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BusinessWeek February 24, 2011 Peter Burrows |
Alcatel-Lucent's Tiny Cell Tower Alcatel-Lucent hopes its compact lightRadio module will change the economics of upgrading congested cellular networks. |
InternetNews July 6, 2005 Colin C. Haley |
Upgrades Re-Charging Cellular Station Market The outlook for makers of cellular base station equipment is picking up after several sluggish years, according to a new report. |
Food Engineering July 6, 2009 |
Can You Trace me Now? Cellular technologies may not replace licensed and unlicensed wireless systems in food production processes, but they have their place. |
IEEE Spectrum January 2008 Steven Cherry |
Winner: Sprint's Broadband Gamble A new cellular service will sell high-speed data access instead of phones and phone calls. |
PC World October 25, 2007 Becky Waring |
New Ways to Solve Your Cell Phone Dead Spots If using your cell phone in your house is an exercise in frustration, one of these three growing technologies could fix the problem. |
InternetNews March 20, 2006 Tim Scannell |
TenXc Applies Spread Spectrum Smarts Wireless solutions provider TenXc Wireless today unveiled the first in a series of cell site enhancement products offering a "drop and insert" answer to the riddle of cellular bandwidth. |
PHONE+ |
Femtocells Set for Major 3G, 4G Breakthrough Femtocells, those mini-base stations that plug into a broadband router or a carrier's metro Ethernet feed in order to bolster wireless capacity, are on the brink of getting large. |
Entrepreneur March 2003 Mike Hogan |
Why Wait? While 3G networks are stuck in wireless limbo, Wi-Fi is growing by leaps and bounds. |
HBS Working Knowledge February 14, 2005 Julie Jette |
Will Traditional Broadband Stand Up against Wi-Fi and WiMAX? With wireless broadband capabilities expanding significantly, it looks like "regular" broadband providers and cellular phone services have their work cut out for them. But maybe there is room for everybody. |
InternetNews May 16, 2006 Tim Scannell |
Cell a Hard Sell Wi-Fi may be the technology du jour right now, but cellular is fighting for the inside track. |
Popular Mechanics January 24, 2008 Robert X. Cringely |
Everything You Always Wanted to Know About the 700-MHz Auction but Were Afraid to Ask From Google to the FCC, the new race for America's last broadcast spectrum holds many secrets. One of America's leading tech pundits unlocks the ones you need to know. |
CIO March 15, 2001 Lee Pender & Danielle Dunne |
How to Speak Wireless A list of terms to help you understand the most important wireless technologies, standards and devices. |
PC Magazine May 1, 2011 Mark Hachman |
Wi-Fi on Subways: Where Is It? For years Wi-Fi connections have been ubiquitous on university campuses, in coffee shops, and in public buildings for years, yet most of us are still waiting for them to grace our morning commutes. |
IEEE Spectrum May 2013 Mitchell Lazarus |
When Spectrum Auctions Fail For some microwave links, cooperation beats competition as a way to share the air |
InternetNews January 20, 2009 Judy Mottl |
Obama Inauguration a Wireless Challenge The Presidential Inauguration attendees are being urged to text, rather than call, to keep congestion down. |
IEEE Spectrum August 2007 Willie D. Jones |
Low Power to the People A South Carolina city is the latest battleground for low-watt community radio. |
BusinessWeek October 3, 2005 Andy Reinhardt |
A New Wireless Order Nokia and others are starting to turn out phones that switch easily between various technologies. |
BusinessWeek March 22, 2004 Andy Reinhardt |
Why 3G May Still Come Up Short Wireless networks like Wi-Fi and WiMax could slow its troubled take-off |
BusinessWeek November 15, 2004 David Rocks |
Japan: Making 3G Look As Slow As Smoke Signals DoCoMo is already testing 4G technology that blows by current data speed limits. |
PC World December 20, 2006 |
Selecting Your Cell Phone Service Choosing the right cell phone carrier and plan is just as important as picking the phone itself. Here's what you need to know before you go shopping. |
InternetNews August 26, 2009 |
Wi-Fi Smartphone Sales to Double by 2011: ABI As Wi-Fi becomes an integral part of the smartphone success story, recent data shows the trend is snowballing. |
National Defense July 2008 Juan D. Deaton |
How to Achieve Next-Generation Public Safety Networks Cellular technology is an extremely attractive option for public safety communications. The success of the commercial market will guarantee that the technology will continue to improve. |
CRM November 1, 2005 Colin Beasty |
Wonders of a Wireless World Between Wi-Fi and the arrival of 3G technology, VoIP, and dual-mode handsets, the ability for enterprise workers to connect to back-office applications like sales automation and CRM is rapidly increasing. |
BusinessWeek September 24, 2007 Jack Ewing |
Upwardly Mobile In Africa How basic cell phones are sparking economic hope and growth in emerging - and even non-emerging - nations. |
Knowledge@Wharton March 26, 2003 |
Wi-Fi: A Wild Card in Telecom's Restructuring A wild card as the industry restructures is a technology called "wi-fi." Wi-fi is such a hot area -- one of the few pockets of optimism on the tech scene today -- that a recent Wharton conference presented a panel devoted to discussing its potential. |
Entrepreneur October 2007 Mike Hogan |
United we Gab They're here: cell phones that work on both cell and Wi-Fi networks. |
PC Magazine April 28, 2004 Bill Howard |
Welcome to Wi-Fi City Your phone works almost everywhere there's cellular service, and you get one monthly bill, right? Why can't roving Wi-Fi users get the same deal? |
