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Kepler L

BBC NEWS | Technology | Intel seeks wireless unification - 0 views

  • Intel seeks wireless unification
  • The two competing 4G wireless systems, Wimax and Long Term Evolution (LTE), should be united, according to Intel.
  • Vodafone chief executive Arun Sarin said he believed the two standards could be brought together.
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  • Motorola has already said that 85% of the work and technology for Wimax equipment will be re-used in its designs for LTE equipment.
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    Now guys really start doing this. And war is over.
Kepler L

Technology Review: Archiving E-mail Effectively - 0 views

  • global single instancing
    • Kepler L
       
      I believe Google doesn't make a copy for each file. Since many user/mails are with same content, only a single instance is needed. That is why Google can promising a gmail space of more than 6 GB. In fact, the actual dedicated space for each person maybe less than 1G
  • Whitehouse Lost Email Issue had nothing to do with Technology and EVERYTHING to do with deniability.
Kepler L

Google feeling lucky in D.C. - Los Angeles Times - 0 views

  • network neutrality issue
  • It's all part of Google's attempt to feel at home in the nation's capital.
Kepler L

IEEE 802.16 Task Group m (TGm) - 0 views

shared by Kepler L on 18 Dec 07 - Cached
  • IEEE 802.16 Task Group m (TGm)
  • IEEE C802.16m-08/24216jm Ad Hoc Group Report (Rakesh Taori and Peiying Zhu; 2008-03-16)
  • IEEE C802.16m-08/257r1Further comparison of pilot patterns (Yuval Lomnitz, Huaning Niu, Jong-Kae (JK) Fwu, Sassan Ahmadi, Hujun Yin; 2008-03-21) IEEE C802.16m-08/257Further comparison of pilot patterns (Yuval Lomnitz, Huaning Niu, Jong-Kae (JK) Fwu, Sassan Ahmadi, Hujun Yin; 2008-03-20)
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  • IEEE C802.16m-08/253r1Simulation Results for Several of the Proposed Pilot Format Designs in IEEE 802.16m (Fred Vook, Tim Thomas, Mark Cudak; 2008-03-20) IEEE C802.16m-08/253Simulation Results for Several of the Proposed Pilot Format Designs in IEEE 802.16m (Fred Vook, Tim Thomas, Mark Cudak; 2008-03-19)
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    Future of wireless. The next cellular technology. However no big progress currently.
Kepler L

Technology Review: Mobile Carriers See Gold in Femtocells - 0 views

  • Mobile Carriers See Gold in Femtocells If consumers buy in to private wireless phone networks, the industry could save money.
  • Strong cell signals at home are certainly a plus, but it's not clear how much consumers will pay for this, analysts say.
    • Kepler L
       
      If I brought AP, why should I pay for the Wireless Access Provider? If I have paid for the access, why should I investigate on infrastracture myself, but not by wireless operator? I won't buy femtocell unless operator pay me!!!
  • Sprint, one of the first companies to start commercial trials of the products, is offering them to consumers in Denver and Indianapolis for $50 apiece, along with an offer of lower-priced calling plans--altogether a substantial subsidy.
    • Kepler L
       
      That is a fair play.
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  • an acceptable price range for consumers used to buying products such as Wi-Fi modems
    • Kepler L
       
      It is not true! Since WiFi is much faster than 3GPP, 3GPP AP should be cheaper...
  • may be built into other devices, such as Internet routers for consumers.
    • Kepler L
       
      And customer should be benefit from subsidy by operator.
Kepler L

Secrets of 700-MHz Spectrum Auction - Bob Cringely - Google - FCC - Sprint - WiMAX - Po... - 0 views

  • Everything You Always Wanted to Know About the 700-MHz Auction but Were Afraid to Ask: Expert Op-Ed
  • America’s mobile phone oligopoly
  • 700-MHz signals propagate better, spreading farther and penetrating buildings more easily than higher frequencies
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  • having lower so-called spectral efficiency
  • require smaller cells and lower power to reduce interference and increase the total data throughput not per cell but per square mile
  • Which makes one wonder: Why is a data-centric company like Google even interested?
  • simply bidding to make sure some of its open access requirements are imposed on an eventual winner, which will only happen under FCC rules if the bidding for that C Block goes to at least $4.6 billion
  • trade that block to Sprint/Nextel for some of that company’s 2.5-GHz WiMAX licenses
  • The thought of unused or underused spectrum got the juices flowing at companies including Intel, Microsoft and Philips, who banded together to propose that they be allowed to offer unlicensed data service in so-called “white space” within and between existing broadcast frequencies—piggybacking, as it were, on the bandwidth allocated to TV broadcasters and wireless providers.
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