Kodak Wi-Fi Picture Frame

January 10th, 2007

The “picture frames” can show JPEGs and a several movie formats. The frames will ship in March for $280 and $220, respectively. An 8-inch version with USB and a card reader but no Wi-Fi is $180, and a 7-inch unconnected version $130. Several frame plates are available for variety’s sake, including a wipe-off whiteboard version.

Original source here

Apple Announces 802.11n Products, iPhone, Apple TV

January 9th, 2007

The former-computer company—renamed from Apple Computer to just Apple today—has gone Draft N happy. Their version will have no new, special name, and support both 2.4 GHz (802.11b/g/n) and 5 GHz (802.11a/n). Computers shipped to date with Intel Core 2 Duo chips (with the exception of a single iM
ac model) can be upgraded to add Draft N capability through a firmware
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Vonage to Resell EarthLink Service

January 8th, 2007

Interesting synergy, because it’s a wholesaler-retailer relationship, not exactly a strategic partnership, because EarthLink is generally constrained to offer non-disriminatory wholesale access to all its metro-scale networks by contract with the cities it is working with. While EarthLink has its own VoIP service it’s been selling, and is looking to expand, Vonage is a great reseller of this kind of service, as they will be able to leverage
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Wi-Fi Protected Setup Details Announced

January 8th, 2007

The Wi-Fi Alliance has rolled out its long-expected and openly discussed WPS system for its members to choose to implement and have certified as a component of their Wi-Fi devices. With WPS, a router can provide strong WPA/WPA2 encryption keys to client devices with the push of a button or the entry of a 4- or 8-digit personal identification number (PIN). The PIN can be generated by software or preprogrammed into a client device and printed on an
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Details on San Francisco/EarthLink Deal

January 6th, 2007

Most surprising to me—perhaps I’ve been missing this detail—is EarthLink’s agreement to pay a five-percent franchise fee to the city for access to rights of way (ROW). These fees have rarely appeared in other agreements, in which yearly pole fees or other arrangements have provided a different method of taxation. EarthLink will pay $600,000 in advance against ROW fees.

Google is not mentioned by name in this agreement. They
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Solid Coverage in Time of Muni Wi-Fi

January 5th, 2007

An impressive effort in a mainstream publication to explain why cities have rushed in to build or find partners for city-wide Wi-Fi. The writer did an admirable job in providing opinions across a gamut without including, frankly, stupid or uninformed ideas. If you read my site, you already know everything that’s in this article.

Time addresses an increasing point of contention that was first raised in 2004, but mostly papered over since:
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NextWave Buys Go Networks

January 4th, 2007

Go’s equipment uses MIMO to fill more space at lower cost, the company has said. NextWave, a successor firm to the 1990s cell operator and Supreme Court case victor over spectrum auctions, has a portfolio of WiMax hardware and a set of licenses they purchased in the recent advanced wireless services auction. NextWave also acquired some German WiMax licenses last month.

NextWave is obviously assembling a set of technologies that they can roll
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Surf, Sand, and Wi-Fi

January 4th, 2007

Florida’s Haulover Beach is perhaps the only clothing-optional beach that features Internet access. Sans clothes, sans wires: It’s a theme.

Original source here

2007 Promises Busy Year for Mobile VoIP

December 29th, 2006

December 28, 2006

Thanks to the seemingly ubiquitous nature of wireless connectivity, many of the promises of new options for consumers and business made in 2006 will be realized in 2007, according to experts surveyed by internetnews.com.

Companies that made headlines in 2006 will again hold the spotlight, including AT&T, Sprint Nextel and Vonage . And cellular carriers will embrace past competitors as old technology is upgraded.

With nearly
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FCC’s McDowell Stands By Recusal on Merger Vote

December 29th, 2006

December 19, 2006UPDATED: Federal Communications Commission (FCC) member Robert McDowell is standing by his recusal from the agency’s AT&T-BellSouth merger vote, declining an invitation to break the 2-2 deadlock over the $80 billion deal hung up on network neutrality conditions. McDowell, nominated to the FCC by President Bush on Feb. 6, is the former lobbyist for a trade group of AT&T and BellSouth competitors opposing the merger. Since taking his
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