ICE.NET extends rural COVERAGE WITH CDMA network
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Strategic CDMA reference in Europe
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Mobile broadband, from midland to coastal areas in Sweden, Norway and Denmark
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Cost-efficient mobile broadband opens up for machine-to-machine applications
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Reliable communications for the public safety sector
Ice.net's business strategy is to secure mobile broadband in remote areas that have not yet benefited from the booming mobile broadband buildout. The combination of Ericsson's (NASDAQ:ERIC) CDMA technology and Ice.net's use of the 450 Mhz frequency bandwidth secures mobile internet for enterprises and people dependent on coverage outside major cities, like coastal areas, mountain ranges and at sea. With customers like the Swedish police force and rescue organizations, quality and coverage is of utmost importance.
Improved coverage in rural areas makes it possible to develop machine-to-machine applications, such as reading energy meters at a distance, forest-handling and fleet management.
The contract includes expansion of Icenet's CDMA network as well as network rollout and related support services in Sweden, Norway and Denmark
Per Borgklint, CEO of Ice.net, says: "Ericsson offers mobile CDMA technology with extremely good reach, combined with reliable support-services. Ice.net is dependent on a network that can cater to the need for high quality, speed and secure deliveries; critical factors for the broad variation of environment and tasks our customers are facing. A network provided by Ericsson will allow us to address the public safety area, like the Swedish police force and coast guard in a very efficient way."
Mikael Bäckström, head of Ericsson in the Nordic and Baltic region, adds: "This contract points out the new opportunities and yet-untapped markets we see for our CDMA business. Our competitive replacement of other vendor equipment is a proof point of the competitiveness and quality of our CDMA 450 Mhz solution, making high quality mobile internet services available in additional spectrum."
The contract confirms that Ericsson's CDMA business is on a trajectory to expand outside North America. Ericsson's international market extends into several CDMA markets and with over 80 CDMA customers around the world, the company holds a leading position in the market.
CDMA is an established technology both in North America, Europe, Asia, Africa, and Latin America with over 150 operators in over 75 countries and with devices from over 25 suppliers.
Ericsson acquired its CDMA business from Nortel in 2009, adding more than 2,000 employees around the world, to its existing US operations and with important CDMA contracts with North American operators such as Verizon, Sprint, U.S. Cellular, Bell Canada and Leap.
Strategic CDMA reference in Europe
*
Mobile broadband, from midland to coastal areas in Sweden, Norway and Denmark
*
Cost-efficient mobile broadband opens up for machine-to-machine applications
*
Reliable communications for the public safety sector
Ice.net's business strategy is to secure mobile broadband in remote areas that have not yet benefited from the booming mobile broadband buildout. The combination of Ericsson's (NASDAQ:ERIC) CDMA technology and Ice.net's use of the 450 Mhz frequency bandwidth secures mobile internet for enterprises and people dependent on coverage outside major cities, like coastal areas, mountain ranges and at sea. With customers like the Swedish police force and rescue organizations, quality and coverage is of utmost importance.
Improved coverage in rural areas makes it possible to develop machine-to-machine applications, such as reading energy meters at a distance, forest-handling and fleet management.
The contract includes expansion of Icenet's CDMA network as well as network rollout and related support services in Sweden, Norway and Denmark
Per Borgklint, CEO of Ice.net, says: "Ericsson offers mobile CDMA technology with extremely good reach, combined with reliable support-services. Ice.net is dependent on a network that can cater to the need for high quality, speed and secure deliveries; critical factors for the broad variation of environment and tasks our customers are facing. A network provided by Ericsson will allow us to address the public safety area, like the Swedish police force and coast guard in a very efficient way."
Mikael Bäckström, head of Ericsson in the Nordic and Baltic region, adds: "This contract points out the new opportunities and yet-untapped markets we see for our CDMA business. Our competitive replacement of other vendor equipment is a proof point of the competitiveness and quality of our CDMA 450 Mhz solution, making high quality mobile internet services available in additional spectrum."
The contract confirms that Ericsson's CDMA business is on a trajectory to expand outside North America. Ericsson's international market extends into several CDMA markets and with over 80 CDMA customers around the world, the company holds a leading position in the market.
CDMA is an established technology both in North America, Europe, Asia, Africa, and Latin America with over 150 operators in over 75 countries and with devices from over 25 suppliers.
Ericsson acquired its CDMA business from Nortel in 2009, adding more than 2,000 employees around the world, to its existing US operations and with important CDMA contracts with North American operators such as Verizon, Sprint, U.S. Cellular, Bell Canada and Leap.
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