AMR-WB has been standardized by a mobile phone manufacturer consortium for future usage in networks such as
UMTS. Its speech quality is high, but older networks will have to be upgraded to support a wideband codec. In October 2006, the first AMR-WB tests were conducted in a deployed network by T-Mobile in Germany, in cooperation with Ericsson. In 2007 an end-to-end AMR-WB TrFO capable 3G & VoIP product line was commercially released by
NSN (M13.6
MSS, U3C
MGW). AMR-WB TFO support was commercially released in 2008 (M14.2, U4.0). End-to-end TFO/TrFO negotiation and mid-call optimization (e.g. on
handover,
CF or
CT events) was released in 2009 (M14.3, U4.1). In late 2009,
Orange UK announced that it would be introducing AMR-WB on its network in 2010. In France
Orange S.A. and SFR are using AMR-WB format on their 3G+ networks since the end of summer 2010. WIND Mobile in Canada launched HD Voice (AMR-WB) on its 3G+ network in February, 2011. WIND Mobile also announced that several handsets will support HD Voice (AMR-WB) in the first half of 2011, with the first one being Alcatel Tribe. In January 2013, T-Mobile became the first GSM/UMTS based network in the US to enable AMR-WB. In Feb 2013, Chunghwa Telecom became the first GSM/UMTS based network in Taiwan to enable AMR-WB. In August 2013 the AMR-WB standard was introduced in Ukraine by Kyivstar.
Nokia developed the
VMR-WB format for
CDMA2000 networks, which is fully interoperable with 3GPP AMR-WB. AMR-WB is also a widely adapted format in mobile handsets for ringtones. The AMR wideband speech format shall be supported in
3G multimedia services when
wideband speech working at 16 kHz sampling frequency is supported. This requirement is defined in 3GPP technical specifications for
IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS),
Multimedia Messaging Service (MMS) and Transparent end-to-end Packet-switched Streaming Service (
PSS). In 3GPP specifications is AMR-WB format also used in 3GP container format. ==Licensing==