Archive for December, 2007

Top Ten Stories of 2007

Monday, December 31st, 2007

It’s December 31st — time to round up the big stories of 2007. First, let’s review the top 2007 stories from other sites:

  • Unstrung’s 2007 Top Ten Wireless Stories
    10. Cisco goes WiMax
    9. Rural takeover
    8. Emerging markets
    7. Carriers start to pick 4G technology
    6. Muni dreams fade
    5. Sprint’s WiMax tribulations
    4. Verizon’s ‘Open Access’ plans
    3. 700 MHz wireless broadband auctions
    2. Google’s Android
    1. The iPhone
  • Muni Wireless’ Most important Muni Wireless Stories of 2007;
    (1) Launch of the iPhone
    (2) Business models
    (3) Waiting, waiting for WiMAX
    (4) EarthLink implodes
    (5) Minneapolis is going ahead with the network
  • RCR News Top 10 stories of 2007;
    1. iCANDY
    2. Score two for MediaFLO
    3. Skype pushes for wireless net neutrality
    4. Google spectrum plans rattle wireless cage
    5. UNITED WIMAX
    6. MVNO HEALTH CHECK
    7. 700 MHz auction rules set
    8. Consumer protection bill on deck
    9. TECHNOLOGY TRIALS
    10. OPENING UP
  • IDG’s Top 10 tech stories of 2007;
    1. Software consolidation: The big fish get bigger
    2. Dell reinvents itself
    3. The iPhone: Apple redefines a market, again
    4. The Rise of the botnets: Software as a service … for criminals
    5. OLPC and the era of cheap laptops
    6. Google’s “Gphone” morphs into Android
    7. Viacom vs. YouTube: User-generated content hits speed bump
    8. Facebook controversy: Social networking hits prime time
    9. Barcelona: AMD’s Waterloo?
    10. Vista hoopla fizzles: Death of the big-bang upgrade?

  • Network World’s Top 10 stories of 2007:
    10. Behind the scenes of MIT’s network
    9. 50 greatest networking arguments of all time
    8. Networkiest TV characters
    7. Ig Nobel: Honoring weird science at Harvard
    6. The 10 networkiest movies of all time
    5. 20 great Firefox extensions
    4. Top USB geek gadgets
    3. 12 IT skills that employers can’t say no to
    2. Microsoft pulls plug on potty-mouth Santa
    1. Top 25 ‘iPhonies’
  • PC World’s Biggest Tech Disappointments of 2007;
    10. Wireless Carriers
    9. Sorry, We Already Gave: Office 2007
    8. Needs To Change Its Spots: Apple “Leopard” OS 10.5
    7. Cannot be Completed as Dialed: Voice Over IP
    6. Un-Neutral: The Broadband Industry
    5. The Great, The Bad, The Ugly: Apple iPhone
    4. In a Sorry State: Yahoo
    3. The Anti-Social Network: Facebook Beacon
    2. What Is It Good For: The High-Def Format War
    1. No Wow, No How: Windows Vista
  • 10 Weirdest Tech Devices of 2007;
    10. ErgoPod 500
    9. QuikPod
    8. LaCie Artistic Hub
    7. Enlighted Designs Silicone Nerve Bra
    6. OSIM iGoGo
    5. HTL Wireless CPC Strap
    4. USB Pole Dancer
    3. Vibrating Soap
    2. George Foreman iGrill
    1. USB Humping Dogs
  • Our own top picks for 2007, which is just as arbitrary, includes:

    10. Chinese Destroy Satellite - Create Space Debris Field
    9. Big Brother Intrusion
    8. WiMAX ITU Standard
    7. Radio and TV Satellite Mergers
    6. Google’s Open Platform
    5. iPhone a Hit
    4. OLPC Ships
    3. 700 MHz auction
    2. Death to WiMAX?
    1. Muniwireless Pullback

Coupons to Help Buy Digital ConvertersOrangeburg Times Democrat, SC - 8 minutes agoSince then, the broadcast industry has announced a voluntary public education campaign. The FCC is circulating a plan among commissioners that would make

Monday, December 31st, 2007
Rapid City Journal, SD -Since then, the broadcast industry has announced a voluntary public education campaign. The FCC is circulating a plan among commissioners that would make ...

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Coupons to Help Buy Digital ConvertersWaterloo Cedar Falls Courier, IA - 14 minutes agoThe rest of the coupons, however, are meant only for those who do not subscribe to a pay-television service. The Nielsen Co. estimates that 14.3 milli

Monday, December 31st, 2007
Press of Atlantic City, NJ -The rest of the coupons, however, are meant only for those who do not subscribe to a pay-television service. The Nielsen Co. estimates that 14.3 million ...

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Coupons to Help Buy Digital ConvertersNewsMax.com, FL - 8 minutes agoThe rest of the coupons, however, are meant only for those who do not subscribe to a pay-television service. The Nielsen Co. estimates that 14.3 million …Coupons to H

Monday, December 31st, 2007
Chippewa Herald, WI -The rest of the coupons, however, are meant only for those who do not subscribe to a pay-television service. The Nielsen Co. estimates that 14.3 million ...

