3G: Redefining Wireless Internet Services
Most
wireless carriers treat 2.5G as a short-term solution toward the
ultimate highspeed 3G mobile data networks. The visions of 3G networks
are still evolving, growing in both scope and complexity, considering
that it is being defined by all members of the wireless value chain,
including network operators, service providers, equipment
manufacturers, government agencies, and others. The broad definition of
3G is focused on the global telecommunications infrastructure that is
capable of supporting voice, data, and multimedia services over a
variety of mobile and fixed networks. Multimedia support is perhaps the
largest, most-important differentiator of the 3G networks from its
wireless data networks predecessors. Among the key objectives of the 3G
networks are high data-transmission rates from 144 kbps in high
mobility context to 2 Mbps for stationary wireless connections,
interoperability with fixed-line networks, worldwide roaming
capability, common billing/user profiles, location services, and
ability to support high-quality multimedia services.
While the switch from the 1G cellular to the 2G digital
networks was far more noticeable from the technology point of view,
with the industry focusing on adjusting to a major technological
paradigm shift, the move from the 2G to the 3G networks is still a
little blurred, with the industry focusing more on the qualitative
service provision characteristics, and thus making it harder to agree
on specific quantitative standards. In reality, the promise of 3G does
not lie in the technical sophistication of the system, but rather in
the benefits that consumers and providers are hoping to derive from it.
The benefits of 3G to consumers focus primarily on two dimensions:
convenience and cost. With 3G services in place, consumers will obtain
access to wider quantity and variety of information and applications
from their mobile devices. The 3G devices that will enable access to
the 3G services will be enabled with much-richer multimedia features,
location-based services, and other instrumental functions that will
allow the end users to have the best possible experience with the
broadband connection and plethora of content that 3G networks will be
able to offer.
Economically, 3G services will be more reachable for
mobile end users. One of the main complaints from the end users of the
previous mobile Internet services based on the CDPD or Metricom
technology was very high cost associated with data transactions. 3G
systems are being designed to get the most efficient use of the
spectrum, and the tight competition created in the 3G services
providers' field will most likely result in lower costs and prices.
Three classes of 3G networks are expected to emerge:
EDGE, W-CDMA, and CDMA2000. What technology-specific carriers will
choose will mostly depend on the type of current networks that the
carriers have. AT&T and most likely the SBC/BellSouth joint venture
will follow the EDGE network, which is built on GPRS. Sprint and
Verizon, currently using CDMA, are planning to move to CDMA2000. W-CDMA
is the standard that will most likely be implemented in Europe and
Asia, and will come to the United States only if the Asian or European
telecoms will move to the U.S. market through mergers and acquisitions.
Unlike CDMA2000, W-CDMA is not backward compatible with the 2G CDMA
networks. The incompatibility ensures that Japan and Europe will move
to 3G more quickly than the United States. In addition, 3G rollout in
the United States will be slower, considering the fragmented market
lacking the nationwide infrastructure that Europe and Japan have
developed, the widespread and lower-density concentration of mobile
users (due to most Americans living in rural areas), and the patched
network with at least three competing standards.
Japan will lead the 3G revolution, with the 3G
services rollouts by NTT DoCoMo and its competitor J-Phone. In Europe,
the 3G rollouts are planned for the 2003–2004 timeframe. Vodaphone
plans to offer 3G services in the United Kingdom and H3G is planning to
start providing 3G services in Italy by the end of 2002. In the United
States, both Sprint PCS and Verizon Wireless have announced plans to
roll out 3G services using CDMA2000 technology in late 2002 or early
2003. However, 3G technology carries certain technological implications
associated with the network's upgrade that could slow down the 3G
conversion by a year or two.