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Mobile phone market study finds 3G up, older technologies down

Apr 11, 2005 — by LinuxDevices Staff — from the LinuxDevices Archive — views

Forward Concepts has released an in-depth study of the worldwide market for cellphones, and the chips that go into them. The 560-page report forecasts handsets, chips, device manufacturers, and service operators. The report finds Texas Instruments the dominant supplier of cellular chips, but with growing competition from Qualcomm and Freescale.

Cellphone shipments reached 715 million units in 2004, according to the report. That figure includes inexpensive PHS/PAS (Personal HandyPhone Service / Personal Access System) units in China. Sales in 2005 are expected to increase by only 4.5 percent, to 746 million units, as demand for older technologies drops, offsetting strong gains by newer technologies. Forward expects TDMA shipments to drop 30 percent this year, and even GSM should see a 23 percent decline.

On the other hand, cellphones supporting newer high-bandwidth technologies are expected to see sharply higher shipments. The report anticipates the following sales increases in newer technology cellphones:

  • EDGE — up 51 percent to 60 million units
  • WCDMA — up 165 percent to 45 million units
  • CDMA2000 1xEV-DO terminals — up 65 percent to 16 million units
  • PHS — up 24 percent to 77 million units

The 2G PHS is being rapidly displaced in Japan by newer technologies, but is gaining ground in China, Taiwan, India, and other countries, owing to its low cost.

TI top processor supplier, Freescale gaining ground

According to the report's principal author, Carter L. Horney, Texas Instruments remained “the number-one cellular chip provider, overall, and also the number-one provider of baseband chips for both 2G and 3G/UMTS cellular. And, with their OMAP2 application processor, they have quickly become number one in that market segment as well.”

But Horney warns that TI's position could be threatened by Qualcomm, which still dominates the CDMA market and has a large number of design-ins for its UMTS baseband chips. “Freescale Semiconductor had a very good year in 2004 and is also gaining ground in the cellular chip market,” says Horney.

“The cellular handset has become the physical and market magnet that is pulling in the functionality of digital cameras, PDAs, MP3 players, GPS navigation, Bluetooth, and even Wi-Fi, and is quickly becoming the dominant market for each and all of these functions and more,” said Will Strauss, president of Forward Concepts.

The report, “Global Cellular Handset & Chip Markets” is priced at $3,750 in hard copy form.


 
This article was originally published on LinuxDevices.com and has been donated to the open source community by QuinStreet Inc. Please visit LinuxToday.com for up-to-date news and articles about Linux and open source.



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