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Re: Zeev Hed post# 232353

Friday, 04/16/2004 8:40:07 PM

Friday, April 16, 2004 8:40:07 PM

Post# of 704041
Zeev, Since we can't buy any Flarion, maybe it is NXTL that needs to be traded. It should be interesting to see where this goes and what changes it may bring about in the market. IMO
http://biz.yahoo.com/rc/040414/telecoms_nextel_1.html
Nextel launches wireless broadband service
Wednesday April 14, 12:17 pm ET

WASHINGTON, April 14 (Reuters) - Nextel Communications Inc. (NasdaqNM:NXTL - News) on Wednesday said it had begun selling an advanced wireless broadband service in North Carolina, offering download speeds comparable to home broadband lines.

The surprise move by the sixth-largest U.S. wireless company to open an internal test to consumers comes as several wireless companies probe the market for high-speed data, looking for a profitable niche to offset growing competition for voice services.

Nextel said its test service was available around the North Carolina cities of Raleigh, Durham and Chapel Hill, covering about 1,300 square miles. The network, based on proprietary Flarion Technologies equipment, can provide download speeds of about 1.5 megabits per second, with bursts up to 3 megabits -- comparable to home cable Internet connections.

The company set four levels of prices for consumers, from an introductory offer of $35 per month for 150 megabytes of downloads at slower speeds to $75 per month for unlimited downloads at top network speed.

Nextel will also offer cards and modems to connect laptop and desktop computers to the network. The service is available to customers who don't use Nextel cellular service.

Last month, Nextel's chief technology officer told analysts that a full roll-out of high-speed wireless across Nextel's network would cost roughly $2 billion. He also said Nextel wanted its data service to compete with cable and DSL lines, with a premium for wireless mobility.

Verizon Communications Inc. (NYSE:VZ - News) has begun a $1 billion roll-out of its wireless broadband service to 100 U.S. cities. Verizon's service offers slower download speeds than Nextel's, and costs about $80 a month.

Other cellular companies have said they would hold off on building higher-speed wireless networks until cellphones that could take advantages of such networks were developed, likely over the next couple of years.
For the record, I do not own any NXTL nor have I ever traded it. I think this whole Flarion OFDM / NXTL thing is interesting Here is a news release from Flarion as well:
http://www.rcrnews.com/cgi-bin/news.pl?newsId=17740


(Maybe I won't get flamed too bad <G>)





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