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Ymobile

Y!mobile is a Japanese mobile phone operator. Y!mobile is a brand used by SoftBank Corp., a subsidiary of Japanese telecommunications company SoftBank Group Corporation, that provides mobile telecommunications and ADSL services. The current CEO of the company is Ken Miyauchi. It was formed in 2014 through the merger of Willcom and eAccess, and uses the Y! moniker brand from Yahoo! Japan, which is partly-owned by SoftBank.

SoftBank Corp. T/A Y!mobile
Founded1 June 2014; 9 years ago (2014-06-01)
Defunct1 April 2015; 8 years ago (2015-04-01) (as independent company)
HeadquartersShiodome-building 1-9-1 Higashi-shinbashi, Minato-ku, Tokyo, Japan
OwnerSoftBank (100%)[1]
Websitewww.ymobile.jp

On 1 April 2015, Ymobile Corporation merged into Softbank Mobile Corporation (now SoftBank Corporation), with the Y!mobile brand continuing to be used by the newly merged company.[2]

History edit

Willcom edit

 
Willcom logo

WILLCOM Inc. (株式会社ウィルコム, Kabushiki-gaisha Wirukomu) was a PHS operator based in Tokyo, offering flat-rate wireless network data transmission and flat-rate voice calls for its subscribers. The company was founded as a planning-company in 1994, and started to offer telephony services in 1995 under the brand DDI-Pocket. Its PHS network covered almost all of Japan, and had the largest share of the Japanese PHS market. It continued operating after other PHS operators had withdrawn their services. The company later became a subsidiary of KDDI. Willcom Okinawa Co., Ltd. was a subsidiary for operations in Okinawa.

In 2004, the Carlyle Group acquired a majority stake from KDDI and spun off DDI Pocket in February 2005, with the new company called Willcom. The number of its subscribers passed four million on May 29, 2006.

 
A Willcom PHS phone tower in Tokorozawa, Saitama, in 2006

As an operator, it had mainly base stations of 500mW-radio output, unlike other PHS operators, which had mainly built 20 mW base stations. The high output level caused some radio interference and it was difficult to place calls in dense areas such as Shinjuku, Tokyo during the network's early days, although these problems were eventually solved. On the other hand, high output (and sensitivity) can also earn wider coverage of area per base station, therefore the operator was able to expand its coverage faster than the competition. The market between PHS operators and cellular telephony companies was incredibly fierce, and until October 1996 it was not possible to make calls between PHS and cellular telephones. Even then, charges for calls between the two different systems were high.

PHS became popular because of its lower cost, causing cellular telephone companies to reduce their rates, which were initially considered too expensive. Furthermore, the coverage of the cellular companies quickly expanded to comparable levels. With the competitive advantage of PHS reduced, DDI-Pocket went through difficult years at the end of the 1990s and the beginning of the 2000s. The declining market for PHS service has caused the launch of its flat-rate service and its buyout by Carlyle.

 
Logo of eAccess

On February 18, 2010, Willcom filed for bankruptcy with 206 billion yen in liabilities.[3] This took place after Willcom was unable to reschedule its debt payments; the company had been losing subscribers to competing networks with greater data speeds.[3] In December 2010 SoftBank purchased 100% of shares issued by Willcom.[4] Willcom was in the process of rehabilitation under the Corporate Rehabilitation Act.[1]

On June 1, 2014, Willcom was merged with eAccess and formed Ymobile.

eAccess and EMOBILE edit

 
The Toranomon Twin Building in Minato-ku, Tokyo, headquarters of eAccess

The company eAccess was established on November 1, 1999, by Dr Sachio Semmoto as an ADSL fixed line broadband provider. Semmoto founded EMOBILE Ltd. (イー・モバイル株式会社) on January 5, 2005, as a subsidiary of eAccess,[5] offering 3G/HSPA+/DC-HSDPA/LTE services. As they used to offer only data services they were not widely known, but after teaming up with NTT DoCoMo to offer voice services, they became more popular. EMOBILE had a reseller/virtual network arrangement with several fixed-line ISPs including ASAHI Net. As of March 31, 2009 their website claimed 90% coverage of Japan's population.

