| 15th May - The growing use of
mobile broadband services by handsets, laptops, MIDs, and mobile CE devices will
place ever-increasing demands on 3G networks. In the end, 4G networks will be
required because people use devices wherever they are. Meanwhile, one way
to reduce the stress on network capacity is through the use of fixed-mobile convergence
(FMC), which routes traffic through customers wired broadband connections
when they are at home. New data from ABI Research suggests that capital expenditure
by mobile operators on 4G base station gateways and FMC-related carrier equipment
will approach $850 million in 2013. FMC is not just about relieving
networks voice traffic congestion, but data too, says principal analyst
Philip Solis. 3G handsets with Wi-Fi, laptops that often feature cellular
connections, the new class of Mobile Internet Devices, and other mobile broadband-enabled
consumer electronic products all add to network load. Operators need
for FMC and 4G equipment to meet that extra demand creates real opportunities
for vendors. All these factors mean necessary changes to the mobile
network landscape. FMC requires a well-integrated network incorporating unified
cross-platform applications. As femtocells are gradually introduced, they
will up the ante as well, becoming embedded as a function in any number of customer
premises equipment, from DSL gateways to set-top boxes. The $850 million
capital expenditures on the part of the network operators will be spread between
FMC platforms, 4G base stations, and the 4G gateways that aggregate their traffic.
The new ABI Research Brief Mobile Broadband Needs FMC and 4G
examines mobile device growth and the two solutions that are required fixed-mobile
convergence and the use of 4G networks and assesses the importance of each.
It also discusses the revenue opportunity that will come from convergence gateways,
ASN gateways for mobile WiMAX, and SAE gateways for LTE.
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