Cisco Sees LTE And WiMAX Coexisting In A 4G World

April 20, 2009

The move from 3G to 4G wireless networks will be less an evolution and more a transformation, says Cisco System’s Kittur Nagesh.

The volume of mobile data will grow 66 times in the next five years, says Kittur Nagesh

The volume of mobile data will grow 66 times in the next five years, says Kittur Nagesh

Data will fly through the air at greater speeds and in much higher volumes, says this director of service provider marketing.

Nagesh, who spelled out Cisco’s view on the 4G migration in a recent interview, said demands for network bandwidth will skyrocket.

Over the next five years, the amount of data traveling over wireless networks will grow 66 times – or at a 120 percent annual pace, he said. About two thirds of it will be video.

As wireless carriers prepare their networks for the coming onslaught, there will be roles for both LTE and WiMAX, says Nagesh. Many people see LTE – an abbreviation of the long-term evolution technology many wireless carriers expect to use for the cellular networks – and WiMAX – a long-range successor to Wi-Fi – as competitors locked in a boxing match. “We feel that is not true,” he said. “Both have a place.”

Over time, LTE will probably be the dominant of the technologies. But it will take years for this to play out.

In the meantime, WiMAX will be strong in emerging markets and take root as well in markets in the U.S. where the necessary spectrum is plentiful.

And with tens of billions of wireless devices in use by 2013, the dual role could be a good thing. All that data will need wireless roads to follow.


Video Will Boost Mobile Internet Traffic, Cisco Says

February 10, 2009
Handsets and laptops will drive the increase in wireless traffic

3.5 and 4G handsets and laptops will drive the increase in wireless traffic

In its Mobile Forecast for 2008-2013 released today, Cisco is projecting global mobile traffic to increase 66-fold between 2008 and 2013.

Video on fourth-generation (4G) mobile Internet networks will be the main driver for this tremendous growth.

Here are some more findings from Cisco’s Mobile Forecast:

  1. Global mobile traffic will exceed two exabytes per month by 2013;
  2. Nearly 64 percent of the world’s mobile traffic will be video by 2013;
  3. Mobile video will grow at a CAGR of 150 percent between 2008 and 2013;
  4. Latin America will have the strongest mobile growth at 166 percent CAGR, followed by the Asia-Pacific region at 146 percent;
  5. Asia-Pacific will account for one-third of all mobile data traffic by 2013;
  6. Mobile broadband handsets with higher than 3G speeds and laptop air or data cards will constitute more than 80 percent of global mobile traffic by 2013.

Clearwire Could Stall Nationwide WiMAX Deployment Amid Credit Crunch

December 17, 2008
Sprint's dual 3G/4G modem works on both the carrier existing EVDO high-speed network and on Clearwire's WiMAX network

Sprint's dual 3G/4G modem works on both the carrier existing EVDO high-speed network and on Clearwire's WiMAX network

Network operator Clearwire is set to build the first nationwide 4G mobile broadband network using WiMAX wireless technology.

But it now appears that the company is $2 to $5 billion short to complete the national roll out. Despite the $3.2 billion investment Clearwire received earlier this month from Comcast, Intel, Time Warner Cable, Google and Bright House Networks.

Today, Clearwire’s network only covers the city of Baltimore, with Portland, Ore., officially launching early January. And 46 more markets are planned in the initial build-out next year.

With credit markets still in flux, Clearwire’s prospect of raising public debt are slim; leaving the carrier with little choice but to slow if not stall its network build-out. Which could represent a significant financial blow for suppliers like Motorola.

Sprint launched a WiMAX modem inspite the lack of a WiMAX network!

In a somewhat funny turn of event, Sprint – which provided Clearwire with most of the WiMAX spectrum – announced today a 3G/4G dual-mode USB modem that will connect a computer to Clearwire’s WiMAX (4G) service.

The wireless modem will cost $150 with a two-year subscriber agreement and after a $50 mail-in-rebate. The device will work on both Sprint’s existing EVDO (3G) nationwide high-speed network and on Clearwire’s Baltimore – and soon Portland – WiMAX networks. Sprint claims an average downlink speeds of 2-4 Mbps within its 4G network; about 3 times the speed of its EVDO network.

But unless you are in the Baltimore or Portland areas, I find hard to understand the benefit of this dual modem. Especially if the WiMAX roll-out takes several more years to complete than initially thought!


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