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	<title>4G Domains &#187; Taiwan</title>
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		<title>WiMAX Moves Forward in Taiwan</title>
		<link>http://4gdomains.com/2009/07/wimax-moves-forward-in-taiwan-2/</link>
		<comments>http://4gdomains.com/2009/07/wimax-moves-forward-in-taiwan-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 20 Jul 2009 03:05:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>aweissberger</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[4G News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Taiwan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[WiMAX]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Taiwan is a country to watch carefully in assessing the early success and commercial viability of Mobile WiMAX deployments.  Executive Briefing on Current Status, Innovative Applications and Future Deployments.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<b>Introduction<br />
</b><br />
The Taiwan government has already invested more than $220M in WiMAX<sup>1</sup> and has<br />
heavily promoted the technology for &quot;next-generation&quot; mobile Internet access.&nbsp;<br />
In 2007, the first WiMAX Forum Applications lab was opened on the island nation.&nbsp;<br />
And in April 2008, the Taiwan Ministry of Economic Affairs and Intel-Taiwan<br />
signed a memorandum of understanding to jointly accelerate the commercial<br />
deployment of WiMAX in Taiwan.&nbsp; But a lot more has happened since then.</p>
<p>In a highly anticipated presentation last week, Dr.&nbsp; Ching-Tarng Hsieh &#8211;<br />
Engineering Director at ITRI and Head the WiMAX Forum Taiwan office &#8211; described<br />
the current and forthcoming WiMAX deployments in Taiwan along with several<br />
unique applications being trialed.&nbsp; Dr.&nbsp; Hsieh spoke to an audience of<br />
approximately 40 engineers and scientists at a July 13th meeting at ITRI<br />
International Inc., San Jose, CA.&nbsp; ITRI, NATEA, and IEEE ComSoc -SCV<br />
jointly sponsored Dr.&nbsp; Hsieh&#8217;s well received talk.</p>
<p>Ching-Tarng also briefed attendees on WiMAX deployments in other countries,<br />
including Japan, Malaysia, Russia, and the U.S.&nbsp; According to the WiMAX<br />
Forum, there are currently 475 WiMAX deployments in 140 countries providing<br />
fixed and mobile WiMAX services.&nbsp; </p>
<p>A strong case was made that broadband penetration can significantly increase a<br />
country&#8217;s GDP (one surmises this was a main motivator for the Taiwan government<br />
to invest so heavily in WiMAX).&nbsp; In addition, WiMAX availability stimulates<br />
the design and development of innovative new devices and applications, which<br />
further contribute to economic growth.&nbsp; At the CES- 2009, Sony CEO Howard<br />
Stringer stated, &quot;By 2011, 90 percent of Sony products will connect to the<br />
Internet and to each other.&quot;</p>
<p>The creation of a complete WiMAX ecosystem is expected to enhance the global<br />
competitiveness of Taiwan originated WiMAX offerings through greater<br />
interoperability with the WiMAX infrastructure in other parts of the world.&nbsp;<br />
Indeed, Taiwanese PC and CPE manufacturers are already a leading exporter of<br />
WiMAX products to many countries.&nbsp; And the growth of the domestic Taiwan<br />
WiMAX market will likely re-enforce this trend.</p>
<p>
<b>WiMAX in Taiwan &#8211; a Complete Package<br />
</b><br />
Two of the six WiMAX Forum certification labs in the world are in Taiwan.&nbsp;<br />
Certification is needed to ensure interoperability of WiMAX base stations,<br />
subscriber stations, CPE, and mobile devices.&nbsp; A March 2009 the WMF NOTF<br />
Low Cost Device Survey found that 89% of global network operators will require<br />
certification of WiMAX equipment and terminals.&nbsp; To corroborate this point,<br />
Takashi Tanaka, President, UQ Communications (Japan) recently stated: &quot;A variety<br />
of WiMAX Forum Certified end products are indispensable for UQ pursuing the<br />
