Your Wireless Internet Need Not Be Strictly Mobile nor Patchy
Cat.: Wireless Innovations25. May 2010
The universe of wireless internet technologies has really come an incredibly long way since the first cell phones were equipped with web navigation capabilities back in the early 1990s. Since then, successive revolutions within this field of modern telecommunications technology have riveted the wireless internet-using population, opening up new possibilities that many of us wouldn’t have been expecting for another 10 or 20 years! Among the most significant strides forward to be made in recent years have been the arrival of fourth generation mobile standards, the ability to use wireless signals from stationary locations and the increasingly reliable, non-patchy nature of wireless networks in the nation’s principal urban (and increasingly suburban) communities.
With every new generation of wireless internet that technicians and engineers unleash on the broader population and marketplace, there are truly exciting advancements to come with. From second to third generation mobile standards we saw the door opened to voice over internet protocol applications and other broadband-intense applications; now, from third to fourth generation mobile standards we are seeing even more dynamic VoIP applications and other apps that most of us would only expect to use on a potent desktop computer. Furthermore, next generation wireless internet is bringing us download speeds that most cable/DSL subscribers can only expect to get on the best of days, with speeds topping 10 to 12 Mbps on a regular basis.
The network architecture being deployed in many next generation systems is so clever that, lo and behold, citywide wireless internet is finally here—and that is meaning wireless connections for stationary, home or office based users. Why not take advantage of a superbly reliable signal that offers you more service flexibility (such as simultaneous stationary and mobile access) and which brings better speeds to your office or home setting?! With next generation wireless, all this and more could be yours!