$25 Cellular Handset Achievable Within Two Years.AUSTIN, Texas -- A Portelligent Survey of Customers Indicates Strong Industry Consensus That A Handset The part of the telephone that contains the speaker and the microphone. On a desktop phone, the part you hold in your hand is the handset. On a cellphone, the entire phone is the handset. See multihandset cordless and headset. with Bill-of-Materials at $25 Can be Achieved Within 24 Months or Less Within two years, and possibly within 12 months, the wireless handset industry is on track to design and manufacture low-end cellular handsets that cost $25 or less to make, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. results of a recent survey conducted by Portelligent among the company's customers in the wireless and electronics industries. Among respondents In the context of marketing research, a representative sample drawn from a larger population of people from whom information is collected and used to develop or confirm marketing strategy. to the survey, 80 percent reported a belief that a low-end GSM (Global System for Mobile Communications) A digital cellular phone technology based on TDMA that is the predominant system in Europe, but also used worldwide. Developed in the 1980s, GSM was first deployed in seven European countries in 1992. handset with a total bill-of-materials cost of $25 can be achieved within two years or less, while 51 percent believe this level can be reached within one year or less. In addition to electronic and mechanical components, the cost of the handset as presented in the survey was defined to include battery, testing, final assembly, software and IP licensing, and product packaging. "We have believed for some time, based on the trends in product design and component cost which we see in our product teardown tear·down n. 1. The act or process of taking apart or demolishing. 2. also tear-down A building that is to be torn down and replaced with another, often larger building. analyses, that very low-cost cellular handsets will emerge in the next several years," comments David Carey, president of Portelligent. "We think this survey is significant in that it shows that a substantial majority of our customers seem to agree on the near-term reality of the $25 handset, as they represent diverse points of view within the electronics industry, including semiconductor and device makers, handset makers, and wireless service providers. With the handset industry reaching maturity throughout the developed world, more economic cellular phone designs will be a key factor in securing 'the Next Billion' wireless subscribers." In structuring the survey, Portelligent distinguished 14 categories of electronic components and other items in a "strawman BOM" (Bill-of-Materials) for the $25 handset. When asked about these individual categories, survey respondents reported that target cost levels were most likely to be achieved in printed circuit boards, passive devices, baseband processing ICs, and product casings Ca´sings n. pl. 1. Dried dung of cattle used as fuel. and enclosures. The most challenging categories for achievement of the target costs were display modules, radio transmitter A device that generates signals. Contrast with receiver. and receiver ICs, memory devices, and software and intellectual property. The "strawman BOM" for a $25 handset used as a core data-gathering mechanism in the Portelligent customer survey was first presented by Mr. Carey at Informa's San Diego San Diego (săn dēā`gō), city (1990 pop. 1,110,549), seat of San Diego co., S Calif., on San Diego Bay; inc. 1850. San Diego includes the unincorporated communities of La Jolla and Spring Valley. Coronado is across the bay. World Handset Forum in December 2004. For a version of this press release with graphical content contact Howard Curtis (hcurtis@teardown.com; Tel. 512-338-3792). Portelligent, Inc., located in Austin, Texas, USA, offers reports and analyses that are generated through a rigorous "product-teardown" methodology to the electronics, wireless, semiconductor, and financial sectors. Portelligent is a spin-out of the MCC (The Microelectronics and Computer Technology Corporation, Austin, TX) The first high-tech research and development consortium in the U.S., created in 1982 by leading companies within the electronics industry. research consortium, where underlying analytical methods and cost models were developed. For additional information about Portelligent's product teardown analyses and other analytical offerings, in the U.S. contact Don Stroud stroud n. A coarse woolen cloth or blanket. [After Stroud, an urban district of southwest-central England.] (dstroud@teardown.com; Tel. 1-512-338-3600). In Europe contact Niels Kellerhoff (niels@teardown.com; Tel. +49-(211) 514 1265). For additional information about Portelligent, visit the Portelligent Web site at www.teardown.com or contact the company directly at Tel. 1-512-338-3600 (E-mail: info@portelligent.com). |
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