Mac drivers for Clearwire WiMAX coming in August, Linux DIY code to follow

From August 17, a free download will contain all a Mac user will need to connect to Clearwire’s slowly expanding WiMAX empire. Well, there’s also the matter of a $79.99 Clear 4G+ USB modem, available from the beginning of the month, but you can rationalize that purchase by noting it can also hook up to Sprint’s 3G network. Once you’ve got those things, and you’ve paid your dues — $30 per month for mobile services — we’re sure they’ll finally let you in on the superfast mobile browsing party. Linux users have nothing to smile about here, unless they consider Clearwire CTO John Saw’s promise to release code from which to build their own drivers a reason to cheer.

Filed under: ,

Mac drivers for Clearwire WiMAX coming in August, Linux DIY code to follow originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 22 Jul 2009 10:25:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

CLEAR WiMAX goes live in Las Vegas, Samsung Mondi ships to take advantage

Looking for one more excuse to stay inside and avoid that sweltering Las Vegas heat this summer? Good news, gamblers — Clearwire’s CLEAR WiMAX service has officially gone live across 638 square miles in the greater Las Vegas area. By the books, that’s serving right around 1.7 million residents, not including the influx of tourists from other WiMAX-equipped cities that will undoubtedly take advantage. To coincide with the launch, Samsung has also announced that its QWERTY-packin’, DivX-friendly Mondi — which we toyed with back at CTIA — will be available in Vegas-area Best Buy and Clearwire outlets starting August 1st. Said MID arrives with 4G support, WiFi, GPS, 3 megapixel camera, a QWERTY keypad, a 4.3-inch touchscreen, Opera 9.5 and a customizable set of widgets on top of Windows Mobile. The device is supposedly available now through Samsung’s website and “select Samsung authorized distributors,” but we’re having no lucky hunting one down at present time.

Read – CLEAR in Las Vegas
Read – Samsung Mondi shipping

Filed under: ,

CLEAR WiMAX goes live in Las Vegas, Samsung Mondi ships to take advantage originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 21 Jul 2009 10:06:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Viliv S7 UMPC gets final pricing and specifications

We’ve held onto our hats for quite awhile waiting for this day to come, but at long last, Viliv is dishing out the final specification lists and prices for its remarkably striking S7 UMPC. First shown way back at IDF 2008 as a prototype, this QWERTY-packin’ machine has matured quite nicely over the months, with a trio of models on tap to showcase its mobile prowess. The entry-level I-LOG HX is equipped with a 1.33GHz Intel Atom Z520 CPU, 1GB of RAM, a 60GB hard drive, a battery good for 9.5 hours of use and Windows XP, while the mid-range I-LOG 3X steps up to a 32GB SSD. The flagship D-LOG 3X even gets an internal DMB TV tuner, while WiBro (South Korea’s WiMAX) is an option on all three. We expect the 7-inch device — which is priced at ₩729,000 ($572), ₩799,000 ($628) and ₩849,000 ($666) in order of mention — to ship in its homeland soon, though no official release date has been made public.

[Via SlashGear]

Update: jkkmobile has it that international versions could feature processors as speedy as 2GHz along with Vista and a free upgrade to Windows 7.

Filed under:

Viliv S7 UMPC gets final pricing and specifications originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 07 Jul 2009 07:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Comcast launches High-Speed 2go WiMax service tomorrow in Portland, other cities to follow by end of year

Put down that bowl of homemade granola and take heed, citizens of Portland: you’re about to get a first crack at Comcast’s High-Speed 2go service, and we don’t want any of your excuses about “taking a tech sabbatical” or “getting lost in the wilderness” to keep you away from sweet, sweet broadband bundles. Based on Clearwire’s WiMAX service, Comcast High-Speed 2go is available in a “Fast Pack Metro” bundle which packs home internet service, a WiFi router and the WiMAX for $50 a month, with another $20 tacking on nationwide Sprint 3G (along with the appropriate 3G / WiMAX combo card). Existing Triple Play customers can add the WiMAX by itself for $30. Comcast plans to launch similar service in Atlanta, Chicago, and Philadelphia before the end of 2009.

