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November 6, 2009
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News for wireless telecommunications professionals
  
  Top Story 
  • FCC hands AT&T final OK on Centennial purchase
    AT&T has won the FCC's approval for the wireless carrier's $945 million buyout of Centennial Communications, a deal that beefs up AT&T's base by 1.1 million customers, the agency said Thursday. The mainly rural-based Centennial operates sites in the South and Midwest, and the new company must divest systems in Louisiana and Mississippi, the Department of Justice ruled last month. The FCC attached other conditions to the deal as well. Bloomberg (11/5) LinkedInFacebookTwitterEmail this Story
  • AT&T draws city-specific models for bandwidth needs: To boost its network coverage, AT&T has outlined specific bandwidth models for every major U.S. city that it serves, Chief Technology Officer John Donovan announced Thursday. Donovan said it had proved difficult to predict bandwidth needs in the rapidly changing and growing mobile environment. PC World/IDG News Service (11/5)
  Company News 
  • Leap continues decline in prepaid sector
    Increasingly tense competition and lingering economic weakness hurt Leap Wireless in the third quarter, when it added 116,000 customers, a 25% decline from a year earlier as churn also rose and average revenue for subscriber fell, the prepaid carrier reported Thursday. The company lowered its customer-additions guidance for the year, from 1.5 million to 1.3 million or less, including those buying voice and broadband services. Yahoo!/The Associated Press (11/5) LinkedInFacebookTwitterEmail this Story
  • Ericsson shifts CTO to U.S. as IP unit chief
    Telecom-equipment maker Ericsson will bring its chief technology officer to the U.S. to run the Internet Protocol unit while he remains the CTO, the company said Thursday. Hakan Eriksson's move signifies how the center of the mobile universe has shifted from Europe to the U.S., industry observers noted. The vendor also wants to keep a closer eye on the domestic fixed-broadband market, where the rules for building fiber-optic networks are more clear-cut. CIO.com/IDG News Service (11/5) LinkedInFacebookTwitterEmail this Story
  • T-Mobile, Orange give final OK to U.K. tie-up
    Two months after disclosing their intention to do so, T-Mobile U.K. and Orange on Thursday gave final clearance for their joint-venture plans, the companies said, adding that they hope to earn regulatory approval by the middle of next year. The combined carriers, which have agreed to maintain their individual brands for 18 months, would control 37% of the U.K. market. Reuters (11/5) LinkedInFacebookTwitterEmail this Story
  • Other News
  Technology 
  • Will wireless industry support Android 2.0?
    Today's release of Verizon Wireless' Droid phone -- the first to run on the Android 2.0 operating system -- could provide a real test on whether the market will support three versions of the software, according to industry observers who note that neither carriers nor vendors are saying firmly whether they will upgrade their devices to the latest version. Relatedly, the MOTO Development Group released its Android Media Platform MID device -- which can run Android 2.0 -- to developers. Network World/IDG News Service (11/5) , Electronista (11/5) LinkedInFacebookTwitterEmail this Story
  • DVR management tool from Cablevision lets users phone it in
    Cablevision is offering subscribers a new tool to program their digital video recorders via Web-enabled smartphones. The system, which runs through the company's Optimum.net mobile Web site, lets users who lease a DVR from the cable company schedule recordings and delete shows from their phones. Multichannel News (11/5) LinkedInFacebookTwitterEmail this Story
  Trends & Research 
  Featured Content 
 

  Public Policy 
  • Pioneer Cerf: Open spectrum is the answer
    New modulation schemes can open up the wireless spectrum and make the industry's long-held single operator-single license model obsolete, said Vint Cerf, Google's chief Internet evangelist and often referred to as "the father of the Internet." Speaking at an industry event, Cerf said: "The technology is at a point where we should allow multiple parties to occupy the same spectral space. We can make a lot better use of the spectrum than we are today." Telephony Online (11/5) LinkedInFacebookTwitterEmail this Story
  • FCC studies rules on line access
    The FCC has begun to investigate whether it should amend the rules that govern how many telecoms can control access to telephone lines. The agency said it would seek comments on ways to establish a model to study the "special access" issue. In its notice, the FCC said that while some companies said current rules were working as intended, others pointed to a lack of competition in the areas. Reuters (11/5) LinkedInFacebookTwitterEmail this Story
  • Other News
  CTIA News 
  • Watch FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski's Extended Keynote Highlights from International CTIA WIRELESS I.T. & Entertainment 2009®!
     
    During his keynote presentation in San Diego, FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski acknowledged the unique nature of wireless in the net-neutrality context, and he pledged his support and commitment to providing the wireless industry with more spectrum and a tower siting shot clock. Watch extended keynote excerpts and interviews with industry insiders in the CTIA Buzz Zone, listen to podcasts and much more. Check out CTIA's post-show coverage today! LinkedInFacebookTwitterEmail this Story
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