Mobile Future said the 2007 FCC voice roaming order can in no way be a model for reclassifying broadband as a common carrier service. That analogy misses big differences between automatic voice roaming and broadband Internet access, it said in a filing Friday: “Most importantly, to the extent there is a market for automatic voice roaming, it is a wholesale market involving a discrete set of participants -- namely, mobile wireless voice carriers. In contrast, the broadband Internet access market is a retail market, involving literally hundreds of millions of relationships -- all of which would be dramatically altered by the reclassification of broadband Internet service.” Broadband reclassification “could require a greater degree of forbearance than was required in the voice roaming context -- or, alternatively, could result in a far heavier regulatory burden,” the group said in docket 14-28.
FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler sent letters, as promised Thursday, to wireless carrier CEOs requiring them to lay out steps they will take by the end of Q1 to combat smartphone theft (see 1412040049), FCC officials confirm. The letters weren't posted by the commission. Wheeler asks the CEOs to describe specific steps they're taking to ensure all phones can be locked, wiped and restored, to protect unique identifiers for every device and to improve “the timeliness, accuracy and availability of data about smartphone theft for use by law enforcement,” said one of the letters made available to media. “I would also ask you to take appropriate steps to ensure that employees in your retail and authorized reseller affiliates understand the importance of their role in preventing mobile device theft by checking the appropriate database to ensure that every device they initialize for service has not been reported lost or stolen.” Wheeler said he would send the letters, in remarks Thursday to the FCC Technological Advisory Council. CTIA supports FCC efforts to curb smartphone thefts, said Jamie Hastings, vice president-external and state affairs, in a statement. But Hastings questioned the deadlines in the Wheeler letter, which were not part of the TAC’s stolen phone report. “We must all work together to achieve our shared objectives as soon practical, but we need to be careful in setting artificial deadlines on some stakeholders with respect to implementing technical changes,” Hastings said.
IHS’s 2014 forecast for worldwide unit sales of 58 million wireless charging receivers and 20 million wireless charging transmitters is going to fall short when the company releases figures for the year, said Ryan Sanderson, IHS analyst, in an interview Thursday. But numbers will be better than IHS anticipated midyear after CES and Mobile World Congress didn’t yield the expected number of new smartphones or tablets with wireless charging capability, Sanderson said. While the industry will “struggle” to reach estimates for this year, IHS expects to still see significant growth for the wireless charging market over 2013, he said. Sanderson expects growth in the wireless charging market to get a boost going forward from the wearables category. The Moto 360 smart watch has Qi inductive wireless charging built in, and Apple CEO Tim Cook referenced wireless charging for the Apple Watch at the wearable's product announcement in September. A caveat to wireless charging for wearables derives from the category name itself, Sanderson said. “It’s called a wearable, so the consumer shouldn’t really have to take it off to charge it.” Technologies today require users to do that, either placing the wearable on a surface or near a transmitter for charging. That will change in the near future with far-field wireless charging over a distance of as much as 30 feet, Sanderson said. Energous, with WattUp technology that won a CES Innovations award for 2015, announced this week it has joined the Power Matters Alliance and completed initial FCC Part 15 certification testing for its WattUp receivers. Energous’ technology delivers “scalable power” using the same radio bands as a Wi-Fi router, according to company literature, and allows “meaningful, useable power” that users can tap into while roaming so the device doesn’t have to be plugged in or positioned on a mat for charging, it said. The wireless charging market began slowly in 2014 but picked up midyear with the introduction of products with embedded Qi receivers, including the LG G3, Google Nexus 6 and, more recently, the Nokia 830, which has a receiver that’s both PMA- and Qi-enabled, Sanderson said. He said he “wouldn’t be surprised” to see more developments in multimode, multidevice wireless charging products. On the likelihood of a unified standard, Sanderson said that without A4WP (Alliance for Wireless Power) charging products in the market, “it’s not a level playing field” for consumers to compare products and decide which technologies they prefer. A4WP had expected to have Rezence products in the market by year-end, but that hasn’t happened. A spokesman for A4WP didn’t comment. Over the next couple of years, Sanderson expects to see much more multimode and multistandard support for the tightly coupled technology -- Qi, PMA and Rezence -- as manufacturers look to safeguard themselves in a multihorse field.
The Electronic Communications Committee (ECC) agreed to a “draft decision” on a common technical framework for countries that implement mobile networks in the 700 MHz frequency range. The framework is aimed at giving manufacturers confidence to meet the market demand across Europe, ECC said Wednesday in a news release. It would enable countries that need to implement wireless broadband “to move ahead with the necessary frequency coordination negotiations with neighboring countries, and the reengineering of broadcast networks, with a set of generic technical conditions already in place,” it said. The framework follows the European Commission’s mandate to develop harmonized technical conditions for the 700 MHz band for wireless broadband, it said. The ECC, part of the European Conference of Postal and Telecommunications Administrations, is accepting comment on the draft decision until Jan. 12, it said.