As of April 17, 2009 EMOBILE introduced HSUPA to metropolitan areas claiming support for 5.8Mbit/s. As of early 2011, 21Mbit/s HSPA+ and 42Mbit/s DC-HSPA+ is available in major metropolitan areas, depending upon the subscriber modem used. On March 15, 2012, they began offering LTE service with initial advertised speeds of 75Mbit/s. It is claimed that this speed will eventually increase to 112Mbit/s.

Total EMOBILE subscribers as of April 30, 2009 was 1.53 million.

On January 1, 2013, eAccess became a wholly owned subsidiary of SoftBank Corporation (now SoftBank Group Corporation).[6] eAccess merged with Willcom to form Ymobile in July 2014.

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "SoftBank Annual Report 2011" (PDF). SoftBank. Retrieved 2012-06-13.
  2. ^ "Establishment of Newly Merged Company and Management Team | Press Releases | News | About Us".
  3. ^ a b Yoshinori Eki and Pavel Alpeyev (February 18, 2010). . Bloomberg BusinessWeek. Archived from the original on February 20, 2010.
  4. ^ "Completion of Company Split and Increase and Decrease of Capital, etc. of WILLCOM, Inc". SoftBank. 2010-12-21. Retrieved 2012-06-13.
  5. ^ "Y!mobile created by merger of eMobile and Willcom". 19 May 2013.
  6. ^ "eAccess and Willcom merge under the Ymobile banner". TeleGeography. 2014-06-02. Retrieved 2014-09-18.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Corporate website

