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Corante has launched a special section devoted to the Future of Wireless. It's worth a look. The first feature is a Q&A with the founders of Dodgeball.


Here's a very good blog about how Bluetooth appears to be not only hanging in there, but succeeding rather nicely. Perhaps it was just a matter of getting those unit costs low enough so that vendors no longer hesitate to embed it within devices.


If Cisco does buy Airespace, this will be one smart purchase, akin to the Linksys deal. Airespace was making nice inroads on Cisco's market share and really understands how to help enterprises make the most of their Wi-Fi grids.


Another piece of the puzzle falls into place: Vodafone and Connexion by Boeing are working together to create a seamless "ground to air" experience for travelers.


Unstrung reports that Flarion won a small deployment in Texas. Every little bit helps when you're a startup. But bigger things are coming...


Siemens is getting some blazing speeds out of OFDM. It is also going to be building OFDM gear in partnership with Flarion. OFDM is becoming the technology of choice for next-generation networks. Qualcomm's on board. Wi-Fi uses it. Who's next?


Unstrung reports that PCCW has dropped Navini in favor of IPWireless. Navini had tried to go the proprietary fixed wireless route awhile back, then began backing 802.20 only to change course and join the WiMAX Forum.


Yours truly is quoted in an article by Jeannette Borzo on some of the creative uses for Wi-Fi networks once they're in place. Wi-Fi isn't just about Internet access anymore. In fact, I was at the Electronic Home Expo recently and was suprised to see just how many home monitoring devices and remote controls that now use Wi-Fi.


James Enck recaps the results of Norway's 3.5GHz auction. Looks like NextGenTel is betting big on WiMAX.


TeliaSonera drops Wi-Fi pricing by 40%. Sounds nice, but they're still overpriced.