Sprint Outsources Network Operations to Ericsson, is LTE in Their Future? 26
The story here is very 'inside baseball' but bear with us just a little bit as we try to work through Sprint's most recent announcement. The essence is that Sprint is handing over all network operations to Ericsson - which is to say:
Ericsson assumes responsibility for the day-to-day services, provisioning and maintenance for the
Sprint -owned CDMA, iDEN and wireline networks
Sprint keeps ownership of their network assets -- but honestly they have less of a stake than you might think there since they sold off a bootload of towers one year ago and leased service back. 6,000 Sprint employees will become Ericsson employees (and we wouldn't be surprised to hear about layoffs in the near future), but customer service and technical support will remain in-house. Apparently the deal has been in the works for a long time.
For Sprint customers, here are what we think the implications are:
- the potential for better network quality as Ericsson has been doing this sort of thing all over the planet for a very long time
- the possibility that Sprint's 4G plans will include both WiMAX and LTE.
The first point is exciting but a little scary (Ericsson could botch it up, after all). The second point is, well, surprising. Verizon and AT&T are both committed to moving to LTE (which is a GSM technology at heart, basically), but many had wondered whether Sprint would try to push out WiMAX handsets. InformationWeek implies it's a possibility, as does gigaom. Then again, Sprint CTO Barry West wasn't too keen on the technology back in April.
If nothing else, it's something to watch. Sprint seems to be turning themselves into more and more of a services middleman instead of a traditional cell carrier. They're spinning off physical assets faster than a dervish -- WiMAX went to Clearwire (with Sprint as a 51% investor), lots of towers went to TowerCo (with Sprint leasing service), and now the maintenance of their core network technology has gone to Ericsson.
It all lowers Sprint's operating costs, sure, but the relentless march of technology is very good at cutting out the middle man -- and Sprint is looking more and more like the Middle Man of wireless service. We're not going to call them an MVNO (Mobile Virtual Network Operator) in all but name, but we're not going to say you're wrong if you do.




























26 Comments
ups to doc31 for inspiring that last sentence. :D
This is actually a good thing for sprint as they retain ownership of equipment/services, and lower their headcount. Also it allows them to say what they need and ericsson has to deliver. Basically removing the responsibility from Sprint. One thing that I could see happening is that network services get lost in sprints diverse chain of command resulting in longer turn around times. Now they make a phone call and the work gets done.
I dont see Sprint being a middleman at all, more or less a leaner company, with a higher ROI for wall street.
Hmmm...smells like Sprints making themselves an acquisition target for someone like Verizon.
good imagination...
I think Verizon is too big to buy anyone else
"...many had wondered whether Sprint would try to push out WiMAX handsets."
Only those ignorant on Sprint/Nextel merger are stating that. First, let me say that Sprint HAS YET to push any WiMAX handsets, only data cards. The reason Sprint choose WiMAX was due to the requirements of the Nextel merger. With the 2.5GHz spectrum Sprint acquired, they were required to have a 4G Mobile Broadband network that reached at least 30 million by Summer '09 in said spectrum. In order to get this accomplished, Sprint wait until the very last minute; however, in order to reach the given goal, they had to make a decision and WiMAX was the only 4G standard that was complete. LTE still is in testing phase and I believe has yet to establish any standards.
- VDubb
I really hope they go with LTE. Nice to be able to use my future phone all over the world.
How dare you drag Sarah Palin into this!
LOL xImtc that was classic
Enough with the speculation, Sprint is not going to be bought out, they are not going LTE. GSM in America will always have network issues, due to the fact it is piggy-backed. LTE is another piggy on the back of GSM. Like Sprints CDMA, Wimax was built from the ground up.
The article states, "LTE (which is a GSM technology at heart, basically)"
LTE is NOT a GSM technology. GSM's air interface is based on TDMA; "3G" is CDMA whether you call it EV-DO, WCDMA or HSxPA. LTE's air interface is OFDMA (as is WiMAX, aka 802.16e).
In the core network, GSM is based on circuit switching. LTE will be all-IP.
The 3GPP ITU standards body managed the air interface stds for GSM, WCDMA and now LTE. Managing the stds process, however, does not make LTE (OFDMA IP core) a GSM (TDMA circuit switch)technology.
The LTE std *could* be commercialized for TDD spectrum; however, at this point, LTE commercial products are based on FDD spectrum. This is critical as Sprint's 2.5GHz is allocated as TDD spectrum (WiMAX 16e uses TDD). AT&T & VZ have FDD spectrum only.
sprint still owns fiber...lots and lots of fiber. They sell towers, farm out their technical operations, but they hang on to that fiber.
The best is "back haul"