retail distribution business model.&quot;</p>
<p>More about the WiMAX Forum in Taiwan at: <a href="http://www.wimaxforum.org.tw/"></p>
<p>http://www.wimaxforum.org.tw/</a></p>
<p>MTWAL is the first WiMAX Forum Applications Lab (M-Taiwan WiMAX Applications<br />
Lab).&nbsp; It was established by ITRI with support from WiMAX service provider<br />
VMAX Telecom.&nbsp; The objective of the Applications lab was to provide a<br />
platform for developing innovative WiMAX applications.&nbsp; It is currently an<br />
important ITRI attraction that is frequented by many international and domestic<br />
visitors.</p>
<p>ITRI-Taiwan is conducting a trial of WiMAX technology on a high- speed train<br />
(maximum speed of 300 Km/hour)<sup>2</sup> .&nbsp; Maintaining broadband connectivity during<br />
rapid motion is a super challenge in itself, but it&#8217;s complicated by the fact<br />
that the high-speed train often goes through tunnels, which effectively block<br />
radio waves.&nbsp; For more on ITRI&#8217;s role in the WiMAX ecosystem, please see<br />
the Editors Note on ITRI at the end of this article.</p>
<p>Taiwan was said to have a &quot;Complete WiMAX Ecosystem&quot; -&quot; in collaboration with<br />
leading international companies.&nbsp; The ecosystem includes: IC/Modules, CPE,<br />
Femto /Pico/Micro Base Stations (BS), Carrier-Grade BS/Software System, Testing<br />
and Certification, SI and Content Providers, and WiMAX Network Operators/<br />
Service Providers.&nbsp; The ecosystem is listed in the graphic below:</p>
<p><img border="0" src="http://www.wimax.com/commentary/blog/blog-2009/july-2009/wimax-taiwan-ecosystem.jpg" width="550" height="403" title="WiMAX Moves Forward in Taiwan" alt="wimax taiwan ecosystem WiMAX Moves Forward in Taiwan" /></p>
<p>
<b>Ongoing WiMAX Projects and Future Events in Taipei<br />
</b><br />
Some of the recent WiMAX projects and upcoming events in Taiwan include:</p>
<p>o Roaming trial:&nbsp; ITRI is conducting roaming testing with Tatung University<br />
in<br />
cooperation with Aicent.&nbsp; Domestic operators will soon be invited to<br />
participate in the trial.&nbsp; In addition, Taiwan will participate in the<br />
WiMAX Forum Global Roaming trial.</p>
<p>o WiMAX on Taipei MRT (Municipal Rapid Transit): ITRI teamed up with VMAX<br />
Telecom, Acer, AWB, MSI, Tecom and ZyXEL, PTS, Taipei Zoo, and the Taipei City<br />
Government to offer WiMAX service on designated subway trains.&nbsp; This is a<br />
one-year project on the Muzha Line.&nbsp; VMAX Telecom installed 13 WiMAX base<br />
stations to facilitate the WiMAX service to each train.&nbsp; WiFi is used for<br />
wireless connectivity between the passenger and the WiFi AP within the train.&nbsp;<br />
Then WiMAX is used to backhaul the WiFi traffic to the ISP.&nbsp; The project<br />
has and will continue to demonstrate instant mobile and high quality media<br />
entertainment available to subscribers in motion.</p>
<p>o WiMAX Forum member conference and MTWAL open house in Taipei in<br />
October 2009</p>
<p>o VTC2010-Spring in Taipei May 16-19, 2010 (<a href="http://www.vtc2010spring.org">www.vtc2010spring.org</a>)</p>
<p><b><br />
WiMAX Deployment in Taiwan- It&#8217;s Happening Now<br />
</b><br />
The WiMAX development in Taiwan reached an important milestone with the first<br />
commercial service deployment earlier this year.&nbsp; On April 27, 2009, Tatung<br />
InfoComm formally launched WiMAX services on Penghu, Taiwan&#8217;s largest outlying<br />
island with 21 base stations providing coverage.&nbsp; Several promotions were<br />
offered to entice Penghu&#8217;s 93,000 residents to sign up for the new broadband<br />
wireless Internet service.&nbsp; On July 8, 2009, Tatung InfoComm launched WiMAX<br />
service in Kaohsiung with 200 base stations.&nbsp; The service is cheaper than<br />
ADSL, but offers 3 to 4 times the speed along with mobility.&nbsp; </p>
<p>Tatung has a very aggressive schedule for WiMAX deployments in the 2008~2012<br />
time period (3000+ Base Transceiver Stations or BTS&#8217;s):<br />
- 2008-2010 Covering 90% population major cities<br />
