As 4G wireless broadband provider Clearwire celebrates its latest market rollout in Las Vegas, Samsung says it will introduce the Mondi WiMax tablet for Clearwire customers. Clearwire also announces an Aug. 1 debut for a dual-mode 4G/3G modem for customers who travel outside of the company's 4G coverage.Samsung plans to debut its Mondi WiMax tablet for Clearwire customers on
Aug. 1 in Atlanta, Baltimore,
Las Vegas and Portland,
Ore., the four markets where Clearwire has
rolled out its 4G mobile Internet service.
The 4.3-inch touch-screen Mondi offers WiMax and Wi-Fi connectivity with a QWERTY
keyboard, optical mouse, GPS and the Opera
9.5 browser. The Mondi runs on Microsoft's Windows Mobile 6.1 operating system,
but contains no voice component. It will be available in select Best Buy stores
in Clearwire markets and Clearwire retail outlets for $449 without a contract
and $349 with a two-year Clearwire contract.
On the same day Samsung brings out the Mondi, Clearwire said it will offer the
Clearwire 4G+ Mobile USB, a dual-mode 4G/3G
modem for customers who travel outside of the company's 4G coverage. The USB
device uses Sprint's nationwide 3G network for Internet service outside of
Clearwire's service area.
In addition, Clearwire announced that it will introduce software that connects
Apple Mac laptops to the Clearwire network using a USB
modem. The software is compatible with existing Clearwire USB
4G WiMax-only modems and will be available for download from clear.com. Dual-mode 4G+ Mobile USB
service is expected to be available for Macs in the fourth quarter.
As part of a multiyear network build-out plan, Clearwire plans to add
additional 4G network service in Chicago,
Dallas/Ft. Worth, Honolulu, Philadelphia, Seattle and Charlotte, N.C., by the
end of 2009. Some of the additional markets in which launches are planned in
2010 include New York, Boston,
Washington, Houston
and the San Francisco Bay Area.
Clearwire and Sprint Nextel are the only two U.S. carriers betting on WiMax technology to deliver 4G wireless
broadband. Verizon and AT&T, the nation's two largest carriers, are betting
on a rival technology called LTE for their 4G networks. Both WiMax and LTE
allow for the delivery of last-mile wireless broadband access, promising faster
download speeds than current cellular networks.
Sprint Nextel opened the original U.S. WiMax market in
Baltimore in 2008. Following a merger that saw Sprint turn over its entire
2.5GHz spectrum holdings and its WiMax-related assets, including its Xohm
division, to Clearwire, the newly
branded Clear Wireless Jan. 6 rolled out a WiMax network in Portland.
As part of the merger deal, Clearwire also brought in
$3.2 billion in WiMax investments from Comcast, Intel, Time Warner Cable,
Google and Bright House Networks. Comcast, Intel and Google have already taken
write-downs on their WiMax investments.