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available for any supplier of
equipment or services, also those who did not take
part in the standardization process. The suppliers may then develop products and
services based on this standard and compete for market shares. The benefit for
the manufactures and the service suppliers is that the cost to
develop the standard
is small for each partner and that the total market becomes larger. This was the
successful approach taken by GSM and later by 3GPP in developing the mobile
standards.
There are also several examples where regional standards have been developed,
forming technological cartels. Europe and the USA have
often adopted different
telecommunications standards, for example, the basic encoding
of voice signals in
the digital telephone network (PCM). These technological incompatibilities were
solved by interworking units at the borders converting the formats, thereby satisfy-
ing the all-important requirement of interoperability.
Except
for a few instances, GSM was not implemented in the USA, so that
roaming between Europe and the USA using the same
mobile phone was not pos-
sible. To respond to this inconvenience, several mobile phone retailers saw the
opportunity to
establish a new business, among others at airports, by leasing
mobile phones to travelers to Europe.
There were also two incompatible standards for 3G systems: UMTS (specified
by 3GPP) in Europe and CDMA2000 (standardized by ITU)
in North America
and several countries in Asia; CDMA2000 was also offered by several European
mobile operators in parallel to UMTS to enhance global roaming.
The first true
global standard for public mobile networks was 4G specified by 3GPP and endorsed
by ITU as a global standard.
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