- 2009-2011 Over 70% population major counties<br />
- 2010-2012 Optimized full coverage</p>
<p>In addition, Tatung Infocomm plans many innovative applications and services for<br />
its WiMAX offerings.&nbsp; These include Location Based Services, remote home<br />
care, mobile office with VoIP, mobile tour guide, and mobile security.&nbsp; In<br />
addition, the service provider has an impressive roadmap for WiMAX devices:<br />
- 2009-USB Dongle, Indoor CPE, Outdoor CPE<br />
- 2010-Embedded netbook, WiMAX MID, Dual mode phone<br />
- 2011-PDA, PSP, Digital Camera, Navigator, etc.</p>
<p><b>But that&#8217;s just the beginning?..<br />
</b><br />
CTV &#8211; the largest TV network in Taiwan- currently uses a WiMAX network to<br />
distribute video news clips to the TV stations.&nbsp; <br />
By the end of 2009, WiMAX service will be available from six different network<br />
operators: Fitel, VMAX Telecom, Vee Telecom Multimedia, Far Eastone, Global<br />
Mobile, and Tatung InfoComm.&nbsp; For spectrum license purposes, the main<br />
island of Taiwan is divided into North and South zones.&nbsp; By the end of<br />
2012, it is expected that WiMAX operators will cover the entire island nation of<br />
22.9M people.</p>
<p><img border="0" src="http://www.wimax.com/commentary/blog/blog-2009/july-2009/wimax-taiwan.jpg" width="550" height="399" title="WiMAX Moves Forward in Taiwan" alt="wimax taiwan WiMAX Moves Forward in Taiwan" /></p>
<p>
VMAX Telecom has very impressive plans for WiMAX deployment.&nbsp; The operator<br />
will launch commercial service by Q3/2009 in Taipei City or Hsinchu County.&nbsp;<br />
They plan to have 20% coverage by Q3/2009, 50% by Q1/2010, and 85% by Q4/2010.&nbsp;<br />
VMAX is partnering with ASUS, Tecom and Intel to realize their WiMAX deployment<br />
schedule.&nbsp; Data, voice, and value added services (TBD) will be offered to<br />
subscribers.&nbsp; Subscribers will be able to buy WiMAX CPE from retail stores,<br />
key account partners, and 3C chain stores.&nbsp; As previously noted, VMAX is<br />
working with ITRI in support of a one year project to provide WiMAX service on<br />
the Taipei MRT Muzha/Neihu Line.</p>
<p><b>Questions and Open Issues</b></p>
<p>From the discussion during and after the presentation, several critical issues<br />
were identified for WiMAX to be successful in Taiwan (and probably other<br />
countries as well):</p>
<p>- Roaming between WiMAX network operators- when will it be operational?<br />
- Interoperability and handoff between Mobile WiMAX and 3G/GSM networks &#8211; both<br />
for data and voice? Which 2G/3G networks should a WiMAX phone also support (in<br />
addition to VoIP over WiMAX)?<br />
- Sufficient backhaul capacity?<br />
- VoIP over WiMAX interoperability and roaming- will it be just Skype service or<br />
a provider based VoIP service that ensures a minimum QOS?<br />
Choice of different handheld devices with embedded WiMAX radios/interfaces, e.g.&nbsp;<br />
cameras, MIDs, Sony gadgets, smart phones, other?<br />
- Availability of WiFi APs with embedded WiMAX radios/interfaces</p>
<p><b>Conclusions<br />
</b><br />
The successful deployment of WiMAX will make industry in Taiwan even more<br />
competitive and enhance the quality of life for subscribers.&nbsp; At three to<br />
four times the speed of DSL (plus mobility), the service will be very<br />
attractively priced. &nbsp;<br />
But the WiMAX activities in this island nation have even more global<br />
significance.&nbsp; Interoperability testing, applications and research lab<br />
results will strongly contribute to the progress of the global WiMAX ecosystem.&nbsp;<br />
An open and thriving WiMAX market in Taiwan will help device and equipment<br />
vendors, as well as companies that develop applications for WiMAX notebooks,<br />
netbooks and other terminals.&nbsp; We find it very encouraging that notebook PC<br />
leaders Acer and Asus-Tech are providing WiMAX CPE along with D-Link.&nbsp; We<br />
are impressed with the devices that Tatung Infocomm (and other Taiwan WiMAX<br />
