Analysis
picoChip powers Axiom multi-protocol femtocell architecture
Axiom Wireless has announced its new “One Phone Service Enabler” product family. This complete system architecture includes the ACF-400 switch and two femtocells: the A-Pro2100 for WCDMA (HSPA) and the A-Pro3500 WiMAX. This is the first WiMAX femtocell, and the first femtocell architecture expressly designed to integrate different wireless standards, starting with these but adding more. With the One Phone Service Enabler, carriers will be able to offer in building service coverage without modifying their existing network, at lower cost, with higher reliability and more flexibility.
Axio“The combination of our previous experience in developing and deploying Pico and Micro IP Base Stations with picoChip’s reference designs enables carriers around the world to offer improved low cost indoor coverage and capacity. We have designed our system to easily integrate with carriers’ networks, no matter which standard they use, and are launching with the two fastest growing wireless protocols. The flexibility of picoChip in supporting different standards was a major attraction”, said Jake Han CEO and Founder of Axiom Wireless.
“picoChip is pleased to add Axiom Wireless to a list of highly capable companies that have chosen our solutions for the femtocell market”, said Guillaume d’Eyssautier, President and CEO of picoChip. “Axiom’s innovative architecture and control platform allows it to easily support many standards, increasingly necessary as carriers move to a mix of protocols.”
The PC202 is the most advanced multi-core DSP on the market, delivery ten times better MIPS/Dollar than legacy processors. This performance allows it to support different wireless standards purely from software. picoChip has reference designs for WiMAX (both 16d and 16e), WCDMA (HSDPA and upgrade to HSUPA) and other standards are in development (CDMA2000, EvDO and TD-SCDMA).
Femtocells, sometimes referred to as 3G access points or “LCIB” (low cost indoor basestations), allow carriers to improve in-building coverage, without needing more macrocell basestations or subsidizing costly new handsets. The advantages to users include better coverage, cheap (or free) calls and the freedom to use any handset they wish. As such, they deliver FMC (fixed mobile convergence) but with none of the disadvantages of VoWiFi or expensive dual-mode handsets.