Wireless War: 4G Battle Lines Have Been Drawn 29 comments
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The battle over so-called 4G wireless technology is heating up, with major industry players choosing sides between WiMax and LTE, or Long Term Evolution.
Nortel (NT), the Canadian telecommunications equipment manufacturer, gave LTE a boost Wednesday when the company said it would devote its main research efforts to that standard, and hand over its WiMax development to an Israeli company called Alvarion (ALVR).
"This enables Nortel to achieve faster time to market with WiMAX at a lower cost, while accelerating LTE development to meet a demand that is emerging faster than the industry originally predicted," Nortel said in a statement.
Investors were enthusiastic about Nortel's new strategy, sending the company's shares up over 13 percent in trading Wednesday.
Nortel's decision to fully embrace LTE comes one month after Sprint Nextel (S) and Clearwire (CLWR), the telecom startup founded by cell-phone pioneer Craig McCaw, announced a $12 billion joint venture to build a nationwide WiMax network offering superfast wireless service for cell phones and laptops.
The Sprint-Clearwire WiMax initiative has attracted powerful backers, including Intel (INTC), Google (GOOG), Comcast (CMCSA), and Time Warner Cable (TWC), which are collectively injecting $3.2 billion in financing into the project.
WiMax has been highly touted as the successor to WiFi, and though it is still largely unproven, its backers say that it offers speeds of up to five times faster than existing wireless networks over much greater distances.
LTE, which has garnered increasing buzz lately, has attracted formidable backers of its own, including AT&T (T) and Verizon Wireless (VZ).
With the battle lines over fourth-generation being drawn, the playing field is set for a showdown over what could be the next great technology format war.
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This article has 29 comments:
From where I stand, the big mobile carriers (Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile, et al.) increasingly look like the AOLs and CompuServes of the 90's. Like their dot.com-era counterparts, the mobile carriers will die a painful death as soon as their customers get a whiff of what they really want -- open internet access. Ringtone downloads, SMS messages, My-5's and all the other "value-added" bullshits will lose all their appeal as soon as smartphones and netbooks become network peers on the open internet.
Disclosure: I own a little Alvarion and will own a little more once my tax rebate check comes in.
Gunark-ALL 4G is required to be open access so your comment bashing the other carriers is unfounded
Mike Cooper-of course you'll comment positively, being a stock holder
Fred C-WiMax does work...but is still unproven in the sense that it has yet to be used to cover entire cities or markets.
So, why say that Nortel is backing something that "will actually work" when LTE is as "unproven" as WiMax? What is your title at AT&T or Verizon? "Official Blogger II"? Your bias is very transparent.
WiMax is going to beat LTE to the market by at least 2 years, and it has a good backing. If Clearwire plays it right, it can be a huge success. But, that's a big "if".
And, there you go again making unfounded claims of network quality and build plan. How do you know? Show us some facts. Sprint's network is completely up to par with AT&T and Verizon's. Clearwire stated the number of subscribers it hopes to have in the next few years, so how can they not have a build plan? I do agree with you in reference to capital, as neither Sprint nor Clearwire have a lot of free cash flow at the moment.
The reality is that WiMax is in use around various parts of the world, so it's not unproven. Time to market is an advantage, as well as the various backers. It seems that WiMax is gaining momentum, and, for some reason, that's scaring you, Geddy?
Humps-look at the sheer unprecedented number of defections by
Sprint customers....enough said. Take a look at stupid head's post stating the same thing about Sprint's network; I'm not alone.
stupid head-not sure which analyst you've seen that said WiMax is not a gamble so please forward any links you have to the contrary. I would love to go back to Nextel as a customer but their roaming was also an issue...& the fact that I hear the network has also gone to pot.
Enough said...
Why are you so hyped on LTE, something that is years away from materializing?
Sprint might have faltered under Forsee, but calling it a failure is a bit much. You are so against Sprint / Clearwire / WiMax, but I have yet to read a lucid statement supporting your opinions.