Technology Research News April 23, 2003 Eric Smalley |
Nanocomputer skips clock Harnessing nanotechnology to build computer chips could lead to ultrafast, ultracheap, low- power computers. But today's chip designs don't translate well to the molecular scale. One proposal calls for throwing out the clock. |
The Motley Fool October 21, 2010 Katherine Tweed |
Can Cellular Shake Its Stigma? Forget about high-cost, lack of coverage and security questions. Cellular is here to compete in the smart grid market. Or is it? |
IEEE Spectrum July 2005 Steven Cherry |
A Match Made in Packets Coming soon: cellular handsets that can use a Wi-Fi network. Several companies are working on two different ways to unite the worlds of mobile telephony and wireless networking within enterprises. |
Chemistry World August 19, 2009 Phillip Broadwith |
Antioxidants could promote cancer Some tumor cells can actually use antioxidants to protect themselves from natural cellular defense mechanisms, enabling them to survive and proliferate. |
Chemistry World January 26, 2011 Anna Watson |
Channelling deeper to target breast cancer US scientists have developed a model of the breast ductal system that could be used to discover abnormal cells or deliver drugs at locations further along the ducts than other techniques. The model fits on a slide, enabling on-chip experiments. |
IEEE Spectrum July 2007 Suhas Sreedhar |
Plastic Solar Cells Get a Boost by Doubling Up Scientists in Korea and California have invented a new way of boosting the efficiency of cheap plastic solar cells, making them more competitive with traditional silicon solar cells. The key is to make the solar cells in pairs. |
PC Magazine September 12, 2007 John C. Dvorak |
Wireless Promises, Unmet The cellular mobile network for voice calls has blossomed into a multibillion-dollar behemoth of a business, but where is the rest of the wireless revolution -- wireless Internet, home stereo, even power transmission? |
Military & Aerospace Electronics August 2007 John McHale |
LGS and Pacstar Provide Tactical-Base-Station Router to U.S. Army Reserve Command Engineers at LGS and Pacific Star Communications (PacStar), have joined hands to provide a rugged, portable cellular solution to the U.S. Army Reserve Command (USARC) |
InternetNews November 23, 2004 Adam Stone |
Wireless LAN Outdoes Wired The money spent on wireless LANs outpaced that tied up in wired solutions for the first time this fall--but Wi-Fi spending still lags behind cellular/telecom wireless. |
PC World February 11, 2008 Glenn Fleishman |
More Options With Tomorrow's Cell Phones Install the software and services you want to enjoy cameras, portable game consoles, and more with access to wireless networks. |
BusinessWeek April 26, 2004 Roger O. Crockett |
Cell Phones: Who's Calling The Shots? Users don't care who makes their phones, they care more about style, size, and service. |
Entrepreneur July 2004 Mike Hogan |
Come Together As telecom companies race to integrate Wi-Fi and VoIP, mobile calling could get even better. |
Entrepreneur July 2006 Mike Hogan |
Launch Sequence Feel the need for speed? Cellular broadband is ready for liftoff. |
Chemistry World April 30, 2014 Tim Wogan |
High efficiency solar cells stack up A new high efficiency solar cell that is easier and potentially cheaper to produce than current designs has been demonstrated by US researchers. |
Scientific American September 19, 2005 Charles Q. Choi |
Chatting Up Cells Stem cells can transform into whatever cell the body tells them to. Unfortunately, scientists have yet to master that particular gift of gab. But investigators may soon crack the language with tiny "chat rooms" for stem cells. |
BusinessWeek February 5, 2007 Dexter Roberts |
China Mobile's Hot Signal China Mobile is the world's biggest cellular carrier. Now it's planning to get even bigger. |
Mother Jones August 1999 Alex Markels |
Low Power To The People Muted by the high cost of broadcast licenses, diverse voices may yet step up to the mike, thanks to a new FCC proposal |
Chemistry World October 31, 2012 Ian Le Guillou |
A cell for a cell If you ever need to isolate a single bacterial cell, why not build it a prison cell? This is the approach that colleagues from Sandia National Laboratories, US, have taken. Using multi-photon lithography, they can construct four walls and a roof around a single cell in just over a minute. |
Chemistry World February 28, 2013 Andy Extance |
Chemical transport defines 'Goldilocks' cell size A US team has suggested molecular movement as an answer to the question of why cells are the size they are. A question that they say 'still awaits an answer from first principles'. |
The Motley Fool November 9, 2004 Charly Travers |
Are Stem Cells a Rule Breaker? Does the science offer real hope or just hype? Biotech investors take on enough risk in the normal course of drug development that they do not need to worry about whether or not the underlying technology even works. |
HHMI Bulletin May 2011 Jim Schnabel |
Oxygen on the Brain An ancient cellular program to protect cells when oxygen is low seems crucial for the production of new brain cells. |
Chemistry World July 1, 2012 Mellisae Fellet |
3D printed sugar network to feed engineered organs US researchers can build vessels into a cell-containing gel -- the beginnings of a thick tissue. Scientists form the gel around a lattice of printed sugar fibers. The fibers dissolve after the gel sets, leaving a network of channels that carry nutrients like blood vessels. |
Smithsonian March 2004 |
Signal Discovery? A Los Angeles scientist says living cells may make distinct sounds, which might someday help doctors "hear" diseases |