T-Mobile to Offer Consumer Push E-Mail

Feb 14, 2007 

After rolling out push e-mail service to its enterprise customers, T-Mobile 
International AG and Co. KG now plans to extend the offering to the consumer
market, in addition to launching a number of new "community" services. 

The consumer push e-mail service was one of several announcements T-Mobile 
International CEO Hamid Akhavan made Tuesday during a news conference at the
3GSM World Congress in Barcelona. 

"We plan a new service that will push e-mail to consumers; this could become a 
very huge market," Akhavan said. 

As T-Mobile rolls out new social networking services such as myFaves in the 
U.S., the operator also plans new "community" pricing plans. With myFaves, for
instance, customers can establish a community of up to five people who receive 
a discounted rate for voice calls, text message and more. 

User-generated content, such as photos and videos, is another social networking 
service already generating lots of buzz, according to Akhavan. 

"It's still early days for social networking services over mobile networks but 
they will drive growth," he said. "I believe the mobile Internet will have
a bigger impact than the Internet itself." 

The company is looking at the new Windows Mobile 6.0. "I don't know yet if our 
Windows Mobile 5.0 handsets can support 6.0," he said. "If so and if we can
use our Web site to allow customers to download the new operating system, then 
maybe this will be a possibility. I guess the answer is if we can upgrade
easily, then yes." 

T-Mobile meanwhile lowered international roaming fees by 20 percent last year, 
with further reductions in the pipeline. Because roaming isn't a unilateral
business, partner operators will also need to agree to changes, Akhavan said. 

Enterprises have been lobbying the European Commission for years to pressure 
European mobile operators into lowering roaming fees. 

T-Mobile is moving ahead on its 3G (third-generation) rollout in the U.S., 
according to Akhavan. He handed the microphone to Ray Nevelle, in charge of the
U.S. deployment, who said U.S. customers can expect 3G service this year. 

Akhavan said he wasn't concerned about the threat of municipality Wi-Fi 
networks. Users want quality service, "which requires networking expertise -- 
this
is something municipalities don't have," he said. "Governments, you may recall, 
used to run telecom networks and then decided to get out of that business."

http://www.pcworld.com/article/id,129002-pg,1/article.html

Vikas Kapoor,
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