It's Silicon Valley vs. Telcos in Battle for Wireless Spectrum
IT'S SILICON VALLEY VS TELCOS IN BATTLE FOR WIRELESS SPECTRUM
[SOURCE: Wired, AUTHOR: Frank Rose]
Apple's iPhone may be the most eagerly awaited gadget of the year, but when it finally goes on sale some time next month, only 30 percent of US mobile phone customers -- those who subscribe to AT&T's wireless service -- will be able to use it. Verizon subscribers might have had a shot, but executives at that carrier nixed the idea of letting an Apple device onto their network years ago. It's as if Mac owners had to connect to the Internet through AT&T because their machines wouldn't work on Verizon, Comcast or Time Warner Cable. The wire-line Internet doesn't work that way, and wireless doesn't have to either. By the end of this year, the FCC is expected to start auctioning a frequency band that could be used for a wireless network that any device -- be it a cell phone, laptop, desktop, TV or toaster -- would be able to connect to. A proposal to build such a network has been presented by Frontline Wireless, a startup backed by three of Silicon Valley's biggest players: Venture capitalist John Doerr, Google angel investor Ram Sriram and one-time Netscape CEO James Barksdale. But Frontline will be bidding against behemoths like Cingular and Verizon, and whether it has a chance will be determined within the next few weeks, when the FCC sets the rules for the auction.
http://www.wired.com/techbiz/media/news/2007/05/uhf_spectrum
It's Silicon Valley vs. Telcos in Battle for Wireless Spectrum