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WiMax Is 'A Disaster' That 'Failed Miserably'
Late last week the city of Bangkok hosted a WiMax conference. Buzz Broadband CEO Garth Freeman was one of the many speakers. You could tell things would going to be bad when he prefaced his presentation with the words "WiMax may not work." According to CommsDay, Freeman went into a tirade about the failings of the technology and outlined exactly what didn't work. Here are the details: What's worse for Buzz Broadband is that it pushed WiMax's VoIP capabilities as one of its best services. This led to scores of customer complaints. In all, Freeman said that WiMax "was still 'mired in opportunistic hype,' pointing to the fact most deployments were still in trials, that it was largely used by start-up carriers and was supported by 'second-tier vendors'." The technology worked so poorly for his company that it has abandoned its WiMax network and is returning to the TD-CDMA networks used in Australia. What this news means for WiMax technology vendors and for companies such as Sprint that are in the process of building out WiMax networks remains to be seen. Just because one network operator had difficulties doesn't mean the technology stinks. But the non-line of site, poor indoor performance, and latency issues make me nervous. Let's hope that Sprint and its vendors are able to get WiMax to behave as its been sold to the public at large. « VMware To Double R&D Presence In India | Main | Network Appliance Rechristens Itself NetApp, Picks Bad Logo » |
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