When I was a Tech I for Sprint in 2001, the biggest selling point was
the dominance of its fiber optic backbone, from "Tier I all the way up
to Tier III". Sprint boasted having the mostest and the fastest OC-96
fiber. Network capacity was below 15%. Cingular was laughed at because
it wasn't CDMA (Sprint wireless is strictly CDMA, except for roaming).
Cingular was paying the highest for its customers as far as air
rights, nothing to worry about. Today I'm a puzzled how Steve Jobs was
touting Cingular.
Francisco
franciscodaum.blogspot.com

--- In [email protected], "Mike Meiser"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> The wimax is coming. And with it broadband communications.
> 
> An actual firm date, by the end of this year. It's no longer just
vaporware.
> 
> > *Sprint Nextel
Corp.*<http://kansascity.bizjournals.com/kansascity/gen/Sprint_Nextel_Corp_38D9B727DAD54EBE929378498D672ECA.html>said
Monday that will launch its WiMax wireless broadband service in Chicago
> > and Washington by year's end.
> >
> > The wireless giant (NYSE: S), which began showing off products
that use
> > WiMax technology on Monday at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las
Vegas,
> > has committed to spending $800 million this year and $1.5 billion
to $2
> > billion next year on the new WiMax network.
> >
> > The company said in a release Monday that early products that will use
> > WiMax include mobile PCs and personal media players by *Samsung
> > Electronics
Co.*<http://kansascity.bizjournals.com/kansascity/gen/Samsung_Electronics_Co_0410697D58D74FAAA93930587D6236B6.html>and
an infotainment device by
> > *LG Electronics
Inc.*<http://kansascity.bizjournals.com/kansascity/gen/LG_Electronics_Inc_605CE10EFDA940E4B937F76CC1234CE2.html>
> >
> > WiMax will allow devices to connect to the Internet at cable
modem-like
> > speeds wirelessly, in coverage areas similar to wireless phone
service. An
> > MP3 player with WiMax capability, for example, would allow music
downloads
> > on the go.
> >
> > The WiMax network is expected to reach 100 million people by the
end of
> > 2008.
> >
> Wimax'ed networked mp3 players very interesting.
> 
> After today's iPhone announcement with it's cellular and wifi
capabilites
> I'm going to repeat my hair brained theories about direct to device
audio
> and video podcast aggregation.
> 
> Also of note.
> 
> Nokia joins Sprint Nextel WiMax team
>
http://sanantonio.bizjournals.com/washington/stories/2007/01/01/daily29.html
> 
> > Nokia, the world's biggest wireless-phone maker, will provide
equipment,
> > including handsets and tablet computers, and do co-marketing for
the planned
> > WiMax network.
> >
> > Sprint says it may spend as much as $800 million developing its fourth
> > generation, or 4G wireless network, this year and as much as $2
billion next
> > year.
> >
> > The company (NYSE: S) is developing the high-speed wireless
network using
> > the spectrum frequencies it owns. It says the WiMax network could
cover at
> > least 100 million potential users by the end of 2008.
> >
> Another good article on the Sprint Wimax network from Ars Technica
> http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20070109-8582.html
> 
> And a related article on Nokia's newly updated N93i
> http://www.mobilised.com.au/content/view/737/1/
> 
> Some choice quotes...
> 
> Nokia has done a deal with Vox, the  personal video and photo blogging
> > service from Six Apart <http://www.sixapart.com/>. Depending on your
> > country the phone may come pre-configured to use the service.
> 
> 
> >
> With Vox users can share full size photo and video content with
enforceable
> > privacy controls.
> >
> 
> [...]
> 
> "With devices such as the Nokia N93i, we believe that video can become a
> > similar kind of mass market phenomenon as mobile photography has
become,"
> > said Satu Ehrnrooth, head of Nokia Nseries Cameras Category,
Multimedia,
> > Nokia.
> >
> > "The slim and beautiful Nokia N93i is the ideal device for
user-created
> > video content, as i is a connected digital camcorder that is
always with
> > you. You can even instantly upload video clips in their original size
> > directly from the device to online blogs or video communities.
With the
> > Nokia N93i, sharing your stories is now as easy as recording and
viewing
> > them."
> >
> 
> It may be pretty early but videoblogging and video sharing are
definitely
> going to move beyond the desktop sooner or later... it's starting.
Call it
> the mobile web or whatever you like.  It's coming via wifi, wimax,
and/or
> wirless. One way or the other.
> 
> I'm still waiting for blip to make an mobile compatible service that
> automatically adds on an intro segment of your choice creating
titling from
> your mobile email's subject line, slapping on a nice outro and cross
posting
> it to your blog with the body copy.
> 
> Peace,
> 
> -Mike
> mefeedia.com
> mmeiser.com/blog
> 
> 
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>


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