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This is a comparison of standards of wireless networking technologies for devices such asmobile phones. A newgeneration of cellular standards has appeared approximately every tenth year since1G systems were introduced in 1979 and the early to mid-1980s.
Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM, around 80–85% market share) andIS-95 (around 10–15% market share) were the two most prevalent 2G mobile communication technologies in 2007.[1] In 3G, the most prevalent technology wasUMTS withCDMA-2000 in close contention.
All radio access technologies have to solve the same problems: to divide the finiteRF spectrum among multiple users as efficiently as possible. GSM usesTDMA andFDMA for user and cell separation. UMTS, IS-95 and CDMA-2000 useCDMA.WiMAX andLTE useOFDM.
In theory, CDMA, TDMA and FDMA have exactly the same spectral efficiency but practically, each has its own challenges – power control in the case of CDMA, timing in the case of TDMA, and frequency generation/filtering in the case of FDMA.
For a classic example for understanding the fundamental difference of TDMA and CDMA, imagine a cocktail party where couples are talking to each other in a single room. The room represents the available bandwidth:
| Generation | Technology | Feature | Encoding | Year of First Use | Roaming | Handset interoperability | Common Interference | Signal quality/coverage area | Frequency utilization/Call density | Handoff | Voice and Data at the same time |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1G | FDMA | NMT | Analog | 1981 | Nordics and several other European countries | None | None | Good coverage due to low frequencies | Very low density | Hard | No |
| 2G | TDMA andFDMA | GSM | Digital | 1991 | Worldwide, all countries except Japan and South Korea | SIM card | Some electronics, e.g. amplifiers | Good coverage indoors on 850/900 MHz. Repeaters possible. 35 km hard limit. | Very low density | Hard | YesGPRS Class A |
| 2G | CDMA | IS-95 (CDMA one) | Digital | 1995 | Limited | None | None | Unlimited cell size, low transmitter power permits large cells | Very low density | Soft | No |
| 3G | CDMA | IS-2000 (CDMA 2000) | Digital | 2000 / 2002 | Limited | RUIM (rarely used) | None | Unlimited cell size, low transmitter power permits large cells | Very low density | Soft | No EVDO / Yes SVDO[2] |
| 3G | W-CDMA | UMTS (3GSM) | Digital | 2001 | Worldwide | SIM card | None | Smaller cells and lower indoors coverage on 2100 MHz; equivalent coverage indoors and superior range to GSM on 850/900 MHz. | Very low density | Soft | Yes[3] |
| 4G | OFDMA | LTE | Digital | 2009 | Worldwide | SIM card | None | Smaller cells and lower coverage on theS band. | Very low density | Hard | No (data only) Voice possible throughVoLTE or fallback to 2G/3G |
| 5G | OFDMA | NR | Digital | 2018 | Limited | SIM card | None | Dense cells onmillimeter waves. | Very low density | Hard | No (data only) Voice possible throughVoNR |
| Network Compatibility | Standard or Revision |
|---|---|
| GSM (TDMA,2G) | GSM (1991),GPRS (2000),EDGE (2003) |
| cdmaOne (CDMA,2G) | cdmaOne (1995) |
| CDMA2000 (CDMA/TDMA,3G) | EV-DO (1999), Rev. A (2006), Rev. B (2006),SVDO (2011) |
| UMTS (CDMA,3G) | UMTS (1999),HSDPA (2005),HSUPA (2007),HSPA+ (2009) |
| 4G | LTE (2009),LTE Advanced (2011),LTE Advanced Pro (2016) |
| 5G | NR (2018) |
Source:[4]
This graphic compares the market shares of the different mobile standards.

In a fast-growing market, GSM/3GSM (red) grows faster than the market and is gaining market share, the CDMA family (blue) grows at about the same rate as the market, while other technologies (grey) are being phased out
As a reference, a comparison of mobile and non-mobile wireless Internet standards follows.