Correction: Telcordia, not Neustar, is the company that wants the FCC to quickly name the next local number portability administrator (see 1412030046).
Wireless mic maker Shure asked the FCC to extend by 45 days comment deadlines on two NPRMs examining the future of the devices in 600 MHz spectrum. “An extension is warranted because the Notices propose many substantial changes in technical and operational rules that will require significant evaluation, testing and analysis,” Shure said in a motion filed in docket 12-268: “The filing periods encompass the winter holidays when many team members will be out of the office and traveling.” Without an extension, comments would be due Feb. 19, replies March 12. Shure said the proposed rule changes would “dramatically alter wireless microphone operations and virtually restructure the entire wireless microphone industry” in the U.S. In October, the FCC approved the NPRMs, which seek comment on unlicensed use of the TV spectrum following the incentive auction and more specifically rules for wireless mics.
Engineers Frequency Advisory Committee (EFAC), which sought FCC certification as a frequency coordinator under Part 90 of the commission’s rules, would be a first of its kind, EFAC said in a news release. Other coordinators have been nonprofit trade associations, but the new coordinating entity was set up by Blue Wing Services, the Shulman law firm and Tusa Consulting Services, EFAC said. The founders “believe that there is a trend of frequency selection becoming more and more engineering-centric, as land mobile radio spectrum transitions from shared to exclusive,” EFAC said. “The founding members of EFAC are finding that they are doing more and more of the frequency selection work themselves, before sending in applications, including creating affordable monitoring services in the field.” The FCC sought comment on the application Tuesday. Comments are due Jan. 5., replies Jan. 20. EFAC would serve as a frequency coordinator for Part 90 public safety and industrial/business pool frequencies, the FCC said.
The FCC Public Safety Bureau granted the Missouri Department of Public Safety a waiver of a requirement under Section 90.559(b) of FCC rules, which mandates station identification be made on the lowest frequency utilized in a group of trunked channels. The department argued that it launched the Missouri Statewide Interoperability Network (MOSWIN) in 2012 prior to the adoption of the rule and it would be expensive and difficult to implement. “We agree with Missouri that it would be unduly burdensome to require MOSWIN user agencies to ‘reprogram their radios with new control channel lists’ solely to ensure that each base station in the system can use the lowest channel for [base station identification] rather than as a control channel,” the bureau said Thursday.
LTE deployment “chewing up spectrum at a faster pace” than expected could explain why the AWS-3 auction bidding (see 1412030023) has topped $40 billion and continues to rise, BTIG analyst Walter Piecyk said Thursday in a research note. Verizon confirms it has started converting PCS spectrum from 3G to LTE a year after it tripled the spectrum it allocated to LTE to launch XLTE, Piecyk wrote. “The increased spectrum usage for LTE comes a year earlier than we expected and leaves Verizon with less than 50 MHz of spectrum to provide voice (which LTE does not yet support) as well as data service to existing 2G and 3G customers." Telecommunications Industry Association CEO Scott Belcher noted in a statement the record levels in the auction. “The level of bidding demonstrates that the spectrum crunch is very real, and that more work is needed to keep pace with exploding consumer demand for mobile broadband,” he said.
The FCC “fundamentally” mischaracterized FiberTower’s position in its legal challenge of an agency order that held the company hadn't demonstrated that it was providing substantial service for 689 of its 24 GHz and 39 GHz licenses and the licenses should be revoked, FiberTower said in a filing last month at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. In October, the FCC told the court it acted within its legal authority in rejecting the licenses (see 1410150093). FiberTower said it never contended “no service” could satisfy FCC build out rules. “To the contrary, despite the technical challenges inherent in the bands and the dearth of widespread customer demand for reasons outside of FiberTower’s control, the record establishes the ample service FiberTower has provided under all of its 24 and 39 GHz licenses,” FiberTower said. FiberTower said the service it offered included “building a nationwide construction platform with the systems and contracts necessary for providing transmission on demand; developing new equipment such as small-cell technologies for transmission in congested urban areas; making 100 percent of its licensed spectrum available for use on a daily basis both through its innovative ‘spectrum-in-a-box’ program and through secondary-market leasing; and -- last but not least -- constructing and operating links wherever sufficient demand existed, including on at least 42 of the licenses at issue.” Oral argument is set for Jan. 20 (see 1412030048). FiberTower filed with the court Nov. 18.