safety, asset management, emergency and disaster relief, national security, telemetry, transportation and utility services, agriculture, tourism, etc. y Coverage: CDMA2000 enables the largest coverage area using the lower 450 and 800 MHz frequency bands and extended base station coverage solutions. y Network Costs: The spectral efficiency of CDMA2000 and its All-IP architecture reduces the Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) of a network, improves performance and enables faster deployments. 2 y Entry-level Devices: A large selection of entry-level CDMA2000 handsets are currently available. Entry level CDMA devices now well below US$30. www.cdg.org Conclusion (Cont.) CDMA2000 has been widely deployed in emerging and rural markets worldwide y Universal service: CDMA2000 is bridging the digital divide by providing affordable telephony and Internet access to some of the most remote places on earth. y Flexibility and Scalability: CDMA2000 has enabled operators to address both sparsely populated rural areas and densely populated urban areas, equally well. y Regulatory Environment: India needs a Technology Agnostic Spectrum Management Policy to enable continued economic development. 2 www.cdg.org Thank You
Similar documents
Next-generation CDMA2000 devices and multimedia convergence
Utilizes OFDMA on the DL and SC-FDMA on the UL; MIMO; supports flexible bandwidths (1.25 to 20 MHz)
More information3G CDMA2000 Worldwide Market Overview
Sierra Wireless Digi MP 595 GPS Connect Port WAN Axesstel Ruggedized In-Vehicle LinkSys MV410*/420/430/440 Modem Wireless G 3G Broadband Gateway Wi-Fi Router EVEV-DO Rev. A
More information