Clearwire to Offer Samsung, HTC Phones for 4G, 3G, WiFi
Clearwire has plans to release 4G-capable smartphones from Samsung and HTC by year's end. While HTC has introduced the Evo 4G, which Sprint will offer for use on the Clearwire network, the news was the first mention of a 4G Samsung smartphone.
The 4G WiMax provider Clearwire will introduced
WiMax-enabled smartphones from Samsung and HTC
before the end of 2010, the company announced in its May 5 first-quarter 2010
earnings statement.
Both the Samsung and HTC phones will offer
3G, 4G and WiFi connectivity, while the Samsung model will run the Android
operating system and be optimized for "heavy video and video communication
use," according to Clearwire. While under the Clear brand, the
WiMax-enabled Samsung Mondi MID (mobile Internet device) is currently
offered, it was the first news of a WiMax smartphone from Samsung.
No additional details were offered on the
HTC phone.
"Customer demand for 4G services is truly making 2010 the year of mobile
broadband, as always-on true mobile broadband keeps people connected to the
information, services and applications that matter most," Clearwire CEO Bill
Morrow said in a statement. "With record-breaking subscriber growth, a
robust wholesale -network of networks' approach to 4G, and customer usage that far
surpasses anything seen on 3G networks today, Clearwire is standing at the
forefront of the next evolution in telecommunications and technology."
Clearwire ended the quarter with 971,000 subscribers and revenue of $106.7
million, which was up 72 percent year over year.
U.S. wireless carrier Sprint, which owns a 51 percent share of Clearwire, is
one of the referred-to networks within Clearwire's network, and March 23
it introduced what's being billed as the
world's first fully integrated 4G consumer handset, the HTC Evo 4G.
Running the Android 2.1 operating system, the Evo additionally features a
4.3-inch capacitive touch screen, a 1GHz Snapdragon processor, an HD-capable
camcorder, an 8-megapixel camera and an additional 1.3-megapixel front-facing
camera.
Through Sprint, the Evo will have access to 4G technology through Clearwire's
WiMax network, which is so far deployed in about 27 cities. On May 5, it
announced plans to add an additional 19 cities-which include Nashville,
Tenn.; Daytona and Orlando,
Fla.; and Syracuse,
N.Y.-by the summer. New York City, Los
Angeles, Boston, Denver, Minneapolis, the San Francisco Bay area, Miami,
Cincinnati, Cleveland and Pittsburgh are also on docket for 2010.
By the end of the year, Clearwire expects to extend 4G coverage to more than
120 million people, both through the Clear brand name and through wholesale
providers, such as Sprint-and, possibly, T-Mobile.
On May 5, the
Financial Times reported that T-Mobile was considering turning to Clearwire for
its 4G network support, in addition to considering either building out a 4G
network itself or purchasing LTE-based (long-term evolution) 4G capabilities
from hedge fund Harbinger
Capital, which has plans for a dual-mode cellular-satellite network.
Clearwire didn't offer any pricing or more exact launch-date details on the
phones.








