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Tecnicamente, come è stato realizzato l'accordo di condivisione di rete tra 3 UK e T-Mobile UK?
a) roaming: i clienti 3 UK possono andare in roaming sulla rete GSM e UMTS di T-Mobile e viceversa;
b) condivisione dei siti ma non delle strutture radianti e dei core networks;
c) condivisione di tutte le strutture attive e passive di rete con la creazione di un'unica rete UMTS per i due competitors.
Idem per la fusione tra T-Mobile UK e Orange UK, che cosa cambia a livello della rete? Se vado in Regno Unito, leggerò Everything Everywhere sullo schermo, anzichè i nomi dei due ex competitors? E quindi i clienti 3 UK potranno andare in roaming su T-Mobile e Orange?
E per la joint venture tra Vodafone AU e 3 AU? Mi sembra che i clienti 3 AU possano andare in roaming sulle reti 2G e 3G di Vodafone AU e di Telstra, ma non viceversa.
Sembra che stia per arrivare un accordo di network sharing anche tra AT&T e T-Mobile US.
Non si potrebbe fare anche in Italia per le costruende reti 4G LTE?
Da http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T-Mobile#cite_note-17
Da: http://www.telegeography.com/products/commsupdate/articles/2010/09/03/orange-to-link-up-with-mbnl/
Da: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Everything_Everywhere
a) roaming: i clienti 3 UK possono andare in roaming sulla rete GSM e UMTS di T-Mobile e viceversa;
b) condivisione dei siti ma non delle strutture radianti e dei core networks;
c) condivisione di tutte le strutture attive e passive di rete con la creazione di un'unica rete UMTS per i due competitors.
Idem per la fusione tra T-Mobile UK e Orange UK, che cosa cambia a livello della rete? Se vado in Regno Unito, leggerò Everything Everywhere sullo schermo, anzichè i nomi dei due ex competitors? E quindi i clienti 3 UK potranno andare in roaming su T-Mobile e Orange?
E per la joint venture tra Vodafone AU e 3 AU? Mi sembra che i clienti 3 AU possano andare in roaming sulle reti 2G e 3G di Vodafone AU e di Telstra, ma non viceversa.
Sembra che stia per arrivare un accordo di network sharing anche tra AT&T e T-Mobile US.
Non si potrebbe fare anche in Italia per le costruende reti 4G LTE?
Da http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T-Mobile#cite_note-17
In late 2007, it was confirmed that a merger of the high-speed 3G and HSDPA networks operated by T-Mobile UK and 3 (UK) was to take place starting January 2008. This will leave T-Mobile and 3 with the largest HSDPA mobile phone network in the country
In 2009, France Telecom's Orange and DT, T-Mobile's parent, announced they were in advanced talks to merge their UK operations to create the largest mobile operator.[17] In March 2010, the European Commission approved this merger on the condition that the combined company sell 25% of the spectrum it owns on the 1800 MHz radio band and amend a network sharing agreement with smaller rival 3
Da: http://www.telegeography.com/products/commsupdate/articles/2010/09/03/orange-to-link-up-with-mbnl/
British cellco Orange UK is reportedly set to link up with Mobile Broadband Network Ltd (MBNL), the 3G network sharing joint venture formed in December 2007 between T-Mobile UK and Hutchison 3G UK (H3G UK). According to ZDNet UK, the move comes in the wake of the merger between Orange and T-Mobile, with both mobile operators now wholly owned by Everything Everywhere, itself a 50/50 joint venture between the duo’s respective former parent companies, European telecoms groups France Telecom (FT) and Germany’s Deutsche Telekom (DT). A formal announcement is expected by the end of this week, with it understood that MBNL will become a 50/50 joint venture between H3G UK and Everything Everywhere, while Orange for its part will contribute several thousand of its base stations for network sharing purposes.
As noted in TeleGeography’s GlobalComms Database, MBNL was created after T-Mobile and H3G UK agreed to pool their respective 3G infrastructures in a 50/50 joint venture, with the duo claiming the move would allow them to construct the UK’s best third-generation network more efficiently and far faster than either could independently. At present MBNL’s HSPA-based infrastructure covers more than 90% of the British population, and by the end of 2010 this figure is expected to rise to more than 98%, with the JV having already consolidated more than 7,000 of the 12,500 cell sites that the initial two partners had said will be merged by October 2010.
Da: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Everything_Everywhere
Joint venture with Hutchison 3G UK
On 3 September 2010 Everything Everywhere announced that Orange would join Mobile Broadband Network Ltd (MBNL), the 3G network sharing joint venture formed in December 2007 between T-Mobile UK and Hutchison 3G UK (H3G UK). MBNL will become a 50/50 joint venture between Three UK and Everything Everywhere, with Orange contributing several thousand of its base stations for network sharing purposes.[12] MBNL was created after T-Mobile and Three UK agreed to pool their respective 3G infrastructures in a 50/50 joint venture. At present MBNL’s HSPA-based infrastructure covers more than 90% of the British population, and by the end of 2010 this figure is expected to rise to more than 98%, with the joint venture having already consolidated more than 7,000 of the 12,500 cell sites that the initial two partners had said will be merged by October 2010.[12]