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WiMAX, making
ubiquitous high-speed data services a reality
- Alcatel |


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Thanks to its innovative technology, WiMAX
will offer broadband wireless access at data rates of multiple Mbit/s to the
end-user and within a range of several kilometers. The same radio technology
will also offer high-speed data services to all nomadic terminals (laptops,
PDAs, etc.) with an optimized trade off between throughput and coverage.
Ultimately it will enable the "Portable Internet" usage replicating on the
move the same user experience as at home or at the office. |
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Introducing WiMAX: The next broadband wireless
revolution
- Alvarion |


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In recent years, Broadband technology has
rapidly become an established, global commodity required by a high
percentage of the population. In the past two years alone, the demand has
risen rapidly, with a worldwide installed base of 57 million lines in 2002
rising to an estimated 80 million lines by the end of 2003. This healthy
growth curve is expected to continue steadily over the next few years and
reach the 200 million mark by 2006 (see Figure 1 below). DSL operators are
now challenged to provide broadband services in suburban and rural areas
where new markets are quickly taking root. |
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WiMAX Technology and Deployment for Last-Mile
Wireless Broadband and Backhaul Applications
- Fujitsu |


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While wireless connectivity options have
expanded rapidly in recent years, wireless network access is available now
only in limited physical areas. Internet and intranet users need broadband
access that extends over longer distances to more locations. The industry’s
solution is the Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access (WiMAX)
standard, developed to create certified standards-based products from a wide
range of vendors. |
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Accelerating Wireless Broadband
- Intel |


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Broadband has been a long time coming, and for
most people it’s still not here yet. At the close of 2002, just 46 million
subscribers worldwide had broadband (In-Stat/MDR*). In the U.S., only 17
percent of households were connected. What’s the holdup? Apparently, the
problem isn’t demand. It’s supply. |
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IEEE 802.16 and WiMax
- Intel |


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Many operators and service providers may be
unfamiliar with the details of the IEEE 802.16* standard, but this wireless
technology is about to revolutionize the broadband wireless access industry.
The 802.16 standard, the “Air Interface for Fixed Broadband Wireless Access
Systems,” is also known as the IEEE WirelessMAN* air interface. |
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Broadband
Wireless: The New Era in Communications
- Intel |


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There’s no doubt the world is going wireless –
faster and more broadly than anyone might have expected. In this visionary
paper, Intel demonstrates this new reality and predicts that billions of
people will gain high-speed Internet access – wirelessly – within the next
decade. The premise for this vision is clear: all high-speed wireless
technologies (3G, Wi-Fi, WiMAX and Ultra- Wideband) will coexist, working in
tandem to meet service provider and customer needs for truly mobile
computing and communications across the globe. |
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IEEE 802.16*
WirelessMAN Specification Accelerates Wireless Broadband Access
- Intel |


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Although broadband has been available for some
time, access for most people is still limited. At the end of 2002,
statistics showed only 46 million subscribers worldwide had broadband access
and in the United States only 17 percent of households were connected
(In-Stat/MDR). So what’s the delay? The problem isn’t demand, it’s how
access is supplied. |
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The Broadband Wireless Access Market
- Proxim |


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Enterprises, Internet Service Providers, and
Mobile Network Operators are all looking for cost-effective ways to move
voice and data amongst multiple, separate locations at broadband speeds.
Copper and fiber optics solutions often fall short due to up-front costs,
recurring leases from telecommunications companies, and lack of flexibility
to scale with the operating organization. Broadband wireless has emerged as
a means to fill these gaps and provide a lower total cost of ownership than
wired solutions, while maintaining or exceeding the reliability and
performance of those technologies. |
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Overcoming the limitations of
fixed wired access technologies -
Siemens |


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Governments globally are starting to
prioritize broadband as a key political objective for all citizens to
overcome the “broadband gap” also known as the “digital divide”. In last
mile markets where traditional cable or copper/fiber infrastructures are
either saturated, outdated or simply out of reach, Broadband Wireless Access
(BWA) technology fills the void admirably, providing highly efficient and
cost effective access services for a large number of subscribers who would
otherwise be left out of the loop in developed markets. |
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