Marvell, and integrated silicon provider, this week announced a mobile tablet based on its chips. Marvell says its Moby tablet prototype will cost $99 and feature 1080p full-HD and full Flash Internet support.
Don Masters, CEA Agent: What kind of time does that give us before the emergency power comes on?
V.I.
India will begin 3G spectrum auctions on April 9, with a “4G” auction for LTE and WiMAX services beginning on April 11, reports the Indian Department of Communications.
T-Mobile USA is looking at possible joint ventures with cable companies and network providers to boost its spectrum capacity, reports Reuters.
Sprint Nextel will sell the Google Nexus One phone and will also unveil its first WiMAX handset next week.
eMarketer says wireless usage and advertising in Brazil, Russia, India and China is expected to explode in the next few years.
Bud: Credit is a sacred trust, it’s what our free society is founded on. Do you think they give a damn about their bills in Russia?
Otto: They don’t pay bills in Russia, it’s all free.
Google, Intel and Sony have teamed to develop a platform called Google TV to bring the Web into the living room through a new generation of televisions and set-top boxes, reports the NY Times.
Portland, Oregon commissioners voted unanimously today to back the city’s pitch for Google’s fiber project.
Dr. Spivey: The funny thing is that the person that he’s the closest to is the one he dislikes the most… That’s you, Mildred.
Neither AT&T nor the City of Riverside want their WiFi network, notes Broadband Reports. Wireless Riverside which covers some 55 square miles, started with the best intentions, as did most of the 300-odd municipal WiFi networks launched in 2007-2008.
Oregon’s State Interoperability Executive Council (SIEC), has voted to prepare a waiver that seeks permission from the FCC to build a public-safety statewide broadband wireless network, reports FireChief.
The $99 AirStash, announced today, is a wireless flash drive that streams media from your pocket. The company says it works like a USB flash drive.
Google has hinted that the value of search advertising on mobile phones is rapidly catching up with traditional Internet search and could soon command higher rates.
The FCC has released its full National Broadband Plan (Executive Summary and pdf), a road map for bringing broadband to nearly all Americans.
Bay Area Rapid Transit, in partnership with San Francisco-based developer Junaio, has released an official augmented reality app that allows you to find BART stations and train schedules.
South by Southwest Interactive, ground zero in social media, produced several new apps for social media over the last few days.
The Financial just reported that the top wireless carriers in the United States added 4.2 million retail subscribers during the fourth quarter of 2009.
The annual gathering for the global satellite-enabled communications, Satellite 2010, starts today. Some than 9,300 satellite professionals will particpate in the conference, which runs March 15-18th, near Washington, D.
The State of the Media report, released Monday by the Pew Research Center’s Project for Excellence in Journalism, has good news and bad news for newspapers.