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cashless's Avatar
Posts: 159 | Thanked: 21 times | Joined on Jan 2008 @ Houston, texas
#1
errrr.. Gizmodo!

Discuss:

http://gizmodo.com/375981/is-wimax-a...an-open-letter

Dear Sprint and Intel,
I'm sorry to hear about your recent WiMax delays and struggles, I really am. The Xohm service was originally scheduled to launch this month, but all you've given us are a few prototypes and half-baked demos in controlled environments—the public has yet to see the technology truly in action. WiMax in general and Xohm in particular have the potential for greatness, but you guys seem to have lost your way. Here are all the signs that WiMax may be washed up:

• When the rollout is already slower than people initially hoped, the aforementioned delays are never good.

• Aside from the Nokia N810, Asus Eee PC and Everex Cloudbook, Xohm lacks any mainstream WiMax-compliant devices, and we were hoping CTIA 2008 would be a good time to hear about them. An infrastructure is only as good as its end-user products (and vice-versa).

• Speaking of that, where are Intel's WiMax-compatible chips? What about the 20% of 2008 devices scheduled to have WiMax? What about the Montevina chipsets allegedly eagerly awaited by Lenovo, Acer, Asus, Panasonic and Toshiba? WiMax needs some love from its $2 billion champion.

• Xohm partners we spoke to were under the impression that a full Xohm demo would be set up for CTIA. However, Wired's Joe Brown attended Nokia's press conference and noted the N810 WiMax Edition Tablet was demoed over Wi-Fi. What's up with that?

• Similarly, while previewing the N810's HAVA Player at Nokia's booth, the Hava rep told me he was using Wi-Fi for demos because the Xohm booth just across the hall didn't have a strong enough WiMax signal. What ever happened to 10Mbps at 10 kilometers?

• The WiMax demos that did work seemed promising, but the people running the booth operated with a healthy amount of paranoia. We weren't allowed to get too hands-on and they tried to kill our photos, suggesting perhaps things weren't as fully functional as they seemed.

• An early WiMax service rolled out in Australia last month suffered an EPIC FAIL, quickly closed up shop and prompted the CEO to say "WiMax may not work." Could Xohm be suffering from similar problems?

• WiMax's direct 4G competition, LTE, chosen by America's two biggest and most powerful wireless carriers, already seems to be gaining steam, not to mention showing well in recent demos.

So guys, anything we can do to help? I want the future of technology to actually make it to the future. Lord knows I'd feel better knowing I could play World of Warcraft lag-free while sitting in the middle of the Mojave Desert, not that I own WoW or plan to visit the Mojave Desert, but you never know. Seriously, just give me my damn WiMax already!!

Signed,
Adrian Covert

Last edited by cashless; 2008-04-04 at 20:19. Reason: jizmode spelling err.
 
tso's Avatar
Posts: 4,783 | Thanked: 1,253 times | Joined on Aug 2007 @ norway
#2
ugh, makes me think of engadget and foleo...
 
cashless's Avatar
Posts: 159 | Thanked: 21 times | Joined on Jan 2008 @ Houston, texas
#3
Originally Posted by tso View Post
ugh, makes me think of engadget and foleo...
Yeah, but hopefully Sprint and intel won't fold like palm did. what wussies!!!
 
Posts: 1,418 | Thanked: 1,541 times | Joined on Feb 2008
#4
Meanwhile, at the other side of the pond:

http://www.enforta.com/geography.html
http://synterra.ru/services//wimax1/
http://www.maxiphon.ru/wimax/

All these will provide you with WiMax access right now using current equipment, at modest prices. They are all operating in Russia though
 
Benson's Avatar
Posts: 4,930 | Thanked: 2,272 times | Joined on Oct 2007
#5
Originally Posted by Gizmodo
• Aside from the Nokia N810, Asus Eee PC and Everex Cloudbook, Xohm lacks any mainstream WiMax-compliant devices, and we were hoping CTIA 2008 would be a good time to hear about them. An infrastructure is only as good as its end-user products (and vice-versa).
Yeah, apart from the three hottest devices anyone's thinking of running over WiMAX, there's nothing. (Oh, wait, I forgot the WiMAX iPhone with hour-and-30 battery life; that's what we're missing?)
So guys, anything we can do to help? I want the future of technology to actually make it to the future. Lord knows I'd feel better knowing I could play World of Warcraft lag-free while sitting in the middle of the Mojave Desert, not that I own WoW or plan to visit the Mojave Desert, but you never know. Seriously, just give me my damn WiMax already!!

Signed,
Adrian Covert
OTOH, at least they're not calling for ditching it...
 
Bundyo's Avatar
Posts: 4,708 | Thanked: 4,649 times | Joined on Oct 2007 @ Bulgaria
#6
The biggest cities in my country are covered with WiMAX. The prices start at $30 per month and the service is very good received from the public.
 
Posts: 183 | Thanked: 77 times | Joined on Jul 2006 @ Mountain View, CA
#7
Not an official Nokia answer, but for those of you interested in the details (since I was there)......

Originally Posted by cashless View Post
• Xohm partners we spoke to were under the impression that a full Xohm demo would be set up for CTIA. However, Wired's Joe Brown attended Nokia's press conference and noted the N810 WiMax Edition Tablet was demoed over Wi-Fi. What's up with that?
The press conference was held outdoors, away from the main halls, and included a crane that took the press people about 180 ft straight up. That makes it a little hard to get proper WiMAX coverage in the area.

• Similarly, while previewing the N810's HAVA Player at Nokia's booth, the Hava rep told me he was using Wi-Fi for demos because the Xohm booth just across the hall didn't have a strong enough WiMax signal. What ever happened to 10Mbps at 10 kilometers?
The RF interference in that hall was *insane*. Think about all the different cellular base stations and the hundreds of WiFi access points competing for essentially the same RF spectrum and you'll understand why this was so hard. I wasn't there when Adrian spoke to the Hava guy, but clearly there was some miscommunication -- the issue was RF interference not, signal strength from a booth that was 40 yards away.

On an unrelated note, in the Xohm booth itself, once they sorted out the immediate interference issues, the N810s ran beautifully on the WiMAX network.
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My insane ramblings are exactly that -- mine. Just because I work at Nokia doesn't mean I speak for the company.

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Posts: 11,700 | Thanked: 10,045 times | Joined on Jun 2006 @ North Texas, USA
#8
1890s mindset: since there are no superhighways yet, let's not build any cars.
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Posts: 5,795 | Thanked: 3,151 times | Joined on Feb 2007 @ Agoura Hills Calif
#9
What is your country, Bundyo? It's not like we should all automatically know that, is it?
 
Bundyo's Avatar
Posts: 4,708 | Thanked: 4,649 times | Joined on Oct 2007 @ Bulgaria
#10
Yeah, sorry. Bulgaria.
 
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