I was back at Gillette Stadium in Foxboro, MA, for a press event last night, and some lively discussion of New England sports, large-scale wireless LANs, and new opportunities for enterprise networks.
My last column on Apple’s current troubles generated a good deal of harsh feedback – and that’s OK. But the evidence for troubles in Appleland is building.
BYOD emerged in 2012 and immediately defined one of the key strategies for mobility going forward. A new Webinar next week will look at both current alternatives and a few exciting possibilities for the future.
802.11ac is really going to pick up steam in 2013, but I’m not recommending you run out and buy it just yet. There’s a good deal of advance work to do, the subject of a new Farpoint Group Technical Note.
I should have posted this earlier, but if you're in the Boston area tonight, please join us for an evening of BYOD and MDM - and more.
While there’s no need to close the patent office, innovation in wireless and mobile is rapidly shifting up the protocol stack and defining the key trend for mobility in 2013.
The lowly antenna – perhaps the most important but also most ignored part of the radio value chain – is benefitting from a huge amount of innovation in this space, and those benefits will accrue ultimately to us users. Here are two exampl
A proposal to the FCC from a satellite communications carrier could breathe new life into the 2.4 GHz. band – but will it?
Reports that the upcoming BlackBerry 10 OS might very well reverse RIM's flagging fortunes make no sense to me. Here's why.
Lots of great gifts this year – whether you’re comatose on Thanksgiving evening or not.