Search for: "Wireless/Open Mobil" Results 281 - 300 of 819
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28 May 2015, 1:19 am by Sanjana
Why isn’t an open network the default? [read post]
27 May 2015, 9:28 am
FBAR technology is primarily used in mobile devices like cellular telephones, tablets and GPS devices. [read post]
26 May 2015, 11:46 am by Rebecca Tushnet
Wireless telephone handsets” includes all mobile telephones including feature phones, smart phones, and “phablets” that are used for two-way voice communications. [read post]
26 May 2015, 8:19 am by Rebecca Tushnet
  Risks posed by DMCA to legitimate security research: discovered serious vulnerabilities in a computer chip used to operate one of the largest wireless payments systems and widely used automotive security system. [read post]
21 Apr 2015, 6:00 am by Cheng-yi Liu
The ability to use small form factor antennas is likely to be critical to the acceptance and expansion of small cell wireless coverage for mobile users. [read post]
2 Apr 2015, 7:00 pm by Paul J. Feldman
You can bet that this issue will be part of any appeal by wireless carriers attacking the FCC’s reclassification of mobile broadband Internet access service as a Title II CMRS. [read post]
31 Mar 2015, 10:02 pm by FHH Law
But reports leaking from the Columbia lab say that Bleen Band spectrum has propagation characteristics ideal for a vast range of services, including broadcast, fixed and mobile wireless, radar, Wi-Fi, and those things that unlock your car from across the street. [read post]
30 Mar 2015, 9:19 am by Douglas Jarrett
  Unlike the 2010 Order, the Open Internet Order imposes the same rules on mobile broadband providers as wireline/fixed wireless providers, noting that it will take into account the network management practices associated with mobile broadband technology. [read post]
23 Mar 2015, 5:06 pm by Nate Russell
Or did that just happen to you, as it did for the other people who use AT&T, T-Mobile, Verizon, Sprint and 450 other wireless network providers around the world who got one of the 2 billion SIM cards produced by Gemalto last year? [read post]
12 Mar 2015, 5:14 pm
  The Order reports that “there will be fewer sections of Title II applied than have been applied to Commercial Mobile Radio Service (CMRS), [the regulatory classification for wireless voice telecommunications service] where Congress expressly required the application of Sections 201, 202, and 208, and permitted the Commission to forbear from others. [read post]
9 Mar 2015, 9:35 am by Paul J. Feldman
And, to justify expanding the application of the net neutrality rules to mobile/wireless providers, the Commission relies on Title III (which authorizes it to regulate “Radio Services”) because “mobile broadband access service is best viewed as a commercial mobile service or its functional equivalent. [read post]
26 Feb 2015, 12:17 pm by Jeremy Gillula and Mitch Stoltz
This reclassification gives the FCC the authority to enact (and enforce) narrow, clear rules which will help keep the Internet the open platform it is today. [read post]
26 Feb 2015, 10:30 am
The FCC also rebuts claims that Title III does not allow classification of mobile broadband as a telecommunications service, noting that the Commission has asserted Title II oversight of wireless telephone service, termed Commercial Mobile Radio Service by Congress in amendments to Title III. [read post]
25 Feb 2015, 7:28 am by Michael Geist
Federal Communications Commission passed the Open Internet Order, which featured relatively weak net neutrality rules. [read post]
19 Feb 2015, 8:53 am by Douglas Jarrett
 He notes that the major ISPs can secure better returns by buying content companies, buying competing cable companies, or investing in faster growing wireless businesses. [read post]
4 Feb 2015, 5:31 pm by Ernster the Virtual Library Cat
Fact Sheet: Chairman Wheeler Proposes New Rules for Protecting the Open InternetErnster, the Virtual Library Cat [read post]
4 Feb 2015, 4:02 pm by Sabrina I. Pacifici
No doubt, we have seen improvements in our wired and wireless broadband infrastructure that are delivering real benefits for our economy and the American people. [read post]
4 Feb 2015, 8:44 am by Jon Brodkin
The Federal Communications Commission chairman, former head of the biggest cable and wireless lobbying associations, is about to issue "the strongest open Internet protections ever proposed by the FCC," and they're going to apply both to fixed Internet service and mobile broadband, he wrote today in an opinion piece in Wired. [read post]