The Malaysian mobile operator DiGi Telecommunications, a subsidiary of the Norwegian telecoms company Telenor, has commissioned Siemens to equip its network with GSM, GPRS, and EDGE technology. This is the Telenor group's first order for Siemens mobile and the first commercial EDGE (Enhanced Data Rates for Global Evolution) project in Asia.
Siemens mobile is supplying DiGi with mobile radio base stations, switching technology, and hardware and software components. Siemens is also upgrading DiGi's GSM/GPRS infrastructure with EDGE technology. Based on the GMS standard, EDGE permits even faster data rates than GPRS so is another "intermediate step" for GSM technology toward UMTS. This will allow DiGi as one of Asia's first mobile operator to offer EDGE-based high speed data services on a commercial basis.
"We'll be able to offer our customers even higher-quality voice calls, more capacity and broader bandwidth which enables faster rates of data transfer than are currently available in Malaysia, thanks to Siemens technology," said Tore Johnson, Chief Operating Officer of DiGi Telecommunications.
"This order from DiGi is our first EDGE contract in Asia, so it will have a signal effect on the entire Asian market," said Christoph Caselitz, President of Networks within the Siemens Information and Communication Mobile Group. "Alongside the EDGE project in the USA, we can now also demonstrate the efficiency of our technology in Malaysia."
DiGi currently has 1.8 million customers and an almost 20% share of the Malaysian market. The Norwegian telecoms company Telenor has a 61% holding in DiGi.
EDGE stands for Enhanced Data Rates for Global (instead of "Global", originally: GSM) Evolution, and is an expansion of GSM/GPRS. The performance enhancement for data throughput rates is achieved by employing a new, higher-grade modulation technique (8PSK). Data rates of up to 472 kilobit per second can be achieved when this type of modulation is also used in conjunction with coding systems (as in the case of GPRS). As in Europe, EDGE is also of interest to GSM operators in Asia holding a UMTS license for providing high-grade mobile data services during an initial phase and thus increasing acceptance for the launching of further broadband applications."
Posted to the site on 29th May 2003