The debate is on about the value of UC and UM in reducing human contact latency to speed up buisness process performance. Where does that really pay off?
Posted by Art Rosenberg, on July 28, 2008
On Monday, Intel introduced the successor to the Centrino chipset, dubbed Centrino 2. While it did add a number of speed, graphics, and power conservation features, in the wireless area it went 1 for 2. Included was
Posted by Michael F. Finneran, on July 16, 2008
In a keynote address at theNXTComm show in Las Vegas this week, Sprint CEO Dan Hesse outlined the rollout schedule for theXohm mobile WiMAX service. Like everything else surrounding WiMAX, the key word is “delayed”. Xohm has been in
Posted by Michael Finneran, on June 20, 2008
While Cisco’s Motion Architecture is a major development in the wireless space, the real value will come from the ecosystem of applications developers and other technology partners that will build the capabilities on top of the platform that Cisco
Posted by Michael. Finneran, on May 28, 2008
One of the biggest wireless stories for the first part of this year was AT&T’s winning the Starbucks Wi-Fi Hot Spot business from T-Mobile. Starbucks is the one venue that people immediately associate with Wi-Fi Internet access, so grabbing it from T-Mobile (regardless of whether it’s profitable or not) was a big coup for AT&T. Of course, the big story was not that AT&T was taking over the Starbucks account, but rather that the service was now going to be free. Well free for 2 hours per day to anyone with a Starbucks card.
Posted by Michael Finneran, on April 16, 2008
When Steve Jobs announced the iPhone at the beginning of 2007, I, and other business communication analysts, quickly criticized its lack of capabilities for business use. Just think what Blackberry did for “push” email,
Posted by Art Rosenberg, on March 07, 2008