Equipment suppliers seek to spur the sluggish WiMAX market by tying its fortunes to GSM/EDGE the world's most popular mobile technology.
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DirecTV on Wednesday gives the broadband-over-powerline (BPL) market a jolt by striking wholesale distribution deal with Current Group. Is Google behind the deal?
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Number of broadband users in China expected to exceed those in the U.S. in less than a year.
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Phone company removes extra surcharge under pressure from FCC and consumers.
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Italy-based company hooks up with U.K. digital TV service provider.
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Mobile music plays on; broadband booms; mobile adults like family plans.
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Americans are sold on the Internet, but they are still determined to shop around for the right price for broadband.
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Many American Internet surfers still sticking with dialup; video game industry to double by 2011; IPTV as next-gen television.
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The carrier offers a promotional price of $12.99, forcing the hand of its DSL and cable rivals.
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The former dial-up darling plans to announce a bundled voice and DSL service next week as part of its makeover.
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The carrier takes on Cablevision on a neighborhood level in a war that Northeast subscribers will love.
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Portal sheds jobs; two iPods and coffee to go; broadband takes off.
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The telecom company’s earnings rose 25 percent, beating analysts’ expectations and lifting its stock.
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Three in 10 young adults in the U.S. rely solely on cell phones.
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The market for high speed service is expected to grow to 440 million by 2010, mostly through DSL cable.
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The U.S. Federal Communications Commission’s plan to deregulate DSL is expected to hasten wireless broadband adoption.
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In the U.S., broadband will be in 62 percent of households by 2010—impressive or underwhelming? In South Korea, 75 percent of households already have high-speed access.
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FCC could order ISPs kicked off DSL lines as early as Thursday.
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Agency looks for ways to level Internet-sharing playing field following Supreme Court decision.
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After years of regulatory and financial hurdles, U.S. phone companies finally start to make progress in fiber-to-the-home services. Now they’re battling local fiber initiatives in cities that got tired of waiting.
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