Joint Sprint, Clearwire Network Could Boost Consumer Power
Sprint Nextel Corp. has finally rounded up the financial backing it needs to build a faster wireless network. But for consumers and the electronics industry, speed may be the least urgent thing about the new network.
Though specifics are scant, everything points to the new network breaking with the current model of the U.S. wireless industry, where carriers both operate the service and sell the devices that use it.
Right now, when you buy a Sprint phone, you use it on the Sprint network, and Sprint picks the applications, like TV services, that come with the phone.
Sprint has indicated the new network will be run on an “open access” basis, where anyone with a compatible device can connect it.
whether everything works well, that could lead to a proliferation of cell phones, Web tablets, computers, TV set-top boxes, GPS devices and gadgets we haven’t even dreamt of. Manufacturers will be free to compose gadgets that can ride on the network,
Rather than buying a cell phone with a monthly minute plan, you could be buying a device that gives you unlimited use of voice-over-Internet services like eBay Inc.’s Skype.
“That’s the real potential of having that open access — it unleashes innovation,” said Bob Williams, who tracks telecommunications for the Consumers Union, the publisher of Consumer Reports.
For example, Nokia Corp., not Sprint, will be selling the first portable gadget that’s likely to be available for the network. It’s a Web tablet that looks like an oversize iPhone and costs about $500.
You’ll buy it without a contract, and when the WiMAX network is available, the device will tell you, much like a laptop will careful you when Wi-Fi is available. You’ll soon after have the option to sign up for an World Wide Web plan through the Web browser.
There could be…
Orginal post by Top Tech News
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