operators) are planning to offer subscribers, through either partners or retail<br />
sales channels.&nbsp; Good luck Taiwan!</p>
<p><b>Postscript from the Speaker<br />
</b><br />
In response to a wimax360 member comment questioning the vibrancy and<br />
sustainability of WiMAX in Taiwan, Dr.&nbsp; Ching-Tarng Hsieh wrote: </p>
<p>&quot;Taiwan&#8217;s ICT industry is not a &quot;low-cost PCB assembly centric service economy.&quot;<br />
Taiwan has been dominating the world in the design and production of many ICT<br />
products.&nbsp; The WiMAX Forum depends on Taiwan to come up with a wide variety<br />
of economical WiMAX products.&nbsp; Taiwan&#8217;s WiMAX industry has exported base<br />
stations and a large quantity of WiMAX CPEs.&nbsp; In 2008, Taiwan vendors<br />
collectively held a dominant global market share of WiMAX CPEs.&nbsp; The<br />
increased shipments in 2009<sup>3</sup> indicate this trend is continuing.&nbsp; This is the<br />
real impact of Taiwan&#8217;s WiMAX industry.&quot;</p>
<p>Best regards,<br />
Ching-Tarng Hsieh, PhD</p>
<p><b><u>Editors Note:</u>&nbsp; ITRI&#8217;s Role in Taiwan&#8217;s WiMAX Ecosystem<br />
</b><br />
ITRI has been involved in the development of many WiMAX related research<br />
projects.&nbsp; These include: WiMAX/WiFi high-speed seamless handover<br />
technology, the establishment of a WiMAX Experiment Network also included the<br />
construction of Taiwan High Speed Rail (HSR) 300 Km/Hr.&nbsp; experiment<br />
network.&nbsp; By emphasizing the technology uniqueness and diversification, the<br />
WiMAX Experiment Network will promote the development of Taiwan bred WiMAX chip,<br />
terminal, base station, and application services that can provide a complete<br />
WiMAX industry chain.&nbsp; </p>
<p>ITRI also collaborates with national and international research organizations<br />
and WiMAX device manufacturers with the expectation of developing new models of<br />
services and operations to assist Taiwan in becoming a world-leading country for<br />
WiMAX system and applications.</p>
<p>For more information, please refer to:&nbsp;<br />
<a href="http://www.itri.org.tw/eng/Research/Focus-Area/focus-sub-area-detail.asp?RootNodeId=0301&#038;NodeId=03011&#038;RDProjectNBR=185"><br />
WiMAX-enabled PMD Platform and the World-leading WiMAX Experiment Network and<br />
Services</a></p>
<p><b><u>Acknowledgements</u>:</b>&nbsp; We would like to thank Dr.&nbsp;<br />
Ching-Tarng Hsieh for his excellent presentation and follow up answers to<br />
questions.&nbsp; Thanks also to ITRI International Inc.&nbsp; President Sean<br />
Wang for hosting this and other very relevant technology forums from NATEA, IEEE<br />
ComSoc, Monte Jade, etc.&nbsp; IEEE ComSoc officer Simon Ma did an excellent job<br />
as the co-coordinator and MC for this meeting (a job normally done by this<br />
author).&nbsp; Thanks Simon!</p>
<p>Alan J.&nbsp; Weissberger<br />
IEEE ComSoc SCV Program Chair</p>
<p>___________</p>
<p><sup>1</sup> &#8211; The government&#8217;s $220M contribution was said to be 1/3 the total<br />
cost of the M-Taiwan Program. Please refer to: M-Taiwan Program and Objectives<br />
of WiMAX in Taiwan at:<br />
<a href="http://www.wimax360.com/profiles/blogs/mtaiwan-program-and-objectives"></p>
<p>http://www.wimax360.com/profiles/blogs/mtaiwan-program-and-objectives</a></p>
<p>
<sup>2</sup> &#8211; Applicable OFDM Communication Technology for Taiwan High Speed<br />
Rail<br />
<a href="http://www.itri.org.tw/eng/Research/Focus-Area/focus-sub-area-detail.asp?RootNodeId=0301&#038;NodeId=03011&#038;RDProjectNBR=187"></p>
<p>http://www.itri.org.tw/eng/Research/Focus-Area/focus-sub-area-detail.asp?RootNodeId=0301&#038;NodeId=03011&#038;RDProjectNBR=187</a></p>
<p>
<sup>3</sup> &#8211; 2Q 2009 Finds That the Taiwanese Wimax CPE Makers Saw Demand<br />
Surge in the First Quarter of 2009,<br />
<a href="http://www.wimax360.com/profiles/blogs/research-and-markets-the"></p>
<p>http://www.wimax360.com/profiles/blogs/research-and-markets-the</a></p>
<p>
&nbsp;</p>
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