Exclusive New Research from the Telecom Leader

Survey stats * market share * real world deployments * and more

Now with two ways to buy…

      Subscribe in NewsGator Online   Subscribe in Bloglines   
   Comments

T-Mobile launches long-awaited FMC service

more on the topic

More Related Articles

T-Mobile today took the tarp off of its Wi-Fi/cellular integrated service after more than a year of testing and trials, making it the first major U.S. carrier to launch a commercial fixed/mobile convergence network.

Called Hotspot @Home, the service uses unlicensed mobile access (UMA) technology to tunnel a GSM signal over the public IP network, allowing a dual-mode phone to switch back and forth between a Wi-Fi and cellular network for voice calls. T-Mobile is offering the service over customers home Wi-Fi networks as well as its 8500 hotspot locations in the U.S. Customers have to buy a dual-mode phone, but the trade off is they get unlimited domestic callings while using the Wi-Fi network, allowing the them to substitute their mobile phone for their home phone line.

“More people than ever want to drop their home landline phone and pocket the savings,” T-Mobile USA President and CEO Robert Dotson said in a statement. “However, they don’t want to use all of their wireless minutes talking from home. Our new service solves this dilemma once and for all.”

T-Mobile is kicking off the nationwide program with two dual-mode handsets, the Samsung t409 and the Nokia 6086, both sold for $50 with a two-year contract. While UMA is designed to work with any standard Wi-Fi router or access point, T-Mobile will also be selling routers easily configurable routers from D-Link and Linksys, offering them for free with a mail-in rebate. The only thing the customer has to bring is a broadband connection.

For the initial launch T-Mobile will charge an additional $10 a month on top of its regular calling plans to use the FMC service or charge $20 a month for a family plan up to five lines. While the service plans could cannibalize minutes from T-Mobile’s voice network, it is trading off the expense of providing more cellular capacity. Using Kineto UMA software, the service bypasses the cellular access network entirely, offloading voice traffic directly into T-Mobile’s circuit-switched core network through a voice gateway linked to the Internet. As T-Mobile faces spectrum pressure over its legacy GSM network as well as per-minute pricing pressure T-Mobile can move more of its traffic to the IP network, growing only its core to handle new capacity demands.

The service, however, not only allows T-Mobile to maximize its capacity it allows it to play in the traditional wireline space, further squeezing the ILECs who already face stiff competition from cable providers and VoIP upstarts like Vonage. Though UMA does not use VoIP—rather encapsulating the GSM call within IP packets—it works much the same way as a VoIP service, using the public Internet to initiate and transport the call.

“T-Mobile doesn’t have any landline or home phone service,” said Moe Tanabian, principle for IBB Consulting, a strategic consulting group that helped T-Mobile manage the FMC deployment. “Any dollar it earns off of UMA is a dollar it steals from a landline carrier.”

Want to use this article? Click here for options!
© 2009 Penton Media Inc.

  • Telephony Content


blog comments powered by Disqus
Get Updates Via Email
  • Telephony Content

related resources

popular articles

Webcasts

WEBCAST

Reduce Customer Churn and Cut Costs Webcast | July 22, 2009

Learn the best practices for online customer billing and service – how to implement a paperless bill, drive traffic to your web site, improve customer service.

REGISTER NOW

White Papers

WHITE PAPER

Automated End-to-End Managed Service Delivery. Sponsored by Ciena.

Ciena’s industry-leading CoreDirector Multiservice Optical Switch with FastMesh® has been used for efficient and robust core switching in the world’s largest networks. DOWNLOAD NOW

Podcasts

PODCAST

Wikimedia explores the phone as encyclopedia

Kul Wadhwa, head of business development, Wikimedia Foundation, discusses with senior editor Kevin Fitchard the Wikipedia’s future on the mobile phone. LISTEN

Blogs

BLOG

I-feature: Readers respond

As promised, a key component of Telephony’s new Interactive Featureis reader participation READ

E-Books

Telephony May Special Section: Carrier Ethernet

No slowdown in sight!

Read how carrier Ethernet is defying the slow economy. DOWNLOAD NOW!

  • Telephony Content
  • Telephony Content

commentary

Carol Wilson
Energy bill should energize change

June 29, 2009

Read Now

Carol Wilson
Steve Hilton
Ask Steve

June 29, 2009

Read Now

Steve Hilton

Recent Comments

Follow comments on Telephony

More ways to stay informed

Find us on Facebook

follow us on twitter

Browse Issues

  • June 1, 2009
  • October 1, 2008
  • April 1, 2009
  • March 1, 2009
  • February 1, 2009
  • January 1, 2009
  • December 1, 2008