Parts of this article (those related to template) need to beupdated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(November 2018) |
| Common name | Family | Primary use | Radio tech | Downstream (Mbit/s) | Upstream (Mbit/s) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HSPA+ | 3GPP | Mobile Internet | CDMA/TDMA/FDD MIMO | 21 42 84 672 | 5.8 11.5 22 168 | HSPA+ is widely deployed. Revision 11 of the 3GPP states thatHSPA+ is expected to have a throughput capacity of 672 Mbit/s. |
| LTE | 3GPP | Mobile Internet | OFDMA/TDMA/MIMO/SC-FDMA/for LTE-FDD/for LTE-TDD | 100 Cat3 150 Cat4 300 Cat5 25065 Cat17 1658 Cat19 (in 20 MHz FDD)[8] | 50 Cat3/4 75 Cat5 2119 Cat17 13563 Cat19 (in 20 MHz FDD)[8] | LTE-Advanced Pro offers rates in excess of 3 Gbit/s to mobile users. |
| WiMax rel 1 | 802.16 | WirelessMAN | MIMO-SOFDMA | 37 (10 MHz TDD) | 17 (10 MHz TDD) | With 2x2 MIMO.[9] |
| WiMax rel 1.5 | 802.16-2009 | WirelessMAN | MIMO-SOFDMA | 83 (20 MHz TDD) 141 (2x20 MHz FDD) | 46 (20 MHz TDD) 138 (2x20 MHz FDD) | With 2x2 MIMO.Enhanced with 20 MHz channels in 802.16-2009[9] |
| WiMAX rel 2.0 | 802.16m | WirelessMAN | MIMO-SOFDMA | 2x2 MIMO 110 (20 MHz TDD) 183 (2x20 MHz FDD) 4x4 MIMO 219 (20 MHz TDD) 365 (2x20 MHz FDD) | 2x2 MIMO 70 (20 MHz TDD) 188 (2x20 MHz FDD) 4x4 MIMO 140 (20 MHz TDD) 376 (2x20 MHz FDD) | Also, low mobility users can aggregate multiple channels to get a download throughput of up to 1 Gbit/s[9] |
| Flash-OFDM | Flash-OFDM | Mobile Internet mobility up to 200 mph (350 km/h) | Flash-OFDM | 5.3 10.6 15.9 | 1.8 3.6 5.4 | Mobile range 30 km (18 miles) Extended range 55 km (34 miles) |
| HIPERMAN | HIPERMAN | Mobile Internet | OFDM | 56.9 | ||
| Wi-Fi | 802.11 (11ax) | Wireless LAN | OFDM/OFDMA/CSMA/MIMO/MU-MIMO/Half duplex | 9600Wi-Fi 6 | Antenna,RF front end enhancements and minor protocol timer tweaks have helped deploy long range P2P networks compromising on radial coverage, throughput and/or spectra efficiency (310 km &382 km) | |
| iBurst | 802.20 | Mobile Internet | HC-SDMA/TDD/MIMO | 95 | 36 | Cell Radius: 3–12 km Speed: 250 km/h Spectral Efficiency: 13 bits/s/Hz/cell Spectrum Reuse Factor: "1" |
| EDGE Evolution | GSM | Mobile Internet | TDMA/FDD | 1.6 | 0.5 | 3GPP Release 7 |
| UMTS W-CDMA HSPA (HSDPA+HSUPA) | 3GPP | Mobile Internet | CDMA/FDD CDMA/FDD/MIMO | 0.384 14.4 | 0.384 5.76 | HSDPA is widely deployed. Typical downlink rates today 2 Mbit/s, ~200 kbit/s uplink; HSPA+ downlink up to 56 Mbit/s. |
| UMTS-TDD | 3GPP | Mobile Internet | CDMA/TDD | 16 | Reported speeds according toIPWireless using 16QAM modulation similar toHSDPA+HSUPA | |
| EV-DO Rel. 0 EV-DO Rev.A EV-DO Rev.B | 3GPP2 | Mobile Internet | CDMA/FDD | 2.45 3.1 4.9xN | 0.15 1.8 1.8xN | Rev B note: N is the number of 1.25 MHz carriers used. EV-DO is not designed for voice, and requires a fallback to 1xRTT when a voice call is placed or received. |
Notes: All speeds are theoretical maximums and will vary by a number of factors, including the use of external antennas, distance from the tower and the ground speed (e.g. communications on a train may be poorer than when standing still). Usually the bandwidth is shared between several terminals. The performance of each technology is determined by a number of constraints, including thespectral efficiency of the technology, the cell sizes used, and the amount of spectrum available.
For more comparison tables, seebit rate progress trends,comparison of mobile phone standards,spectral efficiency comparison table andOFDM system comparison table.