Filed under:

Comcast launches High-Speed 2go WiMax service tomorrow in Portland, other cities to follow by end of year originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 29 Jun 2009 14:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Pioneer uses WiMAX to buffer content into your commute

Pioneer uses WiMAX to buffer content into your commute

What the world needs now is another distraction to keep a driver’s eyes off the road, and Pioneer is ensuring wheelmen of the future will have something other than the asphalt to focus on with what it’s calling the Network AV playback system. It relies on WiMAX to send your entire backlog of Knight Rider episodes straight to your Trans Am, and could stream every track from the Ronin Original Motion Picture Soundtrack too. Pioneer also envisions its technology beaming data to your backyard and anywhere else you can get a WiMAX connection — which, right now, isn’t too many places. But, hey, at least with this tech you can drive somewhere that does. Optimistic video after the break.

[Via DigInfo]

Continue reading Pioneer uses WiMAX to buffer content into your commute

Filed under: , , ,

Pioneer uses WiMAX to buffer content into your commute originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 23 Jun 2009 08:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Lenovo intros well-connected 0.83-inch thick ThinkPad T400s

Thinner than some netbooks and more potent than four or five of them combined, Lenovo’s ThinkPad T400s aims to hit some sort of sweet spot in between weak ultraportables and battery-draining 15-inchers. The 14.1-inch lappie measures in at a remarkable 0.83-inches thin and boasts a starting weight of under four pounds. Within, you’ll find Lenovo’s heralded roll cage technology, a 2.53GHz Core 2 Duo processor, your choice of a 128GB SSD or 250GB HDD, a 9.5mm slim DVD burner or Blu-ray player, a multitouch trackpad, Ethernet, WiFi, optional WiMAX / WWAN / Bluetooth / ultra-wideband, a 34mm ExpressCard slot (or 5-in-1 card reader), a battery good for six hours and VGA / DisplayPort outputs. There’s also support for the company’s ConstantConnect and Protect technology as well as a built-in USB / eSATA port. In a surprising move, Lenovo decided to actually tweak the keyboard that has become a staple of the ThinkPad line; it increased the size of the Delete and Escape keys and tightened up the spaces between the keys to “help avoid crumbs that would otherwise fall below the keyboard.” You can check the full release just past the break, and you can call one your own starting today for $1,599 and up.

Continue reading Lenovo intros well-connected 0.83-inch thick ThinkPad T400s

Filed under:

Lenovo intros well-connected 0.83-inch thick ThinkPad T400s originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 23 Jun 2009 00:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Giz Explains: What AT&T’s 7.2Mbps Network Really Means

AT&T’s contribution to the improved overall speed of the iPhone 3GS—their upgraded 7.2Mbps network—is nearly as important as Apple’s. But 7.2 is just a number, and AT&T’s network is just one of many. Here’s where it actually stands.

First, a direct translation: AT&T’s upgraded (or more accurately, upgrading) 3G network claims data download rates of 7.2 megabits per second. Though that’s the lingo used to describe bandwidth, it’s important to remember that those are not megabytes. AT&T’s impressive-sounding 7.2 megabits would yield somewhere closer to .9 megabytes (900 kilobytes) per second, and that’s only if you’re getting peak performance, which you never will because…

That 7.2Mbps is theoretical, and due to technical overhead, network business, device speed and overzealous marketing, real world speeds are significantly lower. UPDATEDEven looking at the old hardware on the current 3G network—the networking guts in your iPhone 3G is technically capable of reaching the 3.6Mbps downstream that AT&T’s network is technically capable of pushing. There are lots of reasons you don’t ever see that. For one, it’s limited to 1.4Mbps to preserve battery life—the faster you download, the faster you burn that battery. Another is congestion—all the a-holes watching YouTubes around you—and backhaul—the amount of pipe running to a tower, or more English-y still, the total bandwidth the tower has available. Another is proximity—the closer to the tower you are, the faster your phone is gonna fly. So for top speeds, you should sit under a deserted tower with plenty of backhaul.

