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What types of vendors are involved?
What are some of the other drawbacks?
What other options exist for high-speed mobile wireless?
It is the IEEE's 802.16e standard, approved in late 2005. Extending the 802.16d fixed WiMAX standard, 16e adds features to support wireless connectivity with moving clients. Laptops, tablets and PDAs fitted with mobile WiMAX cards and chipsets will be able to create and keep a multimegabit link to a 16e base station while in motion - on board a train or in a car, for example. Bidirectional speeds are expected to be in 2M to -4Mbps, over a range of 3 to 4 miles. That compares with 10 to 15 miles and somewhat higher throughput for fixed WiMAX with a good line of site to the base station. Mobile WiMAX has the bandwidth to deliver video services, as well as data and voice.
Vendors include baseband silicon makers, chipset vendors, component manufacturers, along with base station and customer premises equipment makers, and carriers. Intel, for example, plans to incorporate a mobile WiMAX chipset into its Centrino wireless package, which today supports only Wi-Fi connections. The WiMAX addition is expected in 2007. Intel also pitched in $600 million this summer to fund WiMAX start-up Clearwire, which raised an additional $300 million from other sources, mainly Motorola, which has its own line of customer premises equipment and base station products. Clearwire, founded by Craig McCaw of McCaw Cellular, is upgrading its expanding U.S. network to support mobile WiMAX. Sprint Nextel in August became the first U.S. cellular provider to announce plans to deploy a nationwide mobile WiMAX net in the licensed 2.5GHz frequency band. The carrier says it will begin offering mobile WiMAX services next year.