Posts Tagged ‘3G’

The Business Case for M2M

Monday, March 1st, 2010

In October ’09, Sprint announced that its Emerging Solutions Unit would be focused on accelerating the delivery of M2M and mobile computing solutions. Now four months later, Paget Alves, President, Sprint Business Markets Group, shares his thoughts with us about the company’s M2M strategy and market opportunity, including industry examples. This will help you understand why there’s growing interest in this technology, and Sprint’s unique role. (more…)

Five Key Considerations for Enterprise 4G

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010

For an enterprise to utilize 3G or 4G – or for that matter, embracing wireless access as a strategy – is something that many companies are giving serious thought to, especially now that 4G is steadily spreading across the country, market by market.
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GSM Mobile Phone Code Cracked by Hacker - Just how secure are mobile communications?

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

On December 29th, Information Week announced that a German computer scientist cracked the encryption algorithm that secures 80% of the world’s mobile phones. This means more than 3 billion mobile users, in over 200 countries, could be compromised. That sounds big, but just how big is the threat, and what does it mean to your enterprise? (more…)

No Hotspot? No Problem: Serve-Yourself Hotspots

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

What if hotspots became harder to find?

As this Wall Street Journal story pointed out recently, some coffee shops and  restaurants that once welcomed laptop-toting “customers” to use their hot spots are becoming less hospitable. Maybe it wasn’t a big deal earlier when these visitors lingered for hours over a cup of coffee while they worked on their computers. But the recession changed all that, and now store owners are fretting that they’re hoarding tables that could be used for the revenue-producing lunch crowd.

This makes Sprint’s announcement of a new make-your-own-hotspot solution extremely timely. (more…)

The Emphasis is on Unified

Monday, May 11th, 2009

To appreciate the value of unified communications, the emphasis really needs to be on “unified” versus “communications.” Any organization can communicate, with almost unlimited options for how they do it. But it takes a special mix of technologies and capabilities to make those communications truly unified. This allows the people involved to function as one tight and highly effective unit. (more…)