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43

www.read-wca.com

Wire & Cable ASIA – March/April 2013

annual shipments of small cells by

2017. The report, which looks at the

wider mobile data traffic market,

also forecasts 1.4 million macrocell

shipments in 2017.

Vendors and chipset makers including

Ericsson,

Alcatel-Lucent,

Nokia

Siemens Networks, and Qualcomm

have been talking up HetNets as a

means of helping carriers to expand

capacity in their mobile networks

without relying on traditional base-

station deployments. Small cells are a

key part of that equation.

Phil Goldstein of FierceWireless

(3

rd

December) pointed out that

ARCchart’s outlook for small cell

shipments “is remarkable considering

that the firm forecast just 261,000

annual small shipments for 2012.”

ARCchart predicts a continuing trend

for carriers to deploy small cells as

a dense network capable of adding

capacity to high-traffic areas.

High-speed broadband

access to the Internet tops

72 per cent in Europe

According to figures released 18

th

December by Eurostat, the statistical

office of the European Union, more

than three-quarters of households

across the 27 nations of the EU had

Internet access in 2012, compared

to just under 50 per cent in 2006.

The growth in broadband access has

been even more striking, with fully

72 per cent of Europeans now able

to avail themselves of a high-speed

connection to the Internet, against

just 30 per cent with such access six

years ago.

The highest levels of broadband

access were seen in the northern

member-states of the EU, with

Sweden (87 per cent), Denmark (85

per cent), the Netherlands (83 per

cent), Germany (82 per cent), and

the UK (80 per cent) showing the

greatest penetration. But even in

Italy and Greece, countries harder-hit

by economic crisis, more than half

of all households had a broadband

connection.

Use of social media was found by

Eurostat to be highest in Portugal,

where fully 75 per cent of Internet

users post messages to Twitter,

Facebook, and similar services.

Comparable online activity was lower

among users in Germany (42 per cent)

and France (40 per cent), and lowest

in the Czech Republic (35 per cent).

Eurostat also identified the tiny Baltic

countries as Europe’s leaders in

reading newspapers online. Some

90 per cent of Internet users in

Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania access

Internet news sites. In France, only

38 per cent of respondents said they

read news online.

Eurostat published its findings in

advance of a policy speech by

Europe’s Commissioner for Digital

Agenda Neelie Kroes. Among the

topics she was expected to address

are further broadband growth and

possible changes to EU copyright law.

Elsewhere in telecom . . .

Volvo Car Group on 17

th

December announced that it

will use Ericsson’s Connected

Vehicle Cloud to allow drivers and

passengers in its cars to access

services available in the cloud.

The network vendor, also Swedish,

said users will be able to connect

with applications for information,

navigation and entertainment from

a screen in the car.

Volvo is Ericsson’s first customer

for the Connected Vehicle Cloud

platform. The carmaker said it

plans to partner with Internet

radio providers, city governments,

highway

authorities,

toll-road

operators and others.

Seeking to extend its global

dominance in personal computers

to mobile phones and tablets,

China’s second-largest vendor of

smartphones started in November

to sell them in Russia. Lenovo

Group Ltd is offering its S880 and

P700i models in Russia, its fifth

overseas market for the devices,

spokesman Chris Millward said

in a 28

th

November telephone

interview with

Bloomberg News

.

In the four months to that point,

Lenovo – which introduced its first

touch-screen handset in China

in 2010 – expanded its sales to

India, Indonesia, Vietnam and

the Philippines. The company’s

mobile Internet and digital home

unit, which makes smartphones,

more than doubled revenue to

$1.31 billion in the first half of last

year. Total sales for the period rose

11 per cent to $8.67 billion.

Just a day after having scored

a victory in the US with over

the maker of iPhones, Korea’s

Samsung Electronics on 18

th

December said it was dropping

lawsuits aimed at banning the sale

of Apple Inc products in Europe.

Over the previous 18 months the

world’s two leading smartphone

makers had been locked in patent

disputes in at least ten countries.

Apple began the lawsuit series

when it accused Samsung of

copying its best-selling iPhone

and iPad.

On 17

th

December a judge

rejected Apple’s request for a

ban on the sale of Samsung

Electronics smartphones in the

United States. While the Korean

company did not say that it would

altogether abandon its quest for

compensation at law, it announced

that it was dropping its effort to

stop the sale of Apple products in

Britain, France, Germany, Italy and

the Netherlands.

China Telecom Corp announced

that it has introduced pre-paid

card products that allow third

generation, or 3G, network users

to buy the ability to transmit

specific amounts of data. The

carrier is the first Chinese telecom

operator to offer wireless network

traffic products to customers.

China Telecom said in a statement

that, compared with older-type

telecom contract plans, prepaid

data cards are convenient to

purchase, flexible in use, and

targeted toward specific amounts

of data demand.

As reported by Shen Jingting in

China Daily (12

th

December), China

Telecom offers 3G network data

cards for 60 megabytes (MB),

150MB, and 300MB of data. The

price for a 60MB card is 10 yuan

($1.60).

“Data traffic management is a

very important task for telecom

carriers, especially when they

enter the mobile Internet age,”

Le Huihua,

senior product

manager of China Telecom’s

operation management division,

told

China Daily

.