- This topic has 120 replies, 9 voices, and was last updated 14 years, 10 months ago by CDMA ENG.
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February 16, 2010 at 7:59 PM #514678February 16, 2010 at 9:28 PM #513789CDMA ENGParticipant
Read this and you tell me where the industry is headed.
http://www.mobilecrunch.com/2010/02/16/rim-ceo-pulls-an-att-we-need-to-conserve-bandwidth/
Everyone thinks big bandwidth systems are just around the corner…
Guess what… there not… It will be some time.
The carriers will only give you enough to keep you somewhat happy. Devices will be regulated in the future, in my humble opinion, to limit thier bandwidth.
The air interface will be capable but the backhaul to the LEC will always lag.
CE
February 16, 2010 at 9:28 PM #513937CDMA ENGParticipantRead this and you tell me where the industry is headed.
http://www.mobilecrunch.com/2010/02/16/rim-ceo-pulls-an-att-we-need-to-conserve-bandwidth/
Everyone thinks big bandwidth systems are just around the corner…
Guess what… there not… It will be some time.
The carriers will only give you enough to keep you somewhat happy. Devices will be regulated in the future, in my humble opinion, to limit thier bandwidth.
The air interface will be capable but the backhaul to the LEC will always lag.
CE
February 16, 2010 at 9:28 PM #514361CDMA ENGParticipantRead this and you tell me where the industry is headed.
http://www.mobilecrunch.com/2010/02/16/rim-ceo-pulls-an-att-we-need-to-conserve-bandwidth/
Everyone thinks big bandwidth systems are just around the corner…
Guess what… there not… It will be some time.
The carriers will only give you enough to keep you somewhat happy. Devices will be regulated in the future, in my humble opinion, to limit thier bandwidth.
The air interface will be capable but the backhaul to the LEC will always lag.
CE
February 16, 2010 at 9:28 PM #514452CDMA ENGParticipantRead this and you tell me where the industry is headed.
http://www.mobilecrunch.com/2010/02/16/rim-ceo-pulls-an-att-we-need-to-conserve-bandwidth/
Everyone thinks big bandwidth systems are just around the corner…
Guess what… there not… It will be some time.
The carriers will only give you enough to keep you somewhat happy. Devices will be regulated in the future, in my humble opinion, to limit thier bandwidth.
The air interface will be capable but the backhaul to the LEC will always lag.
CE
February 16, 2010 at 9:28 PM #514701CDMA ENGParticipantRead this and you tell me where the industry is headed.
http://www.mobilecrunch.com/2010/02/16/rim-ceo-pulls-an-att-we-need-to-conserve-bandwidth/
Everyone thinks big bandwidth systems are just around the corner…
Guess what… there not… It will be some time.
The carriers will only give you enough to keep you somewhat happy. Devices will be regulated in the future, in my humble opinion, to limit thier bandwidth.
The air interface will be capable but the backhaul to the LEC will always lag.
CE
February 17, 2010 at 8:28 AM #513905anParticipantFlu, personally, I think the market will be big enough for all of them and having many big players competing will be great for consumers and 3rd party app developers like you and me. I’m enjoying my dessert too.
CDMA ENG, I have no doubt they limit bandwith at opening, but once software start to demand more bandwith, they’ll release it. Imagine streaming HD contents and everything being stored on the “cloud”.
February 17, 2010 at 8:28 AM #514053anParticipantFlu, personally, I think the market will be big enough for all of them and having many big players competing will be great for consumers and 3rd party app developers like you and me. I’m enjoying my dessert too.
CDMA ENG, I have no doubt they limit bandwith at opening, but once software start to demand more bandwith, they’ll release it. Imagine streaming HD contents and everything being stored on the “cloud”.
February 17, 2010 at 8:28 AM #514476anParticipantFlu, personally, I think the market will be big enough for all of them and having many big players competing will be great for consumers and 3rd party app developers like you and me. I’m enjoying my dessert too.
CDMA ENG, I have no doubt they limit bandwith at opening, but once software start to demand more bandwith, they’ll release it. Imagine streaming HD contents and everything being stored on the “cloud”.
February 17, 2010 at 8:28 AM #514566anParticipantFlu, personally, I think the market will be big enough for all of them and having many big players competing will be great for consumers and 3rd party app developers like you and me. I’m enjoying my dessert too.
CDMA ENG, I have no doubt they limit bandwith at opening, but once software start to demand more bandwith, they’ll release it. Imagine streaming HD contents and everything being stored on the “cloud”.
February 17, 2010 at 8:28 AM #514815anParticipantFlu, personally, I think the market will be big enough for all of them and having many big players competing will be great for consumers and 3rd party app developers like you and me. I’m enjoying my dessert too.
CDMA ENG, I have no doubt they limit bandwith at opening, but once software start to demand more bandwith, they’ll release it. Imagine streaming HD contents and everything being stored on the “cloud”.
February 17, 2010 at 9:04 AM #513955afx114ParticipantI read an interesting article the other day theorizing that as flash prices continue to plummet and sizes continue to increase, one day someone (probably Google) could give out a phone with 10TB of storage and 100GBps bandwidth for free — provided you agree to allow them to use the extra space and bandwidth on your phone for cloud storage. Essentially you’d become one tiny piece of an infinitely scalable cloud, serviced by the mesh of mobile phones floating around out there. The idea being that, yes, technology is improving faster than consumers can consume it, but someone somewhere will find a use for all of that “extra” computing power, storage space, and bandwidth.
Google = Skynet
I, personally, can’t wait.
February 17, 2010 at 9:04 AM #514103afx114ParticipantI read an interesting article the other day theorizing that as flash prices continue to plummet and sizes continue to increase, one day someone (probably Google) could give out a phone with 10TB of storage and 100GBps bandwidth for free — provided you agree to allow them to use the extra space and bandwidth on your phone for cloud storage. Essentially you’d become one tiny piece of an infinitely scalable cloud, serviced by the mesh of mobile phones floating around out there. The idea being that, yes, technology is improving faster than consumers can consume it, but someone somewhere will find a use for all of that “extra” computing power, storage space, and bandwidth.
Google = Skynet
I, personally, can’t wait.
February 17, 2010 at 9:04 AM #514526afx114ParticipantI read an interesting article the other day theorizing that as flash prices continue to plummet and sizes continue to increase, one day someone (probably Google) could give out a phone with 10TB of storage and 100GBps bandwidth for free — provided you agree to allow them to use the extra space and bandwidth on your phone for cloud storage. Essentially you’d become one tiny piece of an infinitely scalable cloud, serviced by the mesh of mobile phones floating around out there. The idea being that, yes, technology is improving faster than consumers can consume it, but someone somewhere will find a use for all of that “extra” computing power, storage space, and bandwidth.
Google = Skynet
I, personally, can’t wait.
February 17, 2010 at 9:04 AM #514616afx114ParticipantI read an interesting article the other day theorizing that as flash prices continue to plummet and sizes continue to increase, one day someone (probably Google) could give out a phone with 10TB of storage and 100GBps bandwidth for free — provided you agree to allow them to use the extra space and bandwidth on your phone for cloud storage. Essentially you’d become one tiny piece of an infinitely scalable cloud, serviced by the mesh of mobile phones floating around out there. The idea being that, yes, technology is improving faster than consumers can consume it, but someone somewhere will find a use for all of that “extra” computing power, storage space, and bandwidth.
Google = Skynet
I, personally, can’t wait.
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