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Communications

Nokia concerned at Ofcom consultation

Nokia has voiced concern over a consultation currently being run by Ofcom on ensuring competition in a spectrum market. A question in the document suggests the regulator is going back on undertakings, made in a consultation from November last year, that it would take specific steps to protect competition. In the new consultation Ofcom states that “imposing new regulatory measures ...

Nokia and ST push camera phone design standard

Philips Research last week opened a €60m cleanroom for multidisciplinary R&D at its High Tech Campus in Eindhoven. The MiPlaza (Microsystema Plaza) centre will provide researchers with facilities for developing sensors, displays, healthcare devices, and materials. There is a strong focus on system-in-package, with chipscale packaging a key theme. Henk van Houten, senior v-p and programme manager for lighting, devices, ...

Mobiles get pushy

There you are standing at the bus stop when your mother’s voice starts emanating loudly from your pocket, asking if you’ve got to the bus stop alright and to let her know when you reach the other end. This could prove embarrassing for anyone, even those under the age of 14, but similar situations could be occurring in the UK ...

Making sense of networks

There has been a radiation spill at a nuclear re-processing plant which has triggered an emergency response. An unstable isotope-laden cloud drifts off into the surrounding countryside, but where is it depositing radioactivity? With current technology, people drive into the area with radiation monitors and take measurements. These people have to arrive from all over the country, and none of ...

Comms: The standard debate

Headlines in wireless are dominated by standards. GSM, DECT, Bluetooth, 802.11, ZigBee, and WiMAX have evolved – or are still evolving – through meetings and international committees, as companies and engineers try to influence the final form of the technology. Invariably, it seems, these standards take a long time to finalise, and, once the committee process has run its course, ...

Firms target image sensor market

Firms are racing to gain a share of a European market for high resolution camera phones predicted for next year. The market for image sensors in particular has become a target for firms looking to take advantage of this growth. Cypress Semiconductor last week spent $100m acquiring 46-person Belgian imaging sensor firm FillFactory. It is a first time entry for ...

Telecoms firms take modular steps

The telecoms industry is now moving from proprietary systems to a modular building block approach. This is according to Intel and Motorola, which both made announcements about AdvancedTCA (telecom computing architecture) last week. “Communications is a vast industry, based largely on proprietary systems,” said Richard Lissenden, marketing manager EMEA at Intel. “But all large unregulated, unrestricted, industries modulise over time. ...

Bookham to become ‘US firm’ in September

Bookham Technology is to become a US firm as part of a plan to “strategically position” itself in the North American market. The Oxfordshire-based supplier of optical components will become Bookham Inc as soon as September this year with its shares listed on the NASDAQ stock market. “The Board believes the move will improve its strategic positioning by placing it ...

Academics to promote comms innovation

The Cambridge-MIT Institute (CMI) and University College London (UCL) have launched an initiative with the aim of promoting the level of innovation in the communications industry. The Communications Innovation Institute (CII) will look at tackling some of the major obstacles blocking innovation in communications technology and draw up roadmaps for the future. “Our hope is to solve some of the co-ordination ...

BT upgrade signals cash bonanza for suppliers

BT’s plan to switch the majority of its customers to an Internet protocol (IP) network by 2008 has created a multi-billion pound bonanza for telecoms hardware and software suppliers. The replacement of the existing public switched telephone network (PSTN) will mean investment of £2bn a year for an unspecified number of years from 2004 onwards. Dubbed the 21st century network ...