Subscribe to WiMAX Trends

Sponsors

Archive for the ‘Industry News’ Category

Do you care an Yota about WiMAX devices?

November 18th, 2008 by WiMAX Trends | No Comments | Filed in Industry News

Russian WiMAX operator Scartel may have a diminutively named service in Yota, but you can bet the WiMAX industry gives much more than an iota about the news this week: HTC’s MAX 4G handset is now officially launched as the first WiMAX phone from the iconic handset maker.

Attendees who met with Scartel at WiMAX World in Chicago this fall already have the inside scoop on this device since the operator flashed the device around to a number of insiders at the show. The subsequent buzz around the imminent handset launch has been humming ever since.

The HTC MAX 4G looks to be the first integrated GSM/WiMAX handset, and the gadget blogs are pointing out that the phone cribs a lot of tech from HTC’s Touch HD. Scartel has equipped the phone to run on its WiMAX network Yota as VoIP but also includes an unlocked SIM slot for use on another carrier’s GSM network. The MAX 4G boasts a 3.8-inch WVGA touchscreen, 5-megapixel camera and is powered by Windows Mobile 6.1 Pro with the TouchFLO 3D GUI.

Yota’s services include: on-demand online films, video/TV, online games, maps, messaging and file exchange apps. The TV service included 14 free channels at launch and should include 23 channels by year-end.

More Industry News:

Why AT&T bought Wayport

November 11th, 2008 by WiMAX Trends | No Comments | Filed in Industry News

AT&T recently snapped up WiFi hotspot service provider Wayport Networks for $275 million in cash. The acquisition expands AT&T’s WiFi hotspot footprint to about 20,000 in the U.S. and 80,000 worldwide, including roaming agreements. Some readers may remember that AT&T was instrumental in founding a one-time Wayport rival, Cometa Networks back in 2002 with help from IBM and Intel Capital. Cometa shut down in 2004 just two years. The closure came after Wayport inked a WiFi hotspot deal with McDonald’s that Cometa was the frontrunner for originally. Even now Wayport’s most prominent client is McDonald’s, which boasts more than 10,000 hotspots through the WiFi provider.

AT&T scooped T-Mobile USA for the coveted Starbucks WiFi deal and just now sealed the deal with McDonald’s through its Wayport acquisition. Two of the most ubiquitous eateries in the U.S. have AT&T-powered WiFi. So, why all the recent momentum for AT&T’s WiFi business?

Industry pundit Andy Abramson positions the operator’s latest acquisition as a competitive move against Clearwire’s WiMAX rollout, which launched commercially in late September. “AT&T can now offer WiFi access in more places,” Abramson writes. “XOHM [can't] say that just yet and not for some time… [the acquisition] gives the AT&T Enterprise sales team a huge new offer to make and sell in to their very wide and deep customer base.” Abramson closes by characterizing the buyout as a very “Machiavellian move” by AT&T: “Well done.”

Abramson is certainly right that acquisition is a boon to AT&T’s enterprise offerings–as ABI Research VP Stan Schatt pointed out in a research note:

“Wayport has moved beyond simply providing WiFi service to actively supporting key enterprise applications,” Schatt wrote. “The bottome line is that AT&T Mobility’s growth on the business side will come from being so deeply tied to customers’ business applications that companies won’t easily be able to extract themselves and embrace a competitor such as Verizon. Whether it’s instant check-in at a Wyndham resort of location tracking of expensive equipment at hospitals, applications will place business customers in golden handcuffs that they won’t really want to remove even if a competitor offers a less expensive subscription rate.”

Clearly, the mobile enterprise customers AT&T services will greatly benefit from the acquisition–as well as iPhone and BlackBerry Bold users who can now enjoy free WiFi at all the new WiFi hotspots.

Abramson’s other point, however, that AT&T’s Wayport acquisition was a competitive strike against Clearwire was perhaps a bit too heavy-handed. Sure, Wayport’s footprint puts AT&T’s WiFi coverage map at a saturation level Clearwire’s early adopters can only dream about for now, but there’s more to it.

As Yankee Group Research Fellow Roberta Wiggins writes in an upcoming research note the down economy was a big influence in making the acquisition. Perhaps AT&T stood to lose its key WiFi partner to a competitor if it didn’t act fast:

“By taking over control of Wayport, AT&T avoids losing the company to a competitor,” Wiggins writes. “While Wayport remained independent it was increasingly attractive with the integration of WiMAX, WiFi, and 3G in client devices to competing service providers including WiMAX challenger Clearwire, or cable MSOs like Cablevision or Comcast.”

Other industry news:

Decisions, decisions: VZW-Alltel, white spaces and open access

November 4th, 2008 by WiMAX Trends | No Comments | Filed in Industry News

Anticipation has reached a fever pitch in the wireless industry today as the FCC is in the process of voting on a number of key decisions that will shape the the industry for years to come.

The first major decision is whether or not to greenlight Verizon Wireless’ acquisition of Alltel, which would make the carrier the largest operator in North America–any way you look at it. Analysts say the carrier is looking for a decision ahead of the national election results to ensure the pricetag remains the same–a Democrat in the White House and chairing the FCC could lead to higher regulatory fees associated with the deal, some policy analysts say.

The second major vote will be on Sprint and Clearwire’s WiMAX merger. The $14.5 billion deal sees Sprint pooling all of its 2.5 GHz spectrum and its WiMAX assets into the new Clearwire.

The open access lobbying wars also recently picked up where they left off earlier in the year: Google has been lobbying the FCC to clarify in what ways Verizon Wireless must abide by the open access rules that were part of its winning bid on the upper C Block of spectrum in the 700 MHz auction this time last year. The FCC looks poised to offer a clearer picture of how open Verizon Wireless’ future network must be. Google has worried that Verizon “may exclude its handsets from the open access condition.”

It’s a big day for votes in the U.S. so tune in next week to find out what happens next and gain a deeper insight into the FCC meeting today by reading our weekly columnist, Rethink Research’s Caroline Gabriel’s column below.

In industry news:

Search

Categories

Sponsors