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3G Americas (3GA)
Offices: Bellevue, Washington
Founded in January 2002, 3G Americas unites
mobile operators and manufacturers in the
Americas to provide a single voice to represent
the GSM family of wireless technologies—GSM,
GPRS, EDGE, and UMTS (WCDMA). The founding
members of 3G Americas wanted a single organization
that could globally address the converged
operator networks and their seamless evolution
to future generations. This marks a significant
milestone for the advancement of the GSM
family of technologies and ensures a smooth
transition to Third Generation (3G) services. |
3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP)
Offices: Paris, France
3GPP is an IT initiative based at ETSI headquarters.
It fosters collaboration between telecommunications
standards bodies, including ARIB, CWTS,
ETSI, T1, TTA, and TTC. The scope of 3GPP
is to produce globally applicable technical
specifications for a third generation mobile
system based on evolved GSM core networks,
GPRS and EDGE and the radio access technologies
that they support. |
3rd Generation Partnership Project 2 (3GPP2)
Offices: Arlington
3GPP2 is focused on North American and Asian
interests, 3GPP2 is a sister project to
3GPP, both of which were born out of the
ITU’s "IMT-2000" initiative, covering high
speed, broadband, and Internet Protocol
(IP)-based mobile systems featuring network-to-network
interconnection, feature/service transparency,
global roaming and seamless services independent
of location. This project aims to develop
global specifications for ANSI/TIA/EIA-41
evolution to 3G and global specifications
for the radio transmission technologies
(RTTs) supported by those standards. |
1394 Trade Association
Offices: Southlake, Texas
The 1394 Trade Association was founded in
1994 to support the development of computer
and consumer electronics systems that can
be easily connected with each other via
a single serial multimedia link. The IEEE
1394 multimedia connection enables simple,
low cost, high bandwidth isochronous (real
time) data interfacing between computers,
peripherals, and consumer electronics products
such as camcorders, VCRs, printers, PCs,
TVs, and digital cameras. With IEEE 1394
compatible products and systems, users can
transfer video or still images from a camera
or camcorder to a printer, PC, or television,
with no image degradation. |
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