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Teen Claims Shock At McDonald’s BirthINDYchannel.com, IN - 34 minutes ago… new baby boy Austin to a nearby hospital. Distributed by Internet Broadcasting. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Teen

Monday, December 31st, 2007
KTVU.com, CA -... new baby boy Austin to a nearby hospital. Distributed by Internet Broadcasting. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Teen Claims Shock At McDonald’s BirthWJACtv.com, PA - 30 minutes ago… new baby boy Austin to a nearby hospital. Distributed by Internet Broadcasting. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Teen Claim

Monday, December 31st, 2007
WISC, WI -... new baby boy Austin to a nearby hospital. Distributed by Internet Broadcasting. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Teen Claims Shock At McDonald’s BirthNewsNet5.com, OH - 9 minutes ago… new baby boy Austin to a nearby hospital. Distributed by Internet Broadcasting. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Teen Clai

Monday, December 31st, 2007
WHIOtv.com, OH -... new baby boy Austin to a nearby hospital. Distributed by Internet Broadcasting. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Adoption doesn’t mandate its useWirelessEstimator.com (press release), FL - 12 minutes agoClass II is the default classification that includes cellular and PCS communications, as well as television and radio broadcasting. …Kevin Greeni

Monday, December 31st, 2007
This is London, UK -John Myers, chief executive of the station's parent company GMG Radio, described his death as a 'terrible loss to broadcasting'. He said: "We are extremely ...

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Coupons to Help Buy Digital ConvertersOrangeburg Times Democrat, SC - 7 minutes agoThat’s the day the television industry completes its transition from old-style analog broadcasting to digital. The converter boxes are expected to cost ..

Monday, December 31st, 2007
Rapid City Journal, SD -That's the day the television industry completes its transition from old-style analog broadcasting to digital. The converter boxes are expected to cost ...

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Battle Over 2 Dot 3

Monday, December 31st, 2007

According to RCR News, the FCC recently decided to better ascertain how competing 2.3 GHz band wireless services in the United States can operate without disrupting each other. Terrestrial satellite radio repeaters (DARS) and spectrum for 2.3 GHz Mobile WiMAX threaten to become another Nextel debacle, creating interference and disruption from battling services on neighboring bands.

Andrew Kreig, president of the Wireless Communications Association trade group, said, “As the founder of the WCS Coalition, WCA has long recognized the importance that the 2.3 GHz band plays globally, and can play in the U.S., in the delivery of wireless broadband services to consumers. Thus, WCA is pleased that the [FCC rulemaking] seeks public comment on the WCS Coalition’s proposed solutions to the two regulatory threats to the use of the 2.3 GHz band in America — interference from DARS terrestrial repeaters and an oppressive out-of-band emissions limit.”

The Wireless Communications Services (WCS) licenses cover two 15 Mhz wide bands — one from 2305 Megahertz to 2320 MHz and the other from 2345 MHz to 2360 MHz. The WCS spectrum (pdf) is separated into paired blocks (blocks A and B) that have been allocated on a regional basis and unpaired blocks (C and D) that have been allocated over very wide service areas.

Horizon Wi-Com, for example, owns 10 MHz of A Block WCS spectrum in Boston, New York, Buffalo, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Baltimore, Washington DC, Richmond, and Cincinnati. They plan to utilize Navini’s Smart WiMAX on 2.3 GHz, using a combination of Smart Beamforming & MIMO for mobile WiMAX service.

But satellite radio repeaters of XM and Sirius have been allowed to blast out thousands of watts right in the middle of the band (see WCA’s complaint to the FCC). It should come as no surprise to anyone that [illegal] power levels exceeding thousands of watts from DARS service would make 100 mW mobile WiMAX problematic. But it appears the revolving door at the FCC saw no problem. Until now.

AT&T, Comcast, NextWave Broadband, NTELOS, Sprint Nextel, Horizon Wi-Com and WaveTel, members of the WCS Coalition, have voiced concern about the uncertainty of technical rules governing both services.

The companies have taken the FCC to task with requests by XM Radio and Sirius Satellite Radio for special temporary authorizations that indicate higher-than-allowed power limits on terrestrial repeaters.

“The WCS Coalition’s testing has demonstrated beyond question that adoption of the proposed rule revisions will permit WCS to provide mobile WiMAX services without jeopardizing service to DARS subscribers”, says Kreig. “The [FCC rulemaking] sets the stage for the commission to adopt a more reasonable spectral mask rule, one that allows the 2.3 GHz band to flourish in the U.S. as a home to mobile WiMAX services.”

The FCC, responding to wireless broadband industry complaints, last year extended network build out deadline for 2.3 GHz facilities from 2007 to July 2010.

Related DailyWireless articles include; 2 Dot 3 Comes to Town, Navini Beamforms Voice, Sirius & XM to Merge?, Satellite Radio Growing in US, BellSouth Pushing 2.3 GHz, and Navini Mobilizes at 2 Dot 3.


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