Source : Unstrung News Analysis
Long Term Evolution (LTE) chip developer Altair Semiconductor is predicting that the first "real" LTE handsets will first arrive on the market in the second half of 2010, but it expects the next-gen phones to go mass market until 2012.
The Hod Hasharon, Israel-based semiconductor startup has just released customer samples of what it says is "one of the first" LTE baseband chips available: The "FourGee-3100." The firm says that the silicon can be used for LTE USB dongles, PC cards, and even mobile handsets.
A baseband chip is used with a radio modem for cellphone applications. Eran Eshed, co-founder and vice president of marketing and business development at Altair, told Unstrung Thursday afternoon that the firm will unveil its first LTE radio modem this November.
He estimates that this means that production phones using the Altair silicon could
Read full article...
Long Term Evolution (LTE) chip developer Altair Semiconductor is predicting that the first "real" LTE handsets will first arrive on the market in the second half of 2010, but it expects the next-gen phones to go mass market until 2012.
The Hod Hasharon, Israel-based semiconductor startup has just released customer samples of what it says is "one of the first" LTE baseband chips available: The "FourGee-3100." The firm says that the silicon can be used for LTE USB dongles, PC cards, and even mobile handsets.
A baseband chip is used with a radio modem for cellphone applications. Eran Eshed, co-founder and vice president of marketing and business development at Altair, told Unstrung Thursday afternoon that the firm will unveil its first LTE radio modem this November.
He estimates that this means that production phones using the Altair silicon could
Read full article...
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