| Copyright: L Perlman
In
this section we cover the following
:: cdma2000
:: cdma2000 1X-EV-DO
:: cdma2000 1X-EV-DV
:: cdma2000 3X
CDMA aficionados are rigorously promoting a
technically benign upgrade of existing cdmaOne (IS-95) CDMA networks to faster
cdma2000 technology, a CDMA 3G standard that they say can provide the same level
of 3G service claimed by W-CDMA/UMTS promoters. There are various types of
cdma2000 types, explained below.
cdma2000
1X
The 1xEV specification was developed by the Third Generation Partnership Project
2 (3GPP2), a partnership consisting of five telecomnunications standards bodies:
CWTS in China, ARIB and TTC in Japan, TTA in Korea and TIA in North America.It
is also known as High Rate Packet Data Air Interface Specification. It
delivers 3G-like services up to 140 kbps peak rate while occupying a very small
amount of spectrum (1.25 MHz per carrier), protecting this precious resource for
operators.
cdma2000
1X EV-DO
1X EV-DO, also called
1X-EV Phase One, is an enhancement that puts voice and data on separate channels
in order to provide data delivery at 2.4Mbit/s. It was developed by the
Third Generation Partnership Project 2 (3GPP2), a partnership consisting of five
telecomnunications standards bodies. Also known as High Rate Packet Data Air
Interface.
cdma2000
1X EV-DV
EV-DV, or 1X-EV Phase Two
with promises of data speeds ranging from 3Mbps to 5Mbps. As many as eight
proposals have been submitted to standards committee 3GPP2 for the design of
EV-DV
cdma2000
3X
CDMA2000 3x is an ITU-approved, IMT-2000 (3G) standard. It is part of what the
ITU has termed IMT-2000 CDMA MC. It uses 5 Mhz spectrum (3x 1.25 Mhz channels)
to give speeds of around 2-4 Mbps.
This first phase of cdma2000 - variously
called 1XRTT, 3G1X, or just plain 1X - is designed to double current voice
capacity and support always-on data transmission speeds 10 times faster than
typically available today, some 153.6 kbps on both the forward and reverse
links.
Handset standby times also increase by up to
50%. Users will also be able to benefit from enterprise and consumer
applications requiring more bandwidth, including personal information
management, telemetry, corporate intranet access, video conferencing, gaming and
music on demand.
The increase in voice and data capacity stems inter alia from advances in
modulation algorithms, new IP backbones, and new chipsets that support up to 32
simultaneous users on a single chip, a four-fold increase over the previous
generation.
While the cdma2000 specification allows for an evolutionary migration to later
advances in cdma2000 that use core IP networks and voice-over-IP, the current 1X
migration requires relatively modest hardware and software upgrades to existing
cdmaOne infrastructure. Even then, operators can upgrade to 1X without having to
implement it throughout their entire cdmaOne network, which means they can
upgrade certain hotspots that require voice capacity enhancements or higher data
speeds.
The strategy also aims to reduce technological risks by phased enhancements of
networks with medium rate data services, and then later evolve to higher rate
data services so as to avoid uncertainties of ROI that currently cloud the UMTS
3G vision.
cdma2000 can be deployed in existing spectrums such as 1900MHz along with an
existing cdmaOne system, overlaying its new feature set and increased capacity
on the existing cdmaOne networks. Most importantly, it uses existing (and paid
for) 1.25 MHz spectrum.
Handsets using cdma2000 technology will also be backward compatible to the
existing cdmaOne networks, so current handsets and features will operate over
next generation networks providing continued access both at home and while
roaming. Operators who deploy 3G with 1X will still have roaming with worldwide
CDMA operators on their cdmaOne networks. Dual mode handsets that allow
TDMA/cdma2000 interoperability may also augment the business case for a move by
TDMA operators to cdma2000.
The flexible migration from cdmaOne provides a series of upgrades leading to
cdma2000's increased voice capacity and Megabit 3G data rates, allowing each
operator to upgrade when its individual market requirements dictate without
significantly upgrading infrastructure or purchasing new spectrum.
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