- Wed Oct 27 2004 McCaw's stream of consciousness
Craig McCaw goes to the Canadian hinterland and sells his wares to a military dictator.
Posted by Jim Hu
- Mon Oct 25 2004 Intel, wireless pioneer McCaw team up on WiMax
The chipmaker and Craig McCaw's latest company partner on WiMax--a significant move for the emerging industry.
Posted by Richard Shim and Ben Charny
- Tue Sep 9 2008 CTIA show to highlight mobile Web
Semiannual conference, this week in San Francisco, to take a closer look at how handset makers, access providers, and media companies are driving the adoption of wireless browsing.
Posted by Marguerite Reardon
- Wed Oct 27 2004 Wireless pioneer reflects on roots, looks to WiMax
Craig McCaw discusses Cingular's acquisition of AT&T Wireless and looks toward his new WiMax venture.
Posted by Jim Hu and Ben Charny
- Thu Oct 28 2004 At wireless conference, silly services rule
reporter's notebook Concerned about coverage? It's a good thing you didn't go to CTIA; people there were busy playing "Swordfish."
Posted by Ben Charny
- Wed Sep 10 2008 Mobile carrier CEOs still want network control
CEOs from three of four big wireless operators say opening their networks is essential to new devices and application developers, but they won't cede total control.
Posted by Marguerite Reardon
- Thu Oct 28 2004 At wireless show, services take center stage
Games, graphic ring tones and other services dominate the showroom floor. Also: Yahoo battles Google for the cell phone.
Posted by CNET News.com Staff
- Mon Mar 26 2007 Wireless industry gears up for WiMax
Where does 3G wireless go from here? Many equipment makers and carriers are looking to the packet-based technology known as WiMax.
Posted by Marguerite Reardon
- Tue May 6 2008 Sprint Nextel to spin off WiMax network
Mobile operator to create a joint venture with Clearwire that is backed by Comcast, Time Warner Cable, Bright House Networks, Google, and Intel.
Posted by Marguerite Reardon
- Wed Jul 18 2001 Satellite companies get wireless licenses
The FCC awards eight licenses, angering wireless industry players that wanted to use the radio waves for the next generation of cellular phone service.
Posted by Ben Charny