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Wi-Fi has become the preferred means for connecting to the internet
- at home, in the office, in hotels and at airports. Increasingly,
Wi-Fi also provides internet access for remote communities where it
is deployed by volunteers in community-based networks, by operators
in 'hotspots' and by municipalities in 'hotzones'. This book traces
the global success of Wi-Fi to the landmark change in radio
spectrum policy by the US FCC in 1985, the initiative by NCR
Corporation to start development of Wireless-LANs and the drive for
an open standard IEEE 802.11, released in 1997. It also singles out
and explains the significance of the initiative by Steve Jobs at
Apple to include Wireless-LAN in the iBook, which moved the product
from the early adopters to the mass market. The book explains these
developments through first-hand accounts by industry practitioners
and concludes with reflections and implications for government
policy and firm strategy.
Wi-Fi has become the preferred means for connecting to the internet
- at home, in the office, in hotels and at airports. Increasingly,
Wi-Fi also provides internet access for remote communities where it
is deployed by volunteers in community-based networks, by operators
in 'hotspots' and by municipalities in 'hotzones'. This book traces
the global success of Wi-Fi to the landmark change in radio
spectrum policy by the US FCC in 1985, the initiative by NCR
Corporation to start development of Wireless-LANs and the drive for
an open standard IEEE 802.11, released in 1997. It also singles out
and explains the significance of the initiative by Steve Jobs at
Apple to include Wireless-LAN in the iBook, which moved the product
from the early adopters to the mass market. The book explains these
developments through first-hand accounts by industry practitioners
and concludes with reflections and implications for government
policy and firm strategy.
The European Commission's Digital Agenda for Europe sets the
targets for broadband development by 2020, yet current broadband
market outcomes vary widely amongst the EU Member States and the
objectives seem challenging for many. In this book, a group of
in-country experts follows a framework of qualitative and
quantitative analysis to capture patterns, commonalities and
differences between twelve different European countries, in terms
of infrastructure endowments, institutional arrangements, time of
joining the EU, behavior of market actors, personal interventions
of regulators, the role of municipalities, and the role perception
of governments. By exploring how the past explains present
broadband market outcomes, these longitudinal country case studies
look to how improvements can be made for the future. As the first
in-depth study of broadband developments in Europe, this book will
be invaluable to policy-makers, regulators, academic researchers,
advisors, and consultants working in the fields of
telecommunications, broadband development, technology and
innovation.
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