As you can see on our chart above, our tested speeds for everything from EV-DO Rev. A to WiMax ran at anywhere from one half to one sixth their potential speed. Accordingly, Jason found AT&T’s network to run at about 1.6Mbps with the iPhone 3G S—about a third faster than with the 3G, though he was probably still connecting at 3.6Mbps rates—the 7.2 rollout won’t be complete until 2011, according to AT&T.

AT&T-style HSDPA is expected to reach out to an eventual theoretical speed of 14Mbps, which will undoubtedly make the current 3G networks feel slow, but won’t necessarily blow them out of the water. That’s the thing: the iPhone, and indeed just about all high-end handsets on the market today, operate at speeds that are reasonably close to the limits of 3G technology. In a funny sort of way, the iPhone 3GS is already a bit out of date.

So what’s next? And what the hell are those really long green bars up there? Those are the so-called 4G (fourth generation) wireless technologies. Americans can ignore HSPA+ and EV-DO Rev B. for the most part, and given that they’re the slowest of the next-gen bunch, shouldn’t feel too bad. And anyway, as Matt explained, WiMax and LTE are what’s next for us.

Both Verizon and AT&T are within a couple of years of deploying LTE in their networks, and WiMax is already out there in some cities. Our own WiMax tests on Clearwire’s network peaked at an astounding 12Mbps—nearly eight times faster than the iPhone 3GS on AT&T. And even if WiMax is shaping up to be more of a general broadband protocol than a cellular one, this is the kind of thing that’ll be in your phones in a few years, and the promises are mind-boggling: earlier this year, Verizon’s LTE were breaking 60Mbps.

So in short, your brand-new, “S”-for-speed iPhone is pretty speedy—as long as you only look to the past.

Clearwire’s WiMAX ordained with official Atlanta launch

Sure, Clearwire has actually been running its WiMAX network in Atlanta for six weeks already, but that technicality isn’t stopping the company from deciding now is the time to “launch” the service in the metro area, with an appropriately-sized marketing blitz to boot. Portland travelers already using the service should feel at home now with their own personal 4G network to keep them company while they engorge on the recommended dosage of Chik-Fil-A sandwiches and Varsity chili dogs. Prices are identical to what we’ve already heard and, yes, even though the company just quietly launched the service in Las Vegas, expect to see the delayed red carpet rollout for that city sometime later this Summer.

Filed under: ,

Clearwire’s WiMAX ordained with official Atlanta launch originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 16 Jun 2009 03:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

VAIO P gets whole new lease on life with Atom Z550 processor, SSD and WiMAX

A whole new day is dawning for the never-ever-a-netbook Sony VAIO P — those new processor and drive upgrades apparently have the little PC churning through benchmarks at twice the pace of the original. Most of the benchmark help comes from the SSD drive, but the Atom Z550 doesn’t hurt. Meanwhile, Japan is getting a WiMAX version to churn through stereotypically Japanese websites in record time. We’d be jealous if only we lived under 1,000 miles from the nearest WiMAX signal.

Read
– VAIO P gets WiMAX
Read – VAIO P benchmarks

Filed under:

VAIO P gets whole new lease on life with Atom Z550 processor, SSD and WiMAX originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 13 Jun 2009 22:50:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

NEC builds WiMAX router for sharing sweet broadband goodies with your friends over WiFi

We’re big into 3G routers, don’t get us wrong, but with a bit of WiMAX on tap, the concept becomes all the more succulent. NEC is showing off a vaguely defined Mobile WiMAX Router at Interop Tokyo 2009, which can run on battery and shares its connection over WiFi. NEC isn’t talking launch plans just yet, but plans on rolling out the device alongside local WiMAX rollouts.

Filed under: ,

NEC builds WiMAX router for sharing sweet broadband goodies with your friends over WiFi originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 12 Jun 2009 15:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments