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China has launched a trial run of home-grown
fourth-generation mobile technology in Shanghai in what it called
the world's first rollout of the wireless application, state press
reported.
"It testifies that the technology we've developed is feasible
and brings us one step closer to put it into commercial use,"
the China Daily quoted You Xiaohu, a leading expert involved in
China's 4G development programme, as saying of Sunday's trial.
4G technology provides wireless services at much faster speeds,
sharply improving high-quality images and data services, and
potentially allowing for such features as multi-channel
high-definition TV broadcasting.
Third-generation (3G) telephony is still not available in China due
to repeated government delays. In a bid to crack a potentially
lucrative market, engineers here have moved directly to developing
the ultra-fast 4G technology.
China has developed a 3G technology of its own but has not yet
issued any licenses to operators.
The 4G trial in Shanghai cost 150 million yuan (19 million dollars)
and was billed by the government as the world's first rollout of the
technology, the newspaper said.
However, South Korea's high-tech giant Samsung Electronics last
August unveiled the world's first fourth-generation (4G) mobile
technology with a demonstration on a moving bus.
Samsung has said it plans to put the technology into commercial use
by 2010 if the spectrums for 4G technology are decided next year.
For its part, China has set a goal of conducting more field tests of
the 4G system and putting it into trial commercial sometime before
2010, the China Daily said.
"The Shanghai system shows that we have entered the final phase
of our project," said You.
--AFP
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