We've been waiting for 3G cell
phones for so long, most of us
have forgotten what we were
waiting for. Now the wait is
finally over, but we still aren't
seeing many handsets.
Many carriers don't refer to 3G cell phones as 3G. As a result, most subscribers don't even know what it is. Average cell-phone users couldn't tell if they
have a 2G, 2.5G, or 3G phone. In fact, they
probably don't even know if they're using
GSM, cdma2000, WCDMA, or whatever.
But they do know who their carrier is.
Cingular and T-Mobile use GSM while Verizon, Alltel, and Sprint Nextel use
cdma2000. The usage is split rather
equally in the U.S., but GSM dominates
the rest of the globe. In either case, 3G
generally can be defined as a cellular service that provides data transfers of up to 2
Mbits/s or more in a packet-based format
with mobility.
While the market has been slow to adopt
3G, the cell-phone business is still prosperous and growing, with over 2.6 billion worldwide subscribers in 2006. Last year alone,
an estimated 956 million handsets were sold, with over 1 billion projected for 2007.
Research company iSuppli expects a total
of 4 billion subscribers by 2010, or twothirds of the world's 6 billion population.
Where's It Headed?
We're in the
early stages of 3G adoption today ().
EV-DO cdma2000 phones are probably
more prevalent right now, but the use of
WCDMA phones is growing. WCDMA is
heavily used in Japan and widely used in
Europe. WCDMA adoption in the U.S.,
meanwhile, is increasing, albeit slowly.
The adoption of WCDMA is a major
change. It requires all-new basestation
equipment, a multibillion-dollar investment. There also has been a shortage of
WDCMA handsets and a lack of suitable
spectrum space, especially in the U.S.
WCDMA phones use 5-MHz channels,
unlike the 1.25-MHz channels of
cdma2000 and the 200-kHz channels of
GSM/GPRS/EDGE. WCDMA has been
assigned to the 2.1-GHz spectrum where
such bandwidth is available. But at this
higher frequency, range is more limited,
meaning more basestations are needed
to provide equivalent coverage.
Finally, customers aren't clamoring for
3G. Yet cell-phone video will make 3G data
rates necessary. We have some video over
the networks from Verizon, Cingular, and
Sprint Nextel, but more is on the way.
Broadcast video directly to separate
receivers in the cell phone should begin
later this year with technology and spectrum supplied by Qualcomm's MediaFLO
system in the 750-MHz band and Crown
Castle's Modeo in the 1.67-GHz band.
And we're going to get even faster data
services in the future. Some GSM/GPRS/
EDGE carriers may even hold back on
adding WCDMA and opt for a cheap and
easy data rate upgrade to EDGE Evolution
instead. According to Brent Wilkins, director of marketing for cellular chip sets at RF
Micro Devices, this standard has been put
forth in the Third Generation Partnership
Project's (3GPP) GSM Radio Access Network (GRAN) Release 6.
The standard changes EDGE's 8PSK
(phase-shift keying) modulation
scheme to 16QAM (quadrature amplitude modulation). It also boosts the
number of GSM time slots and uses
improved coding methods to get data
rates well beyond 200 kbits/s depending upon conditions. Inexpensive hardware and software changes like this will
no doubt make it a tempting way to get
increased throughput without a major
commitment to WCDMA.
In cdma2000, some carriers already
have adopted Qualcomm's EV-DO (socalled Rev. 0) for a downlink data rate up
to 2.45 Mbits/s within the same 1.25-MHz
channels. Rev. A (2006-07) promises even
more capacity, up to 3.1 Mbits/s, with
quality of service (QoS), push to talk, and
Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP). Rev. B
(2008+) offers even more with a downlink
speed of up to 4.9 Mbits/s. Rev. C (200910) promises 16 Mbits/s.
Also, the WCDMA standards for higher
speeds have been enhanced with highspeed downlink packet access (HSDPA)
and high-speed uplink packet access
(HSUPA). HSDPA uses 16QAM to achieve a
peak of 3.6 Mbits/s or up to 14.4 Mbits/s.
HSUPA promises greater uplink speeds
with a peak to 5.6 Mbits/s.
Both technologies have been implemented in the U.S., Europe, and Japan to
make WCDMA a more attractive and viable
3G option. They also will protect the carriers' big 3G investment. Beyond HSDPA and
HSUPA, 3GPP's Long Term Evolution project will achieve not only faster data rates
but also greater robustness and reliability.