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19th July 2006 - The number of 3.5G mobile broadband subscribers
worldwide will boom more than ten-fold from 2.5 million in
2006 to more than 300 million in 2011, but market growth in
2006-07 will be restrained by a lack of compelling devices,
according to Future Mobile Broadband: HSPA, EV-DO, WiMAX &
LTE, a new Strategic Report from Informa Telecoms & Media.
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"A lack of compelling devices and content
led to delayed launches and slow take-up of WCDMA and
EV-DO services, and early HSDPA and EV-DO Revision A services
are expected to suffer from the very same problems,"
says Malik Saadi, principal analyst at Informa Telecoms
& Media and co-author of the Future Mobile Broadband
Strategic Report.
Saadi notes that most HSDPA services are launching
with only PC cards and notebooks, although a number
of early handsets are also arriving. "However it
is striking that as of June no major vendor has unveiled
plans for EV-DO Rev. A handsets, although data cards
are on the way."
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A lack of a wide range of compelling handsets will slow mass-market
takeup of 3.5G mobile broadband services in 2006-07,but handsets
will start to mature in 2008, leading to a sharp increase
in 3.5G handset sales and subscribers in 2008-09. By 2011
85% of 3.5G devices sold will be handsets, and the remaining
15% will be notebooks and PC cards.
3.5G mobile broadband subscribers are defined as subscribersusing
services based on HSDPA, HSUPA, EV-DO Revision A or EV-DORevision
B.
Mobile WiMAX will compete with HSPA and EV-DO Rev A/B in
the mobile broadband market, but will suffer even more than
those technologies from the slow arrival of compelling notebooks
and handsets. "Mobile WiMAX will play a relatively minor
role in the mobile broadband market through 2011, largely
because Mobile WiMAX notebooks and tablets will not arrive
in volume until 2008-09, and compelling Mobile WiMAX handsets
won't arrive until 2010," says Mike Roberts, principal
analyst at Informa Telecoms & Media and co-author of the
Future Mobile Broadband report. "By comparison HSDPA
notebooks and handsets are already shipping, which means that
the HSDPA device market is one to two years ahead of the Mobile
WiMAX device market," Roberts says.
However that should not obscure the fact that WiMAX will
gain significant momentum in the fixed, nomadic and portable
broadband segments in 2006-11, although many WiMAX subscribers
will be using fixed indoor modems rather than mobile devices,
Roberts adds.
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