Showing posts with label wireless spectrum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wireless spectrum. Show all posts

Monday, April 28, 2008

The Future of the Wireless Industry

With so many new devices and applications being constantly designed and developed, there is so much potential for future services. Products using wireless service get faster and more efficient every day. Many people rely on wireless services and devices for their everyday needs, such as directions, weather updates, downloading music, and local news, etc. The demand for faster and stronger signals continuously increases. Forecasting new products and services relying wireless technology consists of endless possibilities. Industry experts have proclaimed that the wireless industry will revolutionize our lives, if it hasn’t already done so.

“There's grand talk throughout the tech world about a wave of new networks and wireless innovation that will provide better Internet access, deliver streaming video and foster an array of consumer-friendly features. Although it's too early to be sure which companies or networks will be most successful, the optimists dominate the skeptics…

'As far as identifying what the next wave of applications is going to be, no one really knows,’ said Frank Dickson, chief research officer for MultiMedia Intelligence, a business consulting firm in Scottsdale, Ariz.”

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Friday, February 22, 2008

FCC Wireless Spectrum Auction

According the Friday’s Wall Street Journal, Google broadcasted they will make a bid for a 700 MHz wireless spectrum at a Federal Communications Commission auction. To simplify the wireless spectrum being auctioned, the 700 MHz frequency is what is used to carry signal to those old “rabbit ears” television sets. The auction price is estimated to reach $4.6 billion. Other members participating in this auction are most likely going to be the major wireless carriers, Verizon, AT&T and Vodafone. Winning the bid for a wireless license will provide Google a chance to become the newest member in the market of mobile phones and Internet services.

According to an article released by CNet News, Google wants the FCC to agree to its four "open" platform recommendations, which include: open applications for users; open devices that will work with whichever network provider customers choose; open services that would allow for third-party resellers to acquire wireless services on a wholesale basis; and open networks, which would allow third parties, such as Internet service providers, to interconnect at any feasible point within the 700MHz licensee's wireless network. If Google indeed wins the auction, the purchase of the 700MHz wireless spectrum will provide cell phone users access to an “open” platform. This means that cell phone users would be free to choose their service provider and still have access to the wireless spectrum. With a large player such as Google jumping into the mobile provider industry, they will definitely stir up the competition. Increasing competition and easier access to wireless services could create a major overhaul to how mobile providers price their phone and data plans.

On a side note: Resulting from the sale of the wireless spectrum on February 17, 2009, the FCC has mandated that all television channels must be cleared from the “over-the-air” analog spectrum and switched to a digital signal.