Home > Unified Communications News > The new Nortel: LTE patents reviving Nortel?
Unified Communications News:
EMAIL THIS

The new Nortel: LTE patents reviving Nortel?

By Leigha Cardwell, Site Editor
10 Aug 2009 | SearchUnifiedCommunications.com

News, tips and expert advice on unified communications and VoIP
Digg This!    StumbleUpon Toolbar StumbleUpon    Bookmark with Delicious Del.icio.us    Add to Google

Nortel has lost the battle, but has it lost the war? This 127-year-old company may have yet another card up its proverbial sleeve: patents. Nortel has approximately 5,500 LTE patents that it could use to generate royalties and/or create and develop new 4G applications.

Though the company is selling its wireless division to Ericsson and has plans in the works to sell off its enterprise business units, Nortel's LTE patents are its most valuable asset.

Nortel's LTE patents are its most valuable asset.
While Ericsson has entered into an agreement to pay Nortel a fee to license and use the intellectual property rights (IPR) to the pre-4G LTE patents encompassed within their deal, Nortel has decided against selling the patents to Ericsson. Nortel has yet to announce what the company will do with some 5,500 long-term evolution patents.

Why is LTE important?
For consumers and vendors seeking broadband speeds via mobile handsets, LTE combined with 4G phones make for genuinely high-speed, dependable and innovative mobile communications.

By manipulating the wireless spectrum more efficiently, long-term evolution technology will surpass current 3G network speeds and will do so at a lower cost.

LTE is a radio-communications-based standard that uses radio waves or radio frequency (RF) energy to place and receive voice and data calls. By leveraging novel radio technology with simplified network components, data rates and performance can be enhanced. Add IP (Internet Protocol) to the mix -- and the wide range of features and services that IP enables -- and businesses and end users have much to gain.

How does LTE work?
LTE's combination of IP with radio technology is unique but simple and can provide download speeds of around 100 megabits per second (Mbps). With 100 Mbps, end users could access unified communications applications, stream video, and even download music and documents onto their wireless devices as quickly as they do now with their desktops over the fastest landline connections.

For more recent Nortel news
  • Avaya's Nortel bid: Which products will survive merger?
  • Nortel voice customers are the vendor's only enterprise asset
  • Long-term evolution technology promises to be a viable alternative to cable, DSL, satellite and dial-up Internet. LTE will ease the load of road warriors looking to connect to a Wi-Fi hotspot. With an LTE modem, end users can connect anywhere within their service provider's coverage area. Consumer electronic devices -- cameras, notebook computers, video cameras -- that use broadband communications can also tap into the speed of LTE, spreading the value of this technology to a wide and eager audience.

    How valuable are Nortel's LTE patents?
    Just how valuable Nortel's LTE patents are is difficult to establish. In this regard, JP Morgan analysts considered the true and potential value of Nortel's LTE wireless patents in terms of recurring royalty payments and placed that value at $2.9 billion.

    The commitment to LTE research and development and to securing LTE patents could breathe new life into Nortel, shaping a strong research and development company while generating revenues through the licensing of its IPR.



    Tags: Network Planning and Testing for IP TelephonyIP Telephony SystemsVIEW ALL TAGS

    Digg This!    StumbleUpon Toolbar StumbleUpon    Bookmark with Delicious Del.icio.us    Add to Google



    RELATED CONTENT
    Network Planning and Testing for IP Telephony
    3M prepares the network for VoIP
    IP telephony management software essential to large-scale deployments
    Go Green: Al Gore speaks at VoiceCon 2008
    Early adopters of unified communications need to ask about security
    With the launch of unified communications, managing complexity and information is key
    Managed VoIP keeps regatta's communications afloat
    VoIP, unified communications study reveals challenges
    Voice over IPv6: Architectures for Next Generation VoIP Networks
    BT's SDK for do-it-yourself VoIP apps
    Deploying VoIP: Five things every CIO should know

    IP Telephony Systems
    What are the operational costs associated with VoIP after implementation?
    Unified communications infrastructure virtualization now a reality
    HD voice value proposition: Just try using an HD phone
    Tutorial: Connecting and leveraging VoIP islands
    VoIP islands 101: How did we get here?
    Do desk phones matter in the UC everything, IP everywhere era?
    Eldorado Casino can't afford to gamble on IP-PBX telephony upgrades
    Agito first to make BlackBerry a dual-mode phone
    Nortel voice customers are the vendor's only enterprise asset
    Aruba's VBN line pushes IP telephony, secure Wi-Fi to teleworkers

    RELATED RESOURCES
    2020software.com, trial software downloads for accounting software, ERP software, CRM software and business software systems
    Search Bitpipe.com for the latest white papers and business webcasts
    Whatis.com, the online computer dictionary



    Messaging Solutions for Enterprise Business
    About Us  |  Contact Us  |  For Advertisers  |  For Business Partners  |  Site Index  |  RSS
    SEARCH 
    TechTarget provides technology professionals with the information they need to perform their jobs - from developing strategy, to making cost-effective purchase decisions and managing their organizations' technology projects - with its network of technology-specific websites, events and online magazines.

    TechTarget Corporate Web Site  |  Media Kits  |  Site Map




    All Rights Reserved, Copyright 2008 - 2009, TechTarget | Read our Privacy Policy
      TechTarget - The IT Media ROI Experts