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2009-01-12
, 20:00
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Posts: 170 |
Thanked: 23 times |
Joined on Oct 2008
@ Annapolis, MD, USA
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#302
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The Following User Says Thank You to rjzak For This Useful Post: | ||
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2009-01-12
, 20:04
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Posts: 211 |
Thanked: 61 times |
Joined on Aug 2007
@ Washington, DC
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#303
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Perhaps the N810WE should have supported multi-band WiMax, like 2.5GHz, 3.5 GHz, and others. Perhaps throw in an unlocked GSM/Edge/UMTS modem in their and call it the new tablet thingger. That would rock.
My next Nokia device won't be a tablet but a replacement for my N95, whenever that will be. My tablet replacement will be a 17" MacBook Pro!
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2009-01-12
, 20:13
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Posts: 1,878 |
Thanked: 646 times |
Joined on Sep 2007
@ San Jose, CA
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#304
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You're not the first to express this thought. I find it fascinating. I also wish to warn those of you who think you spend time and money at Fry's, Kroger, Walgreens, or A&W that you're suffering from psychosis.
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2009-01-12
, 20:16
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Posts: 1,878 |
Thanked: 646 times |
Joined on Sep 2007
@ San Jose, CA
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#305
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XOHM (now Sprint/Clearwire) addressed the need for a dual-mode 4G (Sprint 3G + WiMAX) in December on their blog with the announcement of Sprint 4G Dual-Mode Device on the Way!
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2009-01-12
, 20:17
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Posts: 751 |
Thanked: 522 times |
Joined on Mar 2007
@ East Gowanus
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#306
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2009-01-12
, 20:31
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Posts: 3,397 |
Thanked: 1,212 times |
Joined on Jul 2008
@ Netherlands
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#307
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2009-01-12
, 20:47
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Posts: 211 |
Thanked: 61 times |
Joined on Aug 2007
@ Washington, DC
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#308
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The world is larger than XOHM, Sprint, Clearwire, USA, or North America. There are tons of WiMAX networks out there, and they do not all compete with HS*PA(+) or LTE.
Calling WiMAX dead because LTE is going to be rolled out is irrational.
If the device WiMAX chipset supports limited frequencies it might be difficult to sell the N810WME elsewhere in the world. That, and not all of those WiMAX networks are residing in regions where people would like to spend money on a N810WME. Also, OMAP2 is by now old hardware. New OMAP3 and new Maemo and new UI paradigms are rolled the future.
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2009-01-12
, 20:54
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Posts: 1,878 |
Thanked: 646 times |
Joined on Sep 2007
@ San Jose, CA
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#309
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The world is larger than XOHM, Sprint, Clearwire, USA, or North America. There are tons of WiMAX networks out there, and they do not all compete with HS*PA(+) or LTE.
Calling WiMAX dead because LTE is going to be rolled out is irrational.
If you got a netbook or laptop with an add-on module (BlueTooth, WiFi, HS*PA, WiMAX, or whatever it is) and this is using ExpressCard, MiniPCI Express, or USB you can very or relatively easy replace this with an other packet radio. On a device such as a tablet this is much harder, if not impossible for an end-user.
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2009-01-12
, 22:21
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Posts: 3,397 |
Thanked: 1,212 times |
Joined on Jul 2008
@ Netherlands
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#310
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I'll give you WiBro in S. Korea, and a few niches in the US. But that isn't enough of a deployment to contradict my overall point.
Right, for the tablet, the two approaches that work are:
- accommodate a modular approach: PCI-Express-Mini card (could be done, with some re-design of the internals), have a well placed USB port (it doesn't; along the top, in a way that wouldn't interfere with the sliding screen, would have been better), or invent a new modular connector (bad idea, IMO), or
- have multiple devices: one with no WWAN, ones with existing widely deployed WWANs (1xRTT/EVDO version, GPRS/EDGE/HSPA version), ones with niche/emerging WWANS (WiMAX version, LTE version).
The latter would have been reasonable if they had remembered the "ones with existing widely deployed WWANs". They didn't, so that has failed, IMO (and in the opinions of several other people in this discussion; but clearly that's the core of the disagreement -- whether or not skipping that item constitutes a marketing failure, thus far).
The Following User Says Thank You to allnameswereout For This Useful Post: | ||
Since Nokia has been steadfast in their development of Internet Tablets as carrier-agnostic, the N810 WiMAX Edition was a one-off in tying themselves to XOHM. Had the Clearwire merger gone through earlier, they could have done 3G/4G, but then they would have been thoroughly tied to Sprint. With WiMAX authentication based off MAC addresses, the N810 WiMAX edition could theoretically be used with other 2.5GHz WiMAX providers, giving an "out" for Nokia and XOHM.
I agree with you that the N810WE was poorly conceived from a marketing point-of-view, but how was Nokia to know. 2 years ago, XOHM looked more promising and WiMAX had potential. If the economy were better right now, I'd still think WiMAX would have a decent chance between the investments of Intel, Google, Sprint, and Motorola.
Unfortunately, the US economy isn't what it once was, and all carriers are taking a hit on 4G deployments... and that's where LTE might overtake WiMAX if Sprint fails with Clearwire.
Promethh
* promethh@xohm.com
* Nokia N810 WiMax Edition with Clear (formerly XOHM)
* Fujitsu U810 (120GB, XPT/OSX) with Sprint 4G (WiMAX)
* http://www.latheofdreams.com