Stimulus bill seeks plan to ensure all Americans have broadband access

As we’ve seen in the decidedly botched digital TV transition, nothing involving government and technology is ever straightforward. With that in mind, let us present to you the most germane portion of the recently passed economic stimulus package with respect to gadgets and the overall nerd kingdom: $7.2 billion. That amount is what President Obama has set aside for “broadband grant and loan programs,” though things get confusing right from the start. $4.7 billion will be distributed through a program run by the Commerce Department, while $2.5 billion is handed out by the Agriculture Department. In theory, at least, that latter chunk would go specifically to rural and underserved areas, but having one goal with two masters just seems like trouble waiting to happen. Oh, and then there’s the mandate to the FCC that instructs it to create (within one year, mind you) a “national broadband plan to ensure that everyone in the US has broadband access.” Granted, these aren’t entirely unheard of — Britain just did the same sort of thing a few weeks ago, and South Korea’s already aiming at 1Gbps for all. We appreciate that the money’s there, but only time will tell if leads to anything meaningful.

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Stimulus bill seeks plan to ensure all Americans have broadband access originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 18 Feb 2009 08:52:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Option’s GlobeSurfer X·1 turns USB modems into WiFi hotspots

You can definitely feel the oncoming rush or portable WiFi hotspots now that we’ve got products like Novatel’s insanely slick MiFi on the way to market, and now Option’s stepped up with its own flavor. While the end result is the same as Novatel’s offering, to get the GlobeSurfer X·1 surfing any kind of 3G data network, you’ll need to add a USB 3G modem of your own. Designed as a home of office connectivity device to enable printer sharing, local network sharing, and access to back up services that leverage an existing USB 3G card — or at least we assume. We’ll get more on this as soon as we can find one

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Option’s GlobeSurfer X·1 turns USB modems into WiFi hotspots originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 16 Feb 2009 03:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Skyhook XPS integrates with TI’s NaviLink and WiLink mobile solutions

It’s not that hybrid GPS systems are all that new, it’s just that most are working totally under the radar. Skyhook’s hoping to get its rendition out in the open a tad more via a new partnership with Texas Instruments. The company’s XPS hybrid positioning system is now cleared for integration within TI’s NaviLink and WiLink mobile solutions, though there’s no mention made of who all is drooling to get this into their phones. In short, Skyhook‘s XPS works by detecting WiFi hotspots, raw GPS readings and cellular IDs, and then comparing that information against a known database of geo-located points. In theory, this stuff could totally amp up the location abilities of most any handset, but in reality, we wouldn’t be surprised to see it get swept away and forgotten just like the eerily similar announcement between Skyhook and Broadcom. Full release is after the break.

Continue reading Skyhook XPS integrates with TI’s NaviLink and WiLink mobile solutions

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Skyhook XPS integrates with TI’s NaviLink and WiLink mobile solutions originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 16 Feb 2009 00:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Huawei announces i-Mo 3G modem with WiFi

Here’s a peek at a tiny modem making its debut at MWC next week. The Huawei i-Mo HSPA modem is, indeed very small — the company says about the size of a key chain — and it boasts both an HSDPA / HSUPA USB modem as well as WiFi, plus it’s got a MicroSD slot for storage. We don’t know about pricing or availability for this little guy yet, but it will probably be offered through carriers, and should show up sometime in the fourth quarter of 2009. Hooray!

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Huawei announces i-Mo 3G modem with WiFi originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 13 Feb 2009 11:08:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Southwest details in-flight WiFi plans, announces partnership with Yahoo!

Southwest got official with its WiFi plans late last month, but avid travelers who favor the only airline worth flying anymore (okay, Virgin America and JetBlue aren’t bad either) were left wondering about most of the details. Today, the company has fired up a single Row 44-equipped flight, and it has announced plans to equip three more airplanes with in-flight WiFi by early next month. Furthermore, it has nailed down a partnership with Yahoo! in order to offer an in-flight homepage with “destination-relevant content.” The service, which has yet to receive final FCC approval, will be tested over the next few months, and if all goes well, we’re left to hope, pray and beg that the airline rolls it out fleet-wide. There’s no mention of an actual price here, but it would totally rule if it bucked the trend and provided it to everyone for free. Right, everyone?

