ROSEMENT, Ill.-Motorola Inc. said its field tests and research have proved that its Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing technology can provide future all-Internet Protocol mobile networks with user experience “previously thought to be unattainable” with peak downlink speeds of up to 300 megabits per second.
The field tests of Motorola Labs’ mobile OFDM system, which were conducted in the greater Chicago area in both urban and suburban environments, validated that a 20 MHz mobile OFDM channel can support peak uncoded channel rates of that speed, the carrier said.
“The promise of faster wireless networks that can meet the demand for mobile broadband that supports multimedia applications has a great appeal to operators,” said the company.
In other Motorola infrastructure news, Motorola announced three new enterprise products as part of an overall solution architecture created in collaboration with Avaya and Proxim. The products include the CN620, a new dual-network Mobile Office Device (MOD), the Wireless Services Manager and the Network Services Manager. The components work with Internet Protocol telephony software from Avaya and wireless local area network infrastructure from Avaya and Proxim.