Categories » ‘Mobile Broadband’
OLYMPUS Zuiko Digital 17mm f/2.8 Wide-Angle Pancake Lens – silver For E-P1 Pen Lens for Olympus Camera Lenses
March 8th, 2010 by adminHow Well Do The Olympus Digital Cameras Work.?
February 26th, 2010 by adminI’m looking at the Olympus Stylus tough-600 with tap control. How well do these cameras work. I went to Best Buy and played with one and i really like it. The girl at Best Buy said they don’t work well in low light and they don’t recover from a shot as fast as Cannon or Sony. Is this true, how well do they work.
FCC Chairman: Congress Should Pay for Public Safety Network
February 25th, 2010 by adminwelcome to s.ourced.com The U.S. Federal Communications Commission will ask Congress for US$16 billion to $18 billion to pay for building and maintaining a nationwide mobile broadband network for emergency response agencies, including police and fire departments. The FCC will also recommend, in a national broadband plan due to be released next month, that mobile carriers that paid billions of dollars for spectrum in the 700MHz band be required to share their spectrum with public safety agencies, agency Chairman Julius Genachowski said Thursday. A grant program of up to $18 billion over 10 years is needed to get a nationwide, interoperable public safety network built, Genachowski said in a press briefing. Public safety officials and U.S. lawmakers have been calling for a nationwide mobile broadband network since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on the U.S., during which the multiple public safety agencies responding to the attacks couldn’t talk to each other. “This is important,” Genachowski said. “We have gone too long with little progress to show for it. The private sector simply is not going to build a nationwide, state-of-the-art, interoperable broadband network for public safety on its own dime.” Asked if Congress might balk at spending $16 billion or more on a public safety network, Genachowski said the network is necessary. The FCC’s plan represents the “best and shortest path” to needed emergency communications for public safety agencies, he said. After a protracted battle, Congress, in late 2005, passed legislation requiring U.S. TV stations to move to all-digital broadcasts and abandon analog spectrum between channels 52 and 69. Much of the cleared spectrum, in the 700MHz band, was sold in auctions that ended in March 2008, and many spectrum experts say the spectrum is optimal for wireless broadband services. But a block of spectrum that the FCC tried to sell for a shared commercial/public safety service failed to sell, and the FCC has not attempted to re-auction that D block of spectrum since then. The FCC’s national broadband plan will recommend that the D block be resold, but that public safety agencies would also have access to about 80MHz of spectrum sold to carriers including Verizon Communications and AT&T. Public safety agencies would have priority access on that spectrum under the FCC’s plan. With access to other spectrum, public safety agencies would have access to a redundant and reliable network, Genachowski said. CTIA, a trade group representing mobile carriers, didn’t have a reaction to the proposal. AT&T looks forward to seeing more details when the national broadband plan comes out, a spokeswoman said. But public safety officials are “disappointed” with the proposal, said Charles Werner, fire chief for Charlottesville, Virginia. Several groups representing public safety agencies had asked Congress to reallocate the D block of spectrum to public safety agencies. Just last month , groups including the International Association of Chiefs of Police, the International Association of Fire Chiefs, and National Sheriffs’ Association called on Congress to pass legislation turning over the spectrum to public safety agencies. “There have been few times in my career that I have seen total alignment between all of the national public safety organizations as we have with the proposal to reallocate the D Block to public safety,” Werner said. “Having said that, it is imperative that public safety direct its energies to determine the best path forward to achieve effective and interoperable public-safety broadband communications. Failure is not an option.” The national broadband plan will also include plans to enhance the nation’s 911 emergency dialing service by linking it into broadband, Genachowski said. The plan will also focus on improving cybersecurity and the reliability of U.S. broadband networks, he said. Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry . Available tools: PDF Newspaper , Full Text RSS , Term Extraction .
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FCC Chairman: Congress Should Pay for Public Safety Network
Telava 3G Broadband Bullet kills mobile broadband contracts dead
February 25th, 2010 by staff3G anywhere is great, but locking yourself into a two (plus) year contract to get access to it is decidedly less-so. Enter Telava, a prepaid wireless company that is launching its so-called Broadband Bullet. It’s a simple USB modem that you can pop into your port-having device and get online at typical 3G speeds, the interesting thing being here that your $50 a month for 5GB ($60 for unlimited) comes without a contract. You can pay for one month, take a month off, then pay for the next two, switch between 5GB and unlimited, and generally do whatever you like without getting hit with an ETF. What you will get hit with is a $100 up-front security deposit, or you can pay $200 if for some crazy reason you want to keep the thing. Telava promises “nationwide coverage everywhere,” and while we’re not sure which network it’s piggy-backing on the coverage map looks reasonably comprehensive, so go get some, infrequent travelers. Update : As a few of you have pointed out in comments, this appears to be T-Mo’s network it’s piggy-backing on. Telava 3G Broadband Bullet kills mobile broadband contracts dead originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 25 Feb 2010 07:54:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink SlashGear | Telava | Email this | Comments

