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 Home > V & D 100 > V&D100 - 2007 > Emerging Technologies: HSPA: The Verdict is Out
  V&D100 - 2007
Emerging Technologies: HSPA: The Verdict is Out
HSPA seems to have the answers to all mobile broadband worries
Friday, June 15, 2007
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High speed downlink packet access (HSDPA) is an evolution of WCDMA. HSPA refers to both the improvements made in the UMTS downlink, often referred to as HSDPA and the improvements made in the uplink, often referred to as high speed uplink packet access (HSUPA). HSDPA enables data transmission speeds of up to 14.4 Mbps per user. Both HSDPA and HSUPA can be implemented in the standard 5 MHz carrier of UMTS networks, and can co-exist with the first generation of UMTS networks based on the 3GPP Release 99 (R99) standard.

A Market Reality
High speed packet access (HSPA) is becoming a market reality with 104 commercial launches in 54 different countries and 158 operator commitments in 72 countries (source: GSA, April 2007). It is widely believed and expected that most, if not all, UMTS operators will upgrade to HSPA. In most markets, the addition of HSPA to operator portfolios is not a question of whether they should, but rather when, where, and how to bring it to market. It is expected that there will be almost one billion active users of HSPA networks by 2012.

Why Will it Happen?
By affording additional capacity and bandwidth in mobile operators' existing spectrum allocations, HSPA can significantly reduce delivery costs per bit and improve operators' ability to deliver advanced applications.

Advantages to Reckon

  • High spectral efficiency of HSPA for data and WCDMA for voice provides UMTS operators an efficient high-capacity network for all services

  • HSDPA users under favorable conditions regularly experience throughput rates well in excess of one megabit per second

  • Continual HSPA enhancements are planned. Beginning with enhanced uplink performance, advanced receivers in the mobile and in the base station, and then multiple input multiple output (MIMO), will extend HSPA capability even further

  • Operators can transition their general packet radio service (GPRS) networks to EDGE and their UMTS networks to HSDPA/HSUPA and, in the future, to HSPA+ and LTE; in some cases by simply upgrading the software in their platforms

  • Voice over Internet protocol (VoIP) with HSPA will eventually add to voice capacity and reduce infrastructure costs

The report quantifies the improvements offered by HSPA technology that will stimulate the market for 3G data services. It also segments the likely applications which will drive this revenue on a regional basis, highlighting geographical differences between taking up services such as mobile infotainment.

By 2012, 3G HSPA subscribers will be generating average traffic per user seven to nine times that of non-HSPA 3G subscribers, as a result of higher quality user experience and lower tariffs. Due to relatively low deployment costs, HSPA will represent a 'must-have' for the vast majority of 3G/UMTS operators over the next few years.

Righteous Adoption
Users are adopting wireless data in a wide range of applications, including email, Internet, game downloads, instant messaging, ring tones, and video as well as in enterprise applications such as group collaboration, enterprise resource planning, customer relationship management, and database access. This simultaneous adoption by consumers for entertainment-related services and businesses to enhance productivity increases the return-on-investment potential for wireless operators.

With data constituting a rising percentage of total cellular traffic, it is essential that operators deploy data technologies that meet customer requirements for performance and are spectrally efficient-especially as data applications can demand significantly more network resources than traditional voice services. Operators have a huge investment in spectrum and in their networks; data services must leverage these investments. It is only a matter of time before today's more than two billion cellular customers start taking full advantage of data capabilities. This presents tremendous opportunities and risks to operators as they choose the most commercially viable evolution path for migrating their customers. The EDGE/HSPA/LTE evolution paths provide data capabilities to address market needs, delivering ever-higher data throughputs, lower latency and increased spectral efficiency.

Nilabh Jha
nilabhj@cybermedia.co.in

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