Monthly Archives: November 2005

WiMax To Grow, 3G To Dominate, Says Study

The coming year will be pivotal in terms of deployment of new and improved wireless broadband technologies but 3G cellular data service will dominate over the next few years, according to a market study by Northern Sky Research. Via [eetimes.com]Continue Reading

Wireless Network Market To Hit $5 Billion In 2006

The wireless LAN (WLAN) market will grow at an annual rate of 30 percent per year, and will hit $5 billion next year, according to a new report by Research and Markets. The report also found that WLAN sales have increased 60 percent compared to last year. Via [commsdesign.com]Continue Reading

Europe Leads On HotSpot Access

Europe has become the world leader in the public availability of wireless internet access points, or hotspots, according to figures published last week. Via [vnunet.com]Continue Reading

Wi-Fi Is Not ‘Enterprise-secure’, Says AT&T

Wi-Fi networks are not secure enough for enterprises to run their businesses, according to a senior AT&T executive. Via [zdnetasia.com]Continue Reading

Startup Offering Light-Powered Sensor For Wireless Security

The amount of light typically available in homes or offices can both operate the RF sensor continuously and store energy for up to six days use in total darkness, according to the company. Via [informationweek.com]Continue Reading

Hospital Goes Wireless To Track Patients

Birmingham’s Heartlands hospital is using wireless networking in its ear, nose and throat department to improve efficiency and patient care. Via [vnunet.com]Continue Reading

Startups’ Mini-PCI Card Kit, Chip Set Fuel WiMax Race

As two startups fighting to be heard above the big WiMax guns of Intel and Fujitsu, Sequans Communications and Wavesat Inc. this week will separately announce a chip set and a mini-PCI card reference kit designed to accelerate WiMax development and deployment. The announcements come a week after the two vendors commenced WiMax certification testing.Continue Reading

Cisco To Bring Wireless Mesh To Gulf Coast Schools

With its announcement of a $40 million initiative to rebuild schools along the storm-ravaged Gulf Coast, Cisco Systems Inc. tipped its hand on mesh networking plans. Via [eweek.com]Continue Reading

US Equipment Makers Turn To WiMAX

WiMAX is being seen in the US as both a potential 3G-killer and as a competitor to DSL. Via [electronicsweekly.com]Continue Reading

Industry Wireless Squabble Gives Newcomers Edge

While so-called “industry leaders” quibble over what will be the one true standard for 802.11n and UWB implementations, there are four different companies pushing the edge in new ways to implement wireless. Three of the four aren’t really mainstream, but all of them hold their own seeds to blow beyond the de facto 802.11g/Bluetooth/WiMax ploddingContinue Reading

Proposed Standard Eases WLAN Management

In enterprise-class 802.11 deployments, network control is limited to the infrastructure, such as wireless switches and access points. Network administrators have little control over wireless client devices such as laptops, PDAs and voice over wireless phones. Uneven distribution of wireless clients on access points typically results in heavily unbalanced networks that suffer bandwidth and accessContinue Reading

WiMax Fever Intensifies

WiMax is one of the fastest growing emerging sectors within the world’s telecoms industry, with the global market potential estimated to be worth up to $1bn in 2007 and $4bn by 2010, according to recent research from analyst firm Maravedis. Via [vnunet.com]Continue Reading

Snowboarders Stay Connected With Wireless Winter Wear

Embarking on a long term wireless integration collaboration, Burton Snowboards and Motorola Inc. recently revealed plans to launch a collection of Bluetooth-enabled winter gear for snowboarding tech types that want to stay connected. Via [pcmag.com]Continue Reading

Qualcomm Co-Founder Skeptical Of Broadband Wireless Potential

The technology is likely to be too expensive to become as popular as existing mobile phones, said Qualcomm’s Andrew Viterbi. Via [informationweek.com]Continue Reading

WiMax Not Cheap Or Easy, Carriers Say

The costs of implementing the new wireless technology are still too steep for widespread deployment, say carriers who have WiMax trials underway–which could mean it will be a while before it’s a viable option for most enterprises. Via [informationweek.com]Continue Reading