I've developed a short video on one of the most important opportunities in wireless today - 60 GHz.
I wouldn't bet on it - but the rolling heads continue
The WLAN leader (and, um, more) is thinking about what's next. The debate continues, but I think it's all about the apps and the ability to sell whatever solutions the customer wants.
Quality problems remain way too common in high-tech products - and even the mighty Apple can't solve these in many cases. "Microsoft Disease" - putting profits over quality - is running rampant. Whatever happened to caring about the cu
A multi-billion-dollar industry is driving important innovations in wireless
We should have more spectrum available soon - unless $600 is worth more than billions (and it may be)
Sure, we can blame this one on the Demo Gods, but real solutions are also available...
AT&T leads the way to a future that won't be half of what it could be - we all know the carriers are having a hard time provisioning enough data capacity to meet the demand, but more scarcity isn't the answer. Priority-based pricing, th
Two (but why stop there?) recent developments further indicate that Microsoft is in big trouble. Can they dig their way out? Not likely.
Well, he's at least half right - wireless and mobile are in fact being used to waste an astonishing amount of time.