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February 13, 2007 12:21 PM PST

BT moves into smart-phone market

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BARCELONA, Spain--BT has announced it will be launching Wi-Fi-enabled smart phones based on Windows Mobile 6 for its business mobile VoIP services.

The move marks the British telecommunications firm's first foray into the smart-phone market. Until now, the company has relied on lower-specified feature phones for its Fusion service, which allows customers to make calls over the Internet, rather than a mobile network, when in range of their home or business BT router or "hub." The phones will be from HTC and Hewlett-Packard.

"We are very excited about Windows Mobile 6 and the range of HTC devices, as it will enable us to develop affordable converged services for customers over our wireless broadband and mobile networks," Jerry Thompson, BT's chief of applications and devices, said Monday.

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Going mobile at 3GSM
More news from the 3GSM World Congress in Barcelona, one of the world's largest showcases of cutting-edge wireless technology.

The first HTC device that BT will release will be a "specific customer version" of the S620, a smart phone with a QWERTY keyboard, according to HTC Vice President Florian Seiche.

Speaking at the 3GSM mobile event in Barcelona, Seiche told ZDNet UK that BT will be integrating additional Internet phoning capabilities into the handset before it is rolled out in the second quarter of 2007.

BT has also agreed to offer the HP iPaq 514 Voice Messenger, a dual-mode UMA (unlicensed mobile access) Windows Mobile 6 handset. Being dual-mode, the handset uses Wi-Fi when in the user's office or at a BT Openzone hot spot, and a cellular connection at other times.

Although BT pulled out of the mobile game years ago, when it sold off BT Cellnet (now O2), the company appears to be rolling out a mobile network of sorts using unlicensed Wi-Fi spectrum. Users of the business version of BT Fusion can get bundled minutes for BT's Openzone hot spots.

It has also been rumored that BT is in talks with Fon, a Spanish-led community of Wi-Fi users where subscribers can piggyback off each other's connections for free. Adoption of such a plan, using BT's home hubs, would in effect extend the companies' Wi-Fi hot zones in residential areas.

Other new HTC devices announced at 3GSM have included the S710, a Windows Mobile 6-based smart phone with a slide-out keyboard--to be rolled out in Q1 by Orange--and the Windows Mobile 5-based "mini-laptop" HTC Advantage, also being released by T-Mobile as the Ameo.

Tony Hallett of Silicon.com contributed to this report.

See more CNET content tagged:
British Telecommunications, HTC, Microsoft Windows Mobile 6.0, BT Openzone, mobile network

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