Mobile Wireless Communications Tomorrow (cont.)
                  by Puneet 
                  Gupta
                  They're Already Talking About 4G!
                  Several new standards have been proposed which don't fit 
                  into this classification of 2, 2.5 or 3G. These standards 
                  either provide only data services and/or provide much higher 
                  data rates than those specified by 3G systems. Examples are 
                  1Xplus and 1XTREME. Since they use a single CDMA carrier they 
                  may be called 2.5G but then they provide much higher data 
                  rates than 3G. According to Motorola, 1XTREME will not require 
                  additional antennas as HDR will, and it will also keep data on 
                  the same spectrum as the voice services, meaning carriers 
                  won't have to devote any spectrum specifically to data 
                  services. 1XTREME is proposed to deliver the same voice 
                  capacity increases as standard 1X, and provide data rates 
                  approaching 1.4 Mbps. The second iteration, expected to be in 
                  trials by the first quarter of 2001, is expected to deliver 
                  data rates as high as 5.2 Mbps. Motorola expects 1XTREME to be 
                  market-ready in the same time frame as HDR: by the end of 2001 
                  to the first half of 2002. 
                  Another interesting thing is that these so called 4G 
                  technologies may start appearing almost at the same time when 
                  3G comes. It is not very clear as to how these developments 
                  will influence an already very complex set of equations. 
                  Concluding Remarks
                  Mobile communications are really poised to see major 
                  improvements in terms of capabilities of mobile networks. The 
                  next generation of wireless services, besides improving the 
                  overall capacity, will create new demand and usage patterns, 
                  which will in turn, drive the development and continuos 
                  evolution of services and infrastructure. While development of 
                  3G networks will continue and pick up pace in the near future, 
                  the 2nd generation networks will keep evolving in terms of 
                  continuous enhancements and towards convergence of existing 2G 
                  standards. The initial 3G solutions should coexist with the 2G 
                  networks while slowly evolving to all 3G networks. While 3G in 
                  its true sense should have transparent roaming across all 
                  networks through out the world, given the penetration and the 
                  investments in the 2nd generation, true roaming (consistent 
                  service availability, across networks, independent of 
                  networks) looks to be to a very distant proposition! 
                  References
                  [1] Yankee 
                  Group
[2] http://www.ovum.com/
                  
                  The statements and opinions set forth in this article 
                  are solely those of the author, and not those of the author's 
                  employer. 
                  About The Author: Puneet Gupta works for Bell Labs, 
                  Lucent Technologies in GSM/GPRS development. He has also been 
                  doing freelance technology writing for many magazines and 
                  newspapers. Puneet is currently focusing on areas related to 
                  mobile wireless data and associated technologies. He can be 
                  reached at puneetg@india.com.