[Via Gadling]

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Southwest details in-flight WiFi plans, announces partnership with Yahoo! originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 11 Feb 2009 07:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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iriver’s Wave-Home WiFi VoIP appliance launches on KT Telecom

While Verizon gets its Hub, lucky KT Telecom subscribers in Korea now have access to iriver’s Wave-Home. The kits sells for 297,000 Korean Won or about $210 and features a WiFi VoIP handset in addition to that larger 7-inch display with 1.3 megapixel camera for video conferencing, surfing the web, checking your calendar and so on. You’ve gotta hand it to iriver, they reveal the initial UNIT2-S concept at a European trade show in August, refine it in Las Vegas for CES in January, and then launch it back home a month later. Now that’s style.

[Via Akihabara News]

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iriver’s Wave-Home WiFi VoIP appliance launches on KT Telecom originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 11 Feb 2009 04:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Snow Leopard gets hip to CoreLocation and multitouch

We’re in the Q1 2009, folks, and while we’d love to believe that the release of Snow Leopard is imminent, it looks like all we’ll have to be sustained by is rumors and innuendo for the time being. According to “insiders” at, well, Apple Insider, the eagerly awaited operating system will be taking some cues from the iPhone, adding both CoreLocation and opening up the multitouch trackpad to third-party developers. Since MacBooks don’t currently have GPS, we’re guessing CoreLocation will be powered by Skyhook’s WiFi-positioning service, but anything can happen down the line. With all the buzz over Google Latitude making its way onto all manner of devices, including the G1, select Blackberrys, and (someday!) the iPhone and iPod touch. With Mac sales being particularly laptop-heavy lately, it looks like location awareness is shaping up to be the must-have functionality of the coming year. Fabulous, darling. Fabulous.

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Snow Leopard gets hip to CoreLocation and multitouch originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 05 Feb 2009 13:07:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Comcast Kicks Off Commuter Rail Wi-Fi Trial in NJ

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Comcast will be providing Wi-Fi access to its customers at select New Jersey train stations, the cable company announced Monday.

“If you’ve got your Comcast high-speed internet log-in user ID and you’re in the area, you can log on,” according to a company spokeswoman. Access will cover the stations and the parking lot areas, but is not intended to be a wireless app that works in between stations on the train, she said.

Comcast kicked off the trial this weekend at about 100 NJ Transit stations throughout the state, according to the spokeswoman. The offering is an independent project, however; Comcast is not working directly with NJ Transit on the effort, she said.

Samsung to release 12 megapixels of cameraphone foolishness this month?

It’s been a few years since Samsung unleashed its 10 megapixel cameraphone onto the world. Now we’re hearing that Samsung will push the limits of absurdity to a full 12 megapixels “this month,” likely at Mobile World Congress. The phone is expected to hit the production lines in February with a European debut shortly thereafter. No details are provided other than the picture above used (but not attributed) by Unwired View. If this is the unannounced phone then we can obviously expect GPS geotagging, DivX video capture, and WiFi with DLNA support. One thing is clear: Samsung thinks that Europeans are pixel braggarts with little concern for image quality.

Update: Nope, that image is just a Photoshop of an 8 megapixel Innov8 — still, we wouldn’t be surprised to see the same feature set and industrial design in a 12 megapixel handset.

[Thanks, Robin of Loxley]

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Samsung to release 12 megapixels of cameraphone foolishness this month? originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 02 Feb 2009 05:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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WiFi Rail finalizes 20 year deal to bring internet to BART trains

Nearly a year to the day after we heard that WiFi trials were beginning on some of the San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit trains, WiFi Rail has announced a deal that’ll last a score and provide high-speed WiFi “throughout the BART transit system and on all BART commuter trains.” Reportedly, the network has successfully been tested to handle loads and provide speeds in excess of 15Mbps on trains moving 81 miles-per-hour. As it stands, four downtown San Francisco stations and some segments of the tunnels are already fully functional, but it’ll take until the end of 2010 before the entire network is complete. There’s no mention of what the price table will end up looking like, though we are told that subscriptions will be available by day, month or year. Now, if only this would filter out to every other mass transit entity in America, we’d be just jolly.

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WiFi Rail finalizes 20 year deal to bring internet to BART trains originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 31 Jan 2009 10:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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