Wireless falls short of hype
The convergence of highquality voice telephony and Internet capabilities has been championed, but 'its hype has never met up with its expectations'
Picture this: Teleconferencing while on the go, using a wireless phone that
lets you browse the Web at the same time. Such technological miracles await
users of the much-anticipated third-generation wireless, also known as 3G
wireless.
The convergence of high-quality, high-speed two-way voice telephony
and Internet capabilities has been championed by industry, government and
the media, but a senior analyst for mobile communications said that kind
of communication is still years away.
"Its hype has never met up with its expectations," Bryan Prohm said
Tuesday during a conference sponsored by Potomac Forum Ltd. in Washington,
D.C.
Prohm, of the Gartner Group Inc., suggested 3G wireless will never fully
catch on. Instead, telecommunications companies will piggyback newer services — as they perfect them — onto existing systems. This is sometimes referred
to as 2.5G wireless, he said. A big problem facing 3G, he said, is that
there are already multiple standards proposed by multiple vendors. That
makes it difficult for companies to backtrack and begin building a single
standard that will allow for the global roaming necessary for the technology
to deliver on the hype.
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