Archive for the 'Wireless' Category

Gogo In-flight Wi-Fi service

Thursday, August 21st, 2008

Aircell announced that their fleet of Boeing 767-200s will have the Gogo In-flight Wi-Fi service enabled on flights originating from NYC’s JFK to LA, San Francisco and Miami. To get this service the pricing will be $12.95 for flights with a duration of over three hours. CrunchGear’s Got a Seat, Check back at noon [...]

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Southwest Will Bring Wi-Fi to Sky

Thursday, January 24th, 2008

Southwest is looking the ways to provide the best solution for their Customers e-mail access through satellite-delivered broadband and a wi-fi enabled device that will have full access to the Internet including e-mail, music, shopping, and virtual private networks (VPN) via a high-speed connection for flight entertainment. “Southwest Airlines is partnering with Southern California-based Row [...]

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BT- Broadband Internet

Sunday, December 9th, 2007

Those struggling with a dial-up modem for using internet can find broadband connection with greater advantage in terms of connection speed that come to an average between 128 kilobits per second all the way up to 1.54 megabits per second. Dial up modems can’t come close to that level. For accessing long database site [...]

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Protecting Mobile Wireless Users

Wednesday, August 22nd, 2007

A global third-party study commissioned by Cisco® and the National Cyber Security Alliance reveals behavioral findings among mobile wireless workers that spotlight the human side of security as businesses and IT organizations empower more and more employees to remain connected outside of their offices.

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Sprint Nextel Bets $5 Billion on WiMax

Monday, August 20th, 2007

Under its new WiMax agreement with Clearwire, Sprint Nextel expects the two partners’ WiMax build-outs will be reaching as many as 100 million potential customers by year-end 2008, with Sprint providing WiMax coverage to 70 million people and Clearwire to 30 million. Sprint Nextel’s WiMax service will be marketed under the brand name Xohm.
Sprint [...]

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Microsoft presses FCC on vacant TV airwaves

Saturday, August 18th, 2007

Microsoft Corp. Monday will try to convince U.S. regulators that vacant television airwaves can be used for wireless services without interfering with broadcast signals, The Washington Post reported.The unused TV airwaves would be available for other services by early 2009, when broadcasters are due to switch from analog to digital signals.

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