Huawei considers Australian 4G lab

  • Email a Friend
  • Print Page
Huawei considers Australian 4G lab
Jul 3, 2009 12:17 PM
Tags: huawei | australia | nbn | lte | wireless | technologies | carrier

But dollars depend on demand.

Huawei said it will consider building a research centre in Australia to enable carriers to test next-generation telecommunications technology for the National Broadband Network.

The Chinese telecoms equipment maker this week opened a long-term evolution (LTE) incubator in Japan, its first in the Asia-Pacific.

It will enable Huawei' s research teams to work with Japanese operators "to conduct rigorous tests on LTE systems before delivery", the company said.

And it will be open to Australian carriers looking to test their equipment. The technology, also called 4G, is one of several being discussed as an alternative for the one in 10 Australians to miss out on optical fibre.

"There's potential to set up a [research] centre in Australia ... but it's all demand-driven," said Huawei Technologies Australia chief technology officer Peter Rossi.

"We've had initial discussions with the industry. Everyone is asking questions about it, finding out where the standards are at and what's coming over the horizon but they're just discussions at the moment."

Most demand is from operators in Europe and Japan, Rossi said.

The Japanese lab has a real-world environment in which tests such as peak throughput, latency, quality of service, handover, management operations and self-organising network are done.

Its downlink data rate at the application layer reaches 140Mbps through a remote radio unit with 20 Mhz bandwidth.

And it has Huawei' s fourth-generation DBS3900 base station and the latest versions of commercial software and test terminals.


 
Comments

Be the first to comment on this article.
Thoughts on this article? Add a comment below.
Comment:
Want to participate in the discussion?
Or log in now to comment
 
 
 
Top Stories
TIO website hit by malware
Weekend malware runs one new process per target machine.
 
Microsoft announces Azure launch date
Australia in second wave of country releases.
 
CBA embarks on "database-as-a-service"
Analysis: How the bank intends to save megabucks.
 

Spotlightthe topics we're following

Latest Comments

"It never fails to astound me at the greed of corporate executives and politicians, and this ..."
by BernieG Feb 10, 2010 7:55 AM
 
"Hahahah...What a joke!! "Conroy had said that it was not possible to apply ISP-level filtering ..."
by gerson Feb 9, 2010 10:39 PM
 
"@@Comments, yes, and history keeps repeating itself. Remember the earlier pr-and-media-fuelled ..."
by anonymous Feb 9, 2010 6:40 PM
 
"I would have paid good money to be in court when that clanger dropped. Could you imagine, the ..."
by Private Citizen Feb 9, 2010 6:23 PM
 
"He is not yet listed on NBN Co. website as part of their team of executives (http://www.nbnco.com..."
by Private Citizen Feb 9, 2010 6:07 PM
1) HTC Magic16 plans 2%
2) Nokia N9743 plans 9%
3) Nokia E7149 plans 1%
4) Apple iPhone 3GS 16GB30 plans 11%
5) Apple iPhone 8GB42 plans 5%
1) iiNet32 plans 5%
2) Netspace36 plans 11%
3) TPG Internet19 plans 14%
4) Optus33 plans 1%
5) Telstra BigPond30 plans 2%

Mobiles | Broadband | Credit Cards

iTnews

Polls

What is the sweet spot for Apple's entry 16GB Wi-Fi iPad?




   |   View results
$549
  78%
 
$579
  10%
 
$619
  4%
 
$649
  3%
 
$699
  5%
TOTAL VOTES: 382

Vote