Free Newsletter Subscription
       

First W-CDMA Treo Operates On Rebranded AT&T Network

By Staff -- TWICE, 1/29/2007

Palm unveiled its first U.S.-market W-CDMA PDA phone during International CES in the Microsoft and AT&T/Cingular Wireless booths here.

A week later, Cingular parent AT&T announced plans to drop the Cingular brand in favor of the AT&T brand after expanding its ownership stake in the carrier to 100 percent from 60 percent. AT&T's ownership stake grew after AT&T on Dec. 29 acquired BellSouth, which owned 40 percent of Cingular. AT&T, which had owned the other 60 percent, plans to use the AT&T name to market all its services, including local, long-distance, wireless, data and video.

The renaming plan resurrects the AT&T name in cellular after a lapse of about two years. The AT&T brand was dropped in fall 2004 after Cingular acquired and absorbed AT&T Wireless.

For the new AT&T network, the five-band Treo 750 worldphone is available through all AT&T cellular distribution channels at $399 with a two-year service contract after $100 mail-in rebate. The phone, based on Microsoft's Windows Mobile 5.0 PocketPC phone edition OS, features a touch screen and QWERTY keyboard.

W-CDMA (Wideband Code Division Multiple Access) technology is also known as UMTS, or Universal Mobile Telecommunications System.

The 750 is the carrier's first W-CDMA Treo and the carrier's second W-CDMA PDA phone. The carrier's first W-CDMA PDA phone, an HTC-made 5.0 PocketPC model, became available in November, when the carrier also launched the U.S. market's first W-CDMA-equipped smartphone. The smartphone, dubbed BlackJack and made by Samsung, is based on Microsoft's Windows Mobile 5.0 smartphone edition OS, so it lacks a touch screen but incorporates a QWERTY keyboard. Another difference is that the smartphone OS lets users view documents, but the PocketPC OS lets them view, edit and create documents.

W-CDMA technology accelerates data speeds in the carrier's network for faster Web browsing, data downloading and video streaming. W-CDMA also allows for simultaneous voice and data sessions, enabling users to send and receive e-mail or browse the Web while using the Treo's speakerphone function.

Palm's Treo 750 can also be used as a wireless laptop modem, delivering data at speeds averaging 220kbps to 320kbps. With a software upgrade to HSDPA (high-speed downlink packet access), the 750 will accelerate data speeds to an average 400kbps 700kbps in Cingular's W-CDMA network. Palm hasn't determined when the HSDPA upgrade will be available.

AT&T/Cingular has deployed W-CDMA and HSDPA in 140 markets, but the phone also operates in data mode at speeds up to 70kbps in Cingular's GPRS/EDGE-data markets. The phone can also be used in W-CDMA mode in 60 other countries

The phone operates in W-CDMA mode in Cingular's 850MHz and 1,900MHz bands and in the 2.1GHz band in Europe. It operates in the GPRS/EDGE modes in those bands and in foreign 900MHz and 1,800MHz markets.

Related Content

No related content found.

» MORE

Newbay Business Information Resource Center

Featured Company


Most Recent Resources

Advertisement
More Content
  • Blogs
  • Photos

Sorry, no blogs are active for this topic.

ADL award winners Jerry Satoren

Vitelli, Satoren, Juszkiewicz Honored By ADL

The National Consumer Technology Industry's annual dinner and fundraiser for the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) honored drew more than 500 industry leaders, here, on Saturday, Nov. 14.
VIEW ALL GALLERIES







Advertisement
If you are having trouble accessing TWICE content or wish to subscribe to TWICE Online
please email customercare@mypressplus.com or call 866-71-PRESS (866-717-7377).
About Us   |   Advertising Info   |   Site Map   |   Contact Us   |   FREE Subscription   |   Affiliate Links
© 2011 NewBay Media, LLC. 28 East 28th Street, 12th floor, New York, NY 10016 T (212) 378-0400 F (212) 378-0470
Use of this website is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy