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23rd July 2006 - Samsung announced their first mobile phone
to work with the Unlicensed Mobile Access (UMA) technology.
Samsung P200 is the first handset of the company which will
use Wi-Fi (WLAN) technology to handle data and voice calls.
The idea behind that technology is simple enough - when there
is an accessible Wi-Fi hotspot near you, for example in your
home, office or university, or simply in the street, the UMA-enabled
device would connect to it and use the broadband connection
for making and accepting calls and sending and receiving data.
It resembles a lot using wireless VoIP-telephony through your
GSM mobile phone. Things get even better though, since the
UMA enabled phone would also be able to use regular GSM base
stations as any normal mobile phone would. The handset would
be able to change connections between the licensed cellular
radio access network and the unlicensed IP network seamlessly
even in the middle of a call without even the user noticing.
All you need to use the new technology is a UMA-enabled device,
an operator that supports UMA, and an Internet broadband connection
that you can access via Wi-Fi (WLAN). The most important difference
from the widely known VoIP technology is that UMA is after
all tightly linked to the mobile radio network, which is used
for routing, authentication and billing. A call initiated
using the Wi-Fi interface after all reaches the 2G core network
through the UMA Network and once the signal is transferred,
it becomes indistinguishable from the rest of the cellular
traffic. Do not throw your hopes for free calls through the
window just yet since the technology allows the UMA-enabled
devices to be used as regular VoIP handsets. But it's of course
up to the manufacturer to decide whether to block that functionality
or not.
The technology is sure to become popular since the UMA Consortium
currently includes leading service providers, infrastructure
suppliers and handset manufacturers such as Nokia, Sony Ericsson,
Ericsson, Motorola, Siemens, British Telecom, Cingular, Nortel,
O2 and T-Mobile US. Currently, Nokia is the only other manufacturer
besides Samsung to have announced a UMA-enabled device - the
Nokia 6136 handset. While the Nokia device is still under
development, the Samsung SGH-P200 though is more than ready
to hit the shelves - at least in Italy for the time being.
The slider follows the design of the manufacturer's current
line of mobile phones and besides the revolutionary UMA support
it offers a 1.3 megapixel camera, a large 262K color TFT with
a 176 x 220 pixel resolution, and 80MB internal memory. Connectivity
options include GPRS, EDGE, and Wi-Fi. The phone measures
95 x 44 x 22.5 mm and weighs only 95 g
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