ymobile, yahoo, mobile, redirects, here, yahoo, mobile, services, yahoo, yahoo, mobile, japanese, mobile, phone, operator, mobile, brand, used, softbank, corp, subsidiary, japanese, telecommunications, company, softbank, group, corporation, that, provides, mob. Yahoo Mobile redirects here For Yahoo mobile services see Yahoo Go and Yahoo Y mobile is a Japanese mobile phone operator Y mobile is a brand used by SoftBank Corp a subsidiary of Japanese telecommunications company SoftBank Group Corporation that provides mobile telecommunications and ADSL services The current CEO of the company is Ken Miyauchi It was formed in 2014 through the merger of Willcom and eAccess and uses the Y moniker brand from Yahoo Japan which is partly owned by SoftBank SoftBank Corp T A Y mobileFounded1 June 2014 9 years ago 2014 06 01 Defunct1 April 2015 8 years ago 2015 04 01 as independent company HeadquartersShiodome building 1 9 1 Higashi shinbashi Minato ku Tokyo JapanOwnerSoftBank 100 1 Websitewww wbr ymobile wbr jpOn 1 April 2015 Ymobile Corporation merged into Softbank Mobile Corporation now SoftBank Corporation with the Y mobile brand continuing to be used by the newly merged company 2 Contents 1 History 1 1 Willcom 1 2 eAccess and EMOBILE 2 Gallery 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksHistory editWillcom edit nbsp Willcom logoWILLCOM Inc 株式会社ウィルコム Kabushiki gaisha Wirukomu was a PHS operator based in Tokyo offering flat rate wireless network data transmission and flat rate voice calls for its subscribers The company was founded as a planning company in 1994 and started to offer telephony services in 1995 under the brand DDI Pocket Its PHS network covered almost all of Japan and had the largest share of the Japanese PHS market It continued operating after other PHS operators had withdrawn their services The company later became a subsidiary of KDDI Willcom Okinawa Co Ltd was a subsidiary for operations in Okinawa In 2004 the Carlyle Group acquired a majority stake from KDDI and spun off DDI Pocket in February 2005 with the new company called Willcom The number of its subscribers passed four million on May 29 2006 nbsp A Willcom PHS phone tower in Tokorozawa Saitama in 2006As an operator it had mainly base stations of 500mW radio output unlike other PHS operators which had mainly built 20 mW base stations The high output level caused some radio interference and it was difficult to place calls in dense areas such as Shinjuku Tokyo during the network s early days although these problems were eventually solved On the other hand high output and sensitivity can also earn wider coverage of area per base station therefore the operator was able to expand its coverage faster than the competition The market between PHS operators and cellular telephony companies was incredibly fierce and until October 1996 it was not possible to make calls between PHS and cellular telephones Even then charges for calls between the two different systems were high PHS became popular because of its lower cost causing cellular telephone companies to reduce their rates which were initially considered too expensive Furthermore the coverage of the cellular companies quickly expanded to comparable levels With the competitive advantage of PHS reduced DDI Pocket went through difficult years at the end of the 1990s and the beginning of the 2000s The declining market for PHS service has caused the launch of its flat rate service and its buyout by Carlyle nbsp Logo of eAccessOn February 18 2010 Willcom filed for bankruptcy with 206 billion yen in liabilities 3 This took place after Willcom was unable to reschedule its debt payments the company had been losing subscribers to competing networks with greater data speeds 3 In December 2010 SoftBank purchased 100 of shares issued by Willcom 4 Willcom was in the process of rehabilitation under the Corporate Rehabilitation Act 1 On June 1 2014 Willcom was merged with eAccess and formed Ymobile eAccess and EMOBILE edit nbsp The Toranomon Twin Building in Minato ku Tokyo headquarters of eAccessThe company eAccess was established on November 1 1999 by Dr Sachio Semmoto as an ADSL fixed line broadband provider Semmoto founded EMOBILE Ltd イー モバイル株式会社 on January 5 2005 as a subsidiary of eAccess 5 offering 3G HSPA DC HSDPA LTE services As they used to offer only data services they were not widely known but after teaming up with NTT DoCoMo to offer voice services they became more popular EMOBILE had a reseller virtual network arrangement with several fixed line ISPs including ASAHI Net As of March 31 2009 their website claimed 90 coverage of Japan s population As of April 17 2009 EMOBILE introduced HSUPA to metropolitan areas claiming support for 5 8Mbit s As of early 2011 21Mbit s HSPA and 42Mbit s DC HSPA is available in major metropolitan areas depending upon the subscriber modem used On March 15 2012 they began offering LTE service with initial advertised speeds of 75Mbit s It is claimed that this speed will eventually increase to 112Mbit s Total EMOBILE subscribers as of April 30 2009 was 1 53 million On January 1 2013 eAccess became a wholly owned subsidiary of SoftBank Corporation now SoftBank Group Corporation 6 eAccess merged with Willcom to form Ymobile in July 2014 Gallery edit nbsp Willcom and EMOBILE signs at a plaza in 2014 nbsp An EMOBILE store in Tokyo in 2012 nbsp A Willcom EMOBILE store in 2014 nbsp emobile store in 2014 as Y Mobile nbsp An EMOBILE UIM cardSee also editSoftBank Mobile PHS W SIM G BOOK Enterprise Turnaround Initiative Corporation of JapanReferences edit a b SoftBank Annual Report 2011 PDF SoftBank Retrieved 2012 06 13 Establishment of Newly Merged Company and Management Team Press Releases News About Us a b Yoshinori Eki and Pavel Alpeyev February 18 2010 Willcom Files for Bankruptcy Protection in Japan Update3 Bloomberg BusinessWeek Archived from the original on February 20 2010 Completion of Company Split and Increase and Decrease of Capital etc of WILLCOM Inc SoftBank 2010 12 21 Retrieved 2012 06 13 Y mobile created by merger of eMobile and Willcom 19 May 2013 eAccess and Willcom merge under the Ymobile banner TeleGeography 2014 06 02 Retrieved 2014 09 18 External links editOfficial website Corporate website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ymobile amp oldid 1163899174, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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