In my previous post we identified the possible top three tech giants which will drive the top three connected ecosystems and the related tribes. So lets get down to the basics and first identify what are the different components in this value chain and how these are contributing to the overall ecosystem. Furthermore, we will also map these links against the current potential ecosystem leaders and understand where these companies stand:
2.5 GHz band,
android,
Apple,
Apple TV,
application testing,
Axeda,
BBM,
China,
CISCO,
cloud,
connected devices,
Connected Ecosystem,
Connected Home,
Gameloft,
Google,
Googorola,
HP touchpad,
HP WebOs Palm,
Hulu,
iOs,
iPad 3,
iPhone 5,
iPhone 6,
iTunes,
Jasper Wireless,
Jobs resignation,
Kore,
LTE,
M2M,
meego,
microsoft,
mobile value chain,
Netflix,
NewBay,
NFC,
NOKIA,
NVIDIA Tegra 3,
Oracle,
pandora,
quadcore chipsets,
Qualcomm Snapdragon,
samsung,
scorecard analysis,
software platform,
spotify,
TD-LTE,
USA,
USB,
Verizon Wireless M2M,
WiFi
Posted by Neil Shah in 3GPP
The licensing of the 2.6 GHz band will be critical to unlocking the benefits of global scale economies in the Mobile Broadband market. The outcome of 2.6GHz allocation will have far-reaching consequences for how the adoption dynamics of WiMAX and 3GPP (such as HSPA and, in future, LTE) will play out in this region since 2.6 GHz is the first arena where the two proponents will be battling each other in the same area of spectrum.So let’s jump in