A major US mobile carrier is set to launch the first wireless broadband
services based on the emerging WiMax standard next year.
Electronics giant
Samsung has held talks
with a number of US telecoms firms and other parties interested in the
technology, and plans to begin field trials next year, according to a report in
the Financial Times.
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Samsung already has WiMax deployments in South Korea and has agreements with
several carriers to deliver field trials worldwide.
In August Pipex
announced that it has teamed up with networking equipment firm
Airspan Networks
to launch a six-month UK WiMax wireless wide area networking trial in the
Midlands.
Graham Currier, wireless development director at Pipex, said: "This is very
much Samsung claiming its territory in the US. It is one of many announcements
that will follow.
"Worldwide there is a debate about how WiMax will work but, as trials develop
next year, we will start to see real implementations take place."
The trial involves delivering Pipex's home and business broadband services
over Airspan's WiMax last-mile access products.
In addition to data services, the trial will also test VoIP services that
would allow Pipex to offer voice and data over wireless broadband product
bundles.
WiMax is a certification mark for products that pass conformity and
interoperability tests for the
IEEE 802.16 standards.
The technology is being seen by some as similar to Wi-Fi but providing a
service over square kilometres rather than square metres.
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