China Daily Global Edition (USA)

All-network smartphone­s change mobile tech game

- By MA SI masi@chinadaily.com.cn

Top three players locked in a fierce battle for supremacy in formats used

Two of China’s major telecom carriers, which trail the marketlead­er,havejoined­forces to step up efforts to introduce phones that can access all networks.

ChinaUnite­dNetworkCo­mmunicatio­ns Group Corp, better known as China Unicom, and China Telecommun­ications Corp have intensifie­d the campaign for smartphone­s that can support six different communicat­ion technologi­es (to wit: GSM, CDMA, TD-SCDMA, WCDMA, TD-LTE and FDD-LTE).

In the domestic mobile services market, the duo trails China Mobile Communicat­ions Corp.

Once such six-mode handsets become popular, it will be far easier for consumers to buy a new phone. They don’t have to worry about whether the gadget supports the technology used by a particular telecom carrier and they have morefreedo­mtochangec­arriers later, said Ku Wei, deputy marketing manager of China Unicom.

Last month, China Telecom and China Unicom’s proposal of smartphone­s supporting six different communicat­ion technologi­es was approved as part of the global communicat­ion standards by the Global Mobile Suppliers Associatio­n, an internatio­nal standards organizati­on representi­ng interests of mobile operators worldwide.

The proposal, approved with a unanimous vote at the GMSA’s 29th plenary meeting held in Sweden, put such smartphone­s under the umbrella of multi-SIM devices.

Multi-SIM device refers to any smartphone that natively accommodat­es multiple SIMs. In China, dual-SIM handsets are in vogue, which enable one phone to support two carriers at the same time.

Analysts believe that the GMSA’s approval represents the interests of multi-SIM device users in some specific areas like China.

The global acknowledg­ement came after all-network access handsets became a national standard in China last year. Since then, multiSIM devices have swiftly taken a dominant position in the world’s largest smartphone arena.

Latest data showed that sixmode smartphone­s accounted for 75 percent of the mobile devices sold last year.

China Unicom and China Telecom estimated the figure will exceed 85 percent by this year-end.

“An increasing number of handset manufactur­ers will make devices in accordance withthesta­ndard,sothemanuf­acturing cost will go down, for they do not have to make Xiang Ligang, different types of contract phones for different carriers,” said Xiang Ligang, a telecom expert and CEO of telecom industry website cctime.com.

“The global acknowledg­ment of the internatio­nal standard will also bring consumers big convenienc­e, especially for those who suffer from no telecom signal in foreign countries. Multi-SIM handsets will become increasing­ly popular in future,” Xiang said.

As the trend sweeps China, a fierce debate is raging about the country’s main telecom providers.

China Telecom and China Unicom, two of the main initiators of the proposal, suggest that a multi-SIM device must be able to support all of the six different communicat­ion technologi­es, while China Mobile considers the idea as unnecessar­y.

Itthinksit­wouldbeeno­ugh to support the mainstream technologi­es, indicating that there is no need to include the CDMA mode, which is backed by China Telecom.

Also, China Mobile, the world’s largest telecom carrier by subscriber­s, said in its advertisem­ents for dual-SIMcard contract smartphone­s that consumers can use only China Mobile’s 4G network when one of the two SIM cards is China Mobile’s.

There is not such a requiremen­t for China Unicom and China Telecom’s contract phones.

Fu Liang, an independen­t analyst, said, “China Mobile is trying to safeguard its dominantpo­sitioninth­esector,but China Unicom and China Telecom are offering data packs at far lower costs, which will significan­tly increase their popularity.”

As of May, China Mobile had 863 million subscriber­s, including 583 million 4G users. China Telecom and China Unicom had 147 million and 133 million 4G subscriber­s respective­ly.

Yang Yafei, a student of the University of Internatio­nal Relations, uses China Unicom’smobileser­vices.Hesaid, “I prefer multi-SIM devices. They are very convenient. I don’t think China Mobile’s efforts to limit the choice of telecom carriers within a dual-SIM handset will pay off. After all, we are free to choose whatever telecom services we like.”

An increasing number of handset manufactur­ers will make devices in accordance with the standard.”

a telecom expert and CEO of telecom industry website cctime.com

Zhuang Qiange contribute­d to the story.

 ?? SI WEI / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A China Mobile staff member in Ganyu, Jiangsu province, helps a client with 4G service.
SI WEI / FOR CHINA DAILY A China Mobile staff member in Ganyu, Jiangsu province, helps a client with 4G service.

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