TAMPA, Fla. (Oct. 9, 2024) — Spectrum announced Wednesday that nearly 45,000 Spectrum WiFi hotspots will remain open to the public across Florida in anticipation of Hurricane Milton. These access ...
OTTAWA, Ontario--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Edgewater Wireless Systems Inc. (TSXV: YFI) (OTC: KPIFF), the industry leader in Wi-Fi Spectrum Slicing technology for residential and enterprise markets, is pleased ...
The company, during this difficult weather period, has made multiple Spectrum WiFi access points available to the public, ...
The winter storms and high winds that have impacted much of northern Ohio have left thousands without power, according to ...
Edgewater Wireless Systems Inc. (TSXV: YFI) (OTC: KPIFF), the industry pioneer of AI-powered Wi-Fi Spectrum Slicing™ silicon solutions and IP for residential, enterprise and Industrial IoT markets, ...
ARLINGTON, Va.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Citizens Broadband Radio Service (CBRS) market leader Federated Wireless today announced it has extended its Spectrum Controller platform to enable spectrum sharing in ...
The Federal Communications Commission has approved a chunk of wireless spectrum called the 6GHz band for unlicensed use by Wi-Fi 6, and gear that supports it could be available by the end of the year.
Broadcom has announced what it’s calling the first Wi-Fi 6E chip for mobile devices, supporting 160MHz-wide channels in the 6GHz wireless spectrum that the FCC could soon open up for use in the United ...
The battle for access into the fertile territory of the 6GHz comms spectrum has advanced into Australia, with the Dynamic Spectrum Alliance (DSA), a trade body promoting spectrum sharing, imploring ...
In a boost for the development of Wi-Fi 6 services in the country, US telecoms and broadcast regulator the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has circulated draft rules permitting unlicensed ...
If unlicensed Wi-Fi spectrum is like a cool, independently run cafe, then mobile operators using those frequencies for LTE may sound like a corporate chain buying out your favorite spot. There goes ...
The Federal Communications Commission today voted to add 45MHz of spectrum to Wi-Fi in a slightly controversial decision that takes the spectrum away from a little-used automobile-safety technology.