Toshiba Establishes Telecommunications Laboratory in Bristol; Key Focus On Development of Chipsets for Next Generation Digital Cellular Phones and Wireless Communications Technologies.BRISTOL--(BUSINESS WIRE)--July 30, 1998--Toshiba Corporation, the major Japanese electronics company, today announced that it will set up a new telecommunications technology research center in Bristol on August 1st. The Telecommunications Research Laboratory (TRL TRL In currencies, this is the abbreviation for the Turkish Lira. Notes: The currency market, also known as the Foreign Exchange market, is the largest financial market in the world, with a daily average volume of over US $1 trillion. ), an important expansion of the company's R&D activities in the UK, will undertake advanced research in next-generation digital cellular phone formats and advanced wireless access technologies. The new research lab will be headed by internationally renowned communications expert, Professor Joseph McGeehan, Professor of Communications Engineering at the University of Bristol and Director of the University's Centre for Communications Research. The new lab will have a 10 million pound R&D budget in its first five years, and an initial staff of five or six, which is expected to increase to about 20 by 2001. TRL will have an initial capitalization of 432,000 pounds. TRL's establishment reflects the expansion and globalization globalization Process by which the experience of everyday life, marked by the diffusion of commodities and ideas, is becoming standardized around the world. Factors that have contributed to globalization include increasingly sophisticated communications and transportation of Toshiba's R&D activities. Europe is in the forefront of telecommunications research, and a fast-growing market, making it the preferred choice for a new telecommunications laboratory. Bristol was selected as the location for the new lab as it is known as a center of excellence for research in mobile communications technology Noun 1. communications technology - the activity of designing and constructing and maintaining communication systems engineering, technology - the practical application of science to commerce or industry . TRL's key mission is to develop next-generation digital cellular telephone technologies and related intellectual property. It will direct its work to the control and signal processing See DSP. technologies necessary for digital cellular phones and their chipsets. The lab will also develop advanced telecommunications technologies in such areas as wireless access technology. In today's Europe, and in many Asian countries Noun 1. Asian country - any one of the nations occupying the Asian continent Asian nation country, land, state - the territory occupied by a nation; "he returned to the land of his birth"; "he visited several European countries" , 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. has emerged as the major standard for mobile communications. The next-generation technology now under development, UMTS (Universal Mobile Telecommunications System) The GSM implementation of the 3G wireless phone system. Part of IMT-2000, UMTS provides service in the 2 GHz band and offers global roaming and personalized features. (Universal Mobile Telecommunications System Universal Mobile Telecommunications System (UMTS) is one of the third-generation (3G) cell phone technologies. Currently, the most common form uses W-CDMA as the underlying air interface, is standardized by the 3GPP, and is the European answer to the ITU ), will offer much higher capacity and better performance for multimedia transmission. In January this year, the European Telecommunications Standards Institute (body) European Telecommunications Standards Institute - (ETSI) A European version of the ITU-T(?). agreed to incorporate into UMTS elements of W-CDMA See WCDMA. , a next-generation standard being developed in Japan. Consequently, Europe and Japan are expected to adopt similar cellular phone standards, derived from a common platform positioned to become a world standard. The commercial success of UMTS hinges on development of control and signal processing technologies. TRL will develop these system technologies for incorporation in terminals and chipsets. Through its work, including close collaboration with Toshiba's central research labs at its corporate R&D Center in Kawasaki, Japan, TRL will seek the initiative in developing intellectual property for the emerging format. TRL is Toshiba Corporation's second dedicated research center in the UK. In Cambridge, the company operates the Toshiba Cambridge Research Centre Limited, which investigates applications of quantum effect physics to future semiconductor devices. At the same time as it establishes TRL, Toshiba will also incorporate Toshiba Research Europe Limited (TREL TREL Time-Resolved Electroluminescence ). This will provide coordination for TRL and Toshiba Cambridge Research Centre Limited, which will be renamed the Cambridge Research Laboratory. TREL will have an initial capitalization of some 1,000,000 pounds.
CONTACT: Ken Murakami, Toshiba of Europe Ltd.
Tel: +44-171-421-7606
Fax: +44-171-421-7626
Internet: http://www.toshiba-europe.com
or
Keisuke Ohmori, Corporate Communications Office
Toshiba Corporation (Japan)
Tel: +81-3-3457-2105
Fax: +81-3-3456-4776
Internet: http://www.toshiba.co.jp
or
Judy Wilks
Bite Communications
Tel: +44-181-600-6703
Fax: +44-181-563-1324
Email: judyw@bitecomm.co.uk
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