Cicero supports Wi-Fi cellular roaming on Nokia phones
By Nancy Gohring
,
IDG News Service
, 11/01/2006
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Some users of Nokia’s combined Wi-Fi and cellular phones will soon be able to make voice calls that can roam between the two
networks without dropping the call.
Cicero Networks announced that it will make its client available on the S60 platform, the phone software based on the Symbian
operating system that was developed by Nokia. The CiceroPhone handset software, combined with back-end technology that a service
provider installs, supports the handoff of voice calls between Wi-Fi and cellular networks.
So far, just two operators have officially launched Cicero’s technology: Hello in Norway and Messagenet in Italy. Two alternative
service providers in the United Kingdom have also launched services but haven’t publicized it yet, said Elaine Treacy, vice
president of marketing for Cicero. She also said that around 30 additional operators, mainly in Europe, are trialing the technology.
An Asian operator plans to launch service in a few weeks, she said.
The Cicero software was available previously only on Windows Mobile phones. The move to S60, which includes Nokia’s Eseries
and some Nseries phones, was important, Cicero said. The devices from Nokia, the world’s number one handset maker, are likely
to reach a wide audience, offering more choice of phones for users.
Users can get the software in several ways, based on how their service provider distributes it. Users can download the software
to the phone or the operator could sell phones with the software already pre-loaded. The operator can charge for the software
or distribute it for free, charging a monthly fee for the service.
While the wireless industry has discussed such converged offerings for some time now, only recently have handsets with Wi-Fi and cellular become
available.
“That was always the challenge for everyone in our space to get the handset footprint out there,” Cicero CEO Ross Brennan
said. Nokia began selling phones with both Wi-Fi and cellular capabilities this year. Sony Ericsson Mobile Communications
also sells a converged phone.
Broadband operators without mobile networks may be particularly interested in using Cicero’s technology to offer converged services because they can shift some phone calls off of the cellular networks and onto their own networks through Wi-Fi connections.
A broadband operator doesn’t need a partnership with a mobile operator to deliver a converged service using Cicero’s technology.
Users may be interested in such offerings because typically the cost of the call that uses the Wi-Fi network will be less
expensive than the cost of a cellular call.
Cicero’s technology competes with Unlicensed Mobile Access (UMA), a technology that cellular operators often prefer because
it allows them to control and charge for all the calls, including those on Wi-Fi networks. T-Mobile USA recently launched
a converged Wi-Fi and cellular service based on UMA in Seattle.
Cicero expects to release the software for the S60 platform Nov. 30.
The IDG News Service is a Network World affiliate.
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