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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum
GLD 379.87+0.4%Nov 11 4:00 PM EST

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To: elmatador who wrote (53518)8/13/2009 6:15:38 PM
From: Maurice Winn1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) of 217699
 
Good news here, no microscope needed. Huawei is cleaning up and lined up to dominate LTE with full spectrum dominance: gigaom.com

<By Om Malik | Tuesday, August 11, 2009 | 7:40 AM PT | 2 comments
Earlier this year, I wrote a post in which I bet that Chinese telecom equipment maker Huawei would win the WiMAX sweepstakes. I would like to amend that bet to place it on Huawei winning the 4G sweepstakes, thanks to the number of carriers deploying the Long Term Evolution standard. For with the exception of Ericsson, Huawei faces little competition in the market for LTE gear.

I’m amending my bet after reading this morning that Vodafone is using Huwaei to run LTE trials. Indeed, with Nortel and Alcatel-Lucent on the ropes, the Chinese company smells blood in the North American market.

It recently opened an LTE lab in Plano, Texas; it has signed up European carriers Telnor and TeliaSonera as customers for its LTE gear; and it’s in the running to become a supplier to AT&T for its 4G network. ... continues...
>

L M Ericsson down for the count. Nortel out.

The vast Euroswindle of the world with GSM is drawing to a close. Let's hear it for Huawei = hip hip, hooray, hip hip, hooray, hip hip, hooray. They are bringing more competition to the service provider world and providing opportunity to a billion people in China to do great things, not that they'll be allowed to by their bosses in Beijing.

Your Brazilian ethanol might even be the right stuff to fuel the revolution as fuel cell fodder. Just squirt another dose of ethanol into the Smartbook with a Mirasol screen and carry on for another couple of days.

It's far easier to stretch eyes and ears wirelessly through cyberspace to the desired location than actually physically go there in 3D via car, train, bus, airliner with hotel and other high costs. With good stereophonic and binocular vision, "being there" will be easier in cyberspace than in 3D. The end of the oil era will come like that, not because we run out of fossil carbon and hydrocarbons. Nor will CO2 be a problem.

A few cameras and microphones can take the place of millions of heads craning their necks for a peek of the view, with remotely located viewers enjoying [or not] the experience from anywhere.

Mobile cyberspace rulz ok. Bring it on.

Mqurice
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