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United Nations agency gives boost to WiMax

Amin N.Karimi   on 22 October 2007 - 16:28 · 3 comments & 3143 views

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The United Nations telecommunications agency in Geneva gave the upstart technology called WiMax a vote of approval, providing a sizable victory for Intel and something of a defeat for competing technologies from Qualcomm and Ericsson. The International Telecommunication Union's radio assembly agreed late Thursday to include WiMax, a wireless technology that allows Internet and other data connections across much broader areas than Wi-Fi, as part of what is called the third-generation family of mobile standards.

That endorsement opens the way for many of the union's member countries to devote a part of the public radio spectrum to WiMax, and receivers for it could be built into laptop computers, phones, music players and other portable devices. Unlike Wi-Fi, this mobile Internet technology can hand off a signal from antenna to antenna, thus allowing a device to hold a connection while in motion. WiMax potentially can move data at 70 megabits a second across 65 kilometers, or 40 miles. Current fixed-line broadband connections have speeds of about 2 megabits a second.

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News source: News.com

Post a comment · Send to friend Comments · There are 3 additional comments
#1 bucko on 22 Oct 2007 - 18:31
Nice
(1 reply) #2 HeadHunter 5 on 23 Oct 2007 - 01:52
How is this an upstart? It's been in development since 1996.
#2.1 +Octol on 23 Oct 2007 - 06:00
Anything is an "upstart" to someone who doesn't like it or want it!

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