Indoor base stations will bring about fundamental changes in the cellular
industry and drive fixed-mobile substitution, according to research firm
Analysys.
Among the many technologies hyped as the 'next big thing', the concept of
indoor base stations, often referred to as 'femtocells', has emerged rapidly and
created extensive speculation about its potentially wide-reaching consequences.
Femtocells will undermine the case for converged cellular-wireless Lan
services by enabling very similar tariffs without the need for dedicated
handsets.
"A number of technologies have been over-hyped in recent years, but
femtocells have the potential to transform the telecoms industry," said Dr
Alastair Brydon, co-author of the Analysys report.
"The trend towards fixed-mobile substitution is increasing in many countries,
and 3G networks are at a relatively early stage in their development. In this
context, 3G femtocells could not have arrived at a better time for the mobile
industry."
The report draws on interviews from a range of indoor base station experts
and vendors in Europe and the US.
Analysys describes how indoor base stations may be used across different
wireless technologies, as well as identifying the issues that need to be
resolved to enable widespread deployment.
According to the report, indoor base stations can be applied to a number of
wireless technologies, including 2G, 3G, 3G LTE, WiMAX and WiBro. But it is the
3G femtocells that present the greatest opportunity.
Indoor base stations can provide a less expensive alternative to traditional
outdoor cellular infrastructures for providing in-building coverage.
Analysys reckons that femtocells will accelerate the migration of voice
traffic from fixed to mobile networks, until 3G networks carry the majority of
voice traffic.
"The potential of femtocells is substantial for mobile operators, but
critical implementation and performance issues need to be resolved before they
can be deployed widely," according to Dr Mark Heath, co-author of the report.
"These include interference, range, performance, network integration and
management, handover, billing and security."
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