Online Business

Intel in talks with ITI for WiMAX joint venture

Huawei, Samsung, Alcatel-Lucent, Hitachi may also bid. - Intel eyes 4G entry in India - Companies to spend more on PCs in 2010: Intel - HCL Info partners BSNL, Intel for WiMax-enabled devices - Google searches 3G prospects in India - Some of these won"t work - 'Not many first-time buyers purchase low-cost PCs' The world"s largest chip maker Intel is preparing to participate in bids recently invited by ailing state-run telecom equipment manufacturer Indian Telecom Industries (ITI) to set up joint ventures based on various technologies including Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access (WiMAX), according to sources close to this development. ITI, according to the bid proposals, intends to be a minority partner in the proposed JVs with a 26 per cent stake. The JV partner should be able to invest at least Rs 60 crore to be able to qualify. Though interested parties have been asked to participate before January 29, 2010, the Department of Telecommunications (DoT) is holding a pre-bid conference in Delhi before selecting them. Intel, according to the sources, is interested in manufacturing the hardware and consumer premise equipment around WiMAX technology which provides for wireless transmission of data and up to 75 Mb/second. Asked about the development, an Intel India spokesperson declined to comment. However, a highly-placed source within the company confirmed the company was holding a "series of discussions with the extended ecosystem in terms of driving WiMAX technology". An Intel delegation recently visited the proposed sites for which ITI announced JVs. ITI has invited bids for JVs on WiMAX technology at Rae Bareli, and Gigabit Passive Optical Network (G-PON), Gigabit Ether Passive Optical Network (GE-PON) and optical transmission equipment at Naini. The company has also sought bids for a JV on IT core systems in Bangalore, where the company employs about 2,200 people. Other than Intel, other global players including Huawei, Alcatel-Lucent, Samsung and Hitachi have also shown interest in participating in the JV. While Huawei and Alcatel Lucent are already working with ITI to cater to state-run BSNL, Samsung and Hitachi — which have significant interest in the telecom segment — are basically keen to have a JV in Rae Bareli. It is also understood that a team of representatives from both the companies recently visited ITI"s Rae Bareli plants, before participating in the bid proposals. In June this year, the government had even announced its intention to write off the Rs 2,820-crore accumulated losses by ITI. DoT had earlier proposed to identify new areas of growth including foraying into new technology areas, to get the PSU up and running.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):

News of the day
Air Deccan still airborne two-yrs after sale to Kingfisher
Air Deccan as an airline may have flown into sunset with Kingfisher buying it out two years ago, but the brand continues to fly the Indian skies as about 10 jets of the erstwhile carrier are yet to be repainted by the new owner.
Popular Articles
Modern furniture stores in New York

What Gladwell saw, and questioned
At the height of the dot-com boom of the 1990s, several executives at McKinsey & Company, the world’s most prestigious management consulting firm, launched what they called the War for Talent. After extensive research, they concluded that the best companies had leaders who were obsessed with “the talent issue”. They recruited ceaselessly, finding and hiring as many top performers as possible. They singled out and segregated their stars, rewarding them disproportionately, and pushing them into ever more senior positions. The “talent mind-set” became the new orthodoxy of American management — the intellectual justification for why a high premium was placed on degrees from first-tier business schools, and why the compensation packages for top executives had become so lavish.

Bungalow in Lutyen's Delhi may flare up Congress-TMC face off
Real estate in Lutyen’s Delhi zone has the latest reason for rattle between the Congress and its biggest ally of the second UPA—the Trinamool Congress. According to top Trinamool sources, mercurial Mamata Banerjee is again angry with the Congress—even before the previous contentious issues could subside—over non-allocation of a preferred bunglow for her party office in the capital. Banerjee had zeroed in on bungalow number 14 on Bishamber Dass Marg as the ideal place to house her party office in Delhi.