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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Developer of mobile chipsets introduces one that supports technologies used by the main cellular data networks, but it's not including WiMAX.
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The apparent collapse of municipally-supported plans to build WiFi networks in several U.S. cities has backers of rival technologies breathing sighs of relief.
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Apple’s phone breaks new ground for its cool features, but as a network device it falls short.
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Wireless chip developer says phone maker uses two patents without paying a dime.
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The telecommunications supplier says the electronics giant violated patents after a license for the mobile technologies expired.
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Sprint Nextel and Verizon gear up for wireless price war, but where is Cingular?
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Melodeo is introducing software that will download podcasts to cell phones.
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iSuppli says multimode cell phones could narrow margins because they are so complex.
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Economy batters European tech; Online pharmacy customers go out on a limb; Will 3G finally take hold?
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Motorola and Samsung unveil new camera phones with high resolution, photo albums, video capture, and easier sharing.
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High-tech gadgets bring new opportunities for injury . . . and embarrassment.
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War and the Technological Edge.
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It could take a giant like Microsoft to goose reluctant VCs into funding the most daring software startups.
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Rumor had it the online stock-tip outfit was dead -- that is, until a hedge fund operator took a fancy to its most prominent asset: a streaming-video service. Now the company is resurrected, but at what cost to shareholders?
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The Internet hasn't abolished distance. Even between machines, proximity matters -- hence the existence of Akamai, and every company that's tried to improve performance by putting content on the edge of the Net....
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In its war with Cisco for dominance in the router market, the secret of success for Juniper Networks is focus.
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PMC-Sierra: Eyes on the Network Edge
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Microsoft's Craig Mundie says the Internet has seen its last killer app. Now, he's looking at the networks' fringes.
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