Cellphones at Rs 1,000 only!

Apex

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Single-chip solution from Texas Instruments to drive down costs.

In a development that may lead to mobile handsets being sold for as little as Rs 1,000, Texas Instruments today launched the world's first single chip solution for cellular phones.

This cost-effective single chip for a handset is expected to boost the production of ultra-low-cost mobile phones in emerging markets like India, China and Latin America.
"The operations of a mobile phone, which were performed by several chips, have been packed in a single chip, allowing GSM and GPRS phone manufacturers to cut production costs by up to 30 per cent," Chairman of Texas instruments Tom Engibous said today after calling the company's facility in France from New Delhi from a mobile phone using the single-chip solution.

"Our team in Bangalore has developed this technology, which will help narrow the digital divide. Our customers can use it to make ultra-low-cost handsets affordable in largely untapped consumer markets," he said.

According to Engibous, this solution integrated the bulk of handset electronics onto a single chip to reduce cost, power requirements, board area, and silicon area -- performance factors that are crucial for high-volume entry-level mobile phones.

Texas Instruments has already shipped its products to Nokia for trial runs. Company executives said it would take about nine months for handsets using this solution to hit the market.

Engibous added that it was up to manufacturers to develop low-end handsets. "If they use this solution, then they can reduce prices by half. But it depends on them to take a call on prices," he said.

Despite being developed in Bangalore, company executives said the chip would be manufactured in Dallas, US, China or Taiwan.

Indian handset manufacturers like BPL and Quasar are also set to use this technology for their future handset models.

"These designs will serve as a platform for the development of a variety of handsets for different market segments, from ultra-low-cost to mid-range voice- and feature-rich data-centric handsets for BPL and Quasar. The first handsets based on the single chip will be available in BPL handsets by September 2005, while Primus phones using this technology will begin production later this year," said Biswadip Mitra, managing director of Texas Instruments India.

Source: ZDNetIndia
 
the bill is what becomes the headache and the only reason why the common man chooses to stay away from mobile fones.

ummm, but let's not forget the fact that Cellular call rates in India are perhaps the lowest in the world....
Wish I cldd say the same about Internet Services and ISPs too
 
and i work for this company :hap2: , the key in these IC is the integration of of the GSM/GPRS module based on a C54x ( or C55x) core ( which actually forms the basis of our EDGE chipset) with a ARM9 processor, you can call it a sort of dual core if you like with a sort of system on chip(soc) solution.
check out this link, will give a basic idea

http://focus.ti.com/general/docs/wt...15&path=templatedata/cm/product/data/omap_710

our GPRS: TCS2500 chipset

http://focus.ti.com/general/docs/wt...281&path=templatedata/cm/product/data/tcs2500
 
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