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Telava 3G Broadband Bullet kills mobile broadband contracts dead
PCWorld ranks AT&T tops in 3G performance test
February 23rd, 2010 by staffWe all have something of a need, a need for speed, and while most won’t have an opportunity to go all Maverick on some MIG-28s somewhere over the Indian Ocean, we can do our best to get the quickest wireless on offer. Last summer, when we stacked the top four mobile broadband cards against each other, we found that AT&T came out on tops for peak performance, and now nearly a year on PCWorld has come to the same conclusion, finding that Ma Bell offers upload and download speeds that are twice some of the competition. The seven page test splits everything out by city and goes into more details than we’ll tire you with here, but do note that all this testing was done in urban areas, so don’t forget to double-check the coverage map before you sign the next 24 months of your life away. [Thanks, A. Dewan] PCWorld ranks AT&T tops in 3G performance test originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 23 Feb 2010 12:10:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink | PCWorld | Email this | Comments

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PCWorld ranks AT&T tops in 3G performance test
Are Olympus Digital Cameras A Good Choice?
February 21st, 2010 by adminDeciding on bying a digital camera. Would like to take good night shots… Are Olympus cameras very good? Do they take any brand SD card?
Five points for best answer!
Sprint promises its first WiMAX handset by this summer, could be the Supersonic
February 19th, 2010 by adminThe life of a gadget lover tends to involve a lot of waiting , so it’s always nice to be surprised by a roadmap getting shorter rather than longer. Sprint has told Forbes that its very first WiMAX phone will be arriving in the first half of this year, which will be somewhat earlier than many had expected. We’re likely talking about that A9292 “bar handset” from HTC that was spotted in January , as Forbes goes on to note that it’s likely to be a HTC-built Android device . The aptly-titled Supersonic seems like the obvious, albeit unconfirmed, prime candidate here. Further word from Paget Alves, Sprint’s president of Business Markets, indicates that businesses and government agencies might be the first adopters, which must mean whatever handset’s being discussed will be at least somewhat business-friendly. Finally, CEO Dan Hesse himself is cited as saying Sprint will be bringing out “dozens of devices” with embedded WiMAX this year, so even if you don’t like the first one, there should be plenty of options come the holidays. [Thanks, Douglas] Sprint promises its first WiMAX handset by this summer, could be the Supersonic originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 19 Feb 2010 03:15:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink | Forbes | Email this | Comments

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Sprint promises its first WiMAX handset by this summer, could be the Supersonic
What Is The Difference Between All Of The Olympus Cameras?
February 16th, 2010 by adminI am shopping for a new digital camera and I am so confused on which one to get! I have narrowed it down to an Olympus Brand, but all of the camera’s sound the same.
What is the difference between the FE series and the Stylus series?
Which do you recommend?
OLYMPUS Li-42BLi-40B high capacity 740mAh Lithium Ion compatible Replacement Digital Camera Battery for Olympus Cameras C-760, C-50 Zoom, C-5000 Zoom, MJU 300, MJU 400.
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