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a333
A hot cup of integrals please

join:2007-06-12
Rego Park, NY
Reviews:
·Cingular Wireless

reply to n2jtx

Re: So Says...

How many LTE deployments have their been around the world so far? Zilch, nada. WiMax? It's already available in parts of the US, and many countries abroad. LTE is and will continue to lag behind WiMax in terms of deployment and subscriber figures. Also, WiMax aims at an entirely different goal than LTE. LTE wants customer control (the old game of locked in handsets, different frequencies, etc.), while WiMax will be more like WiFi, (if Intel succeeds in its plan; heck, Centrino laptops might come built in with WiMax chipsets, just like they come with WiFi today.) Bottom line, WiMax is an IEEE standard, not a proprietary licensed technology, so it has a much greater chance of proliferating faster.


en102
Canadian, eh?

join:2001-01-26
Valencia, CA

There's more to it than that.
Sure, WiMAX has many countries deployed, but how big of a footprint are those WiMAX deployments ? Until WiMAX has a footprint that covers that of cellular (even the prepaid MetroPCS), it will be more of a niche, or used in other devices (more likely). I don't disagree on the locked handset piece, however, handset locking is more of a North America item.
I can purchase unlocked directly from the manufacturers, and even carrier locked from the manufacturers at a better rate than carriers 'list' them for (eg. AT&T V3xx 'lists' as $349, and becomes discounted with service, Motorola 'lists' is at $229 w/o service, and $50 with).
--
Canada = Hollywood North



comcast_customer

@accelnet.net

reply to a333
Verizon Wireless declared their intention of providing an 'any apps/any device' network last October. They do intend on continuing with the 'walled garden' model (e.g. lock-in, as you suggested) for customers who could care less about having the ultimate choice in what rests on their device, but you will also be able to buy devices that work on CDMA2000 EVDO as well as LTE in the future, that aren't sold (or supported) by Verizon Wireless.

Now, if you have a problem trusting Verizon Wireless' word - that's something you have to resolve for yourself and get to the root of where that "healthy" skepticism is emanating from (e.g. most likely, your past experiences).


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