Orange announced today that it is ramping up its planned roll-out of mobile HD voice services in Europe, with the addition of France, Spain and Luxembourg to its 2010 roadmap. Following technological developments, Orange has confirmed that its UK customer trial of mobile HD voice will start from Spring and run for three months.
In September 2009, Orange became the world's first operator to commercially launch a mobile HD voice service in Moldova, announcing plans to bring mobile HD voice to the UK and Belgium in 2010. In addition to mobile HD voice, Orange was also first to launch HD over VOIP, first in France and shortly to be rolled out to Poland and Spain.
Olaf Swantee, senior executive vice president for Orange's global mobile business, said: "As far as Orange is concerned, voice is not just a commodity. With mobile HD voice, we are delivering true customer innovation – one that will genuinely enrich and transform our customers' lives. By being the first to innovate and deliver a new mobile voice experience, we provide a compelling and differentiated proposition which sets Orange apart. High-definition voice is the future standard for mobile communication."
According to Orange, customers using mobile HD voice services will benefit from the best possible sound quality, including a much richer and natural sound that is capable of 'conveying emotion' significantly better than an ordinary handset. It helps people hear better in noisy environments, providing clearer voice conversations and creating a much closer feeling of proximity between both parties, almost as if callers are actually in the same room.
Orange plans to rapidly extend the range of HD voice-compatible mobile handsets across Europe. Pricing and handsets will be announced at the time of launch locally.
HD Voice uses the AMR-WB (Adaptive Multi-Rate Wideband) speech codec. This provides excellent audio quality due to a wider speech bandwidth of 50-7000 Hz compared to the current narrowband speech codec of 300-3400 Hz, says Orange, and the AMR-WB delivers 'significantly enhanced' sound quality whilst utilising the same network resources.