WiMax is suffering from 'growing pains': Intel

By Jo Best, ZDNet Australia
Friday, April 04, 2008 05:31 AM

Despite the ongoing questions over the viability of WiMax, Intel's GM of mobility believes that the long range wireless standard is just going through the same growing pains as Wi-Fi.

"I remember skepticism when we were talking about Wi-Fi four years ago--who needs it and why--it's the same with many other technologies that we and others have done. It's very much a way of life," Intel's Dadi Perlmutter said.

However, according to the Intel exec, the skepticism will pass once WiMax has been given a chance to show what it can do.

"It's about building momentum--there are ups and downs...until we have one successful commercial installment this skepticism will continue," Perlmutter said today at the Intel Developer Forum in Shanghai.

"I hope that will be in the next year," he added.

The "successful commercial installment" of WiMax is not now likely to take place in Australia, after Communications Minister Stephen Conroy canceled a contract the Howard government had struck with OPEL to build an AU$1 billion (US$90.9 million) WiMax network for rural users.

Perlmutter said he hopes that the United States may yet prove to be the required showcase. U.S. operator Sprint, which in 2006 announced plans to roll out WiMax across the country. The rollout has been not been entirely smooth: the operator ditched its CEO ostensibly over concerns about the project's cost and recently severed a roaming agreement with fellow WiMax provider Clearwire, which has received hundreds of millions of dollars in investment from Intel's venture capital arm, as well as revealing this week the deployment will not hit its initial April deadline for launch.

"We have been working with them debugging software and the components. We're both spending huge amounts of energy to make it happen," Perlmutter said.

Sprint this week added new devices to its WiMax line up, including Nokia's first WiMax device, and Samsung's Q1 Ultra as well as a PC card.

However, Perlmutter said he doesn't see WiMax replicating the same level of success as embedded Wi-Fi in laptops and other devices. "It's not practical," he concluded.

Jo Best traveled to Shanghai as a guest of Intel.


WORTHWHILE?

0

0 votes
Blog

Talkback 0 comments

There are currently no comments for this post.


Tech Jobs Now!

Search for your ideal tech job:

Reviewing scheduled task inventory for Windows Server 2008 R2

Windows Server

Default installations of Windows Server 2008 R2 enumerate a number of default scheduled tasks, many of which you may not need.


Read more »



Don't CC me, I'll CC you

Blog thumbnail

Carbon paper fascinated me when I was younger. Write once, get two copies. What a great invention and work tool, I thought.

Then came e-mail, and making carbon copies of important..... by Eileen Yu

Read more »

Tags

  1. 3g
  2. 3g third generation
  3. apple inc.
  4. apple iphone
  5. broadband
  6. cellular phones
  7. google inc.
  8. handset
  9. internet
  10. mobile
  11. mobile platforms / communications
  12. mobile / wireless
  13. network
  14. phone
  15. revenue
  16. smart phone
  17. smart phones
  18. software
  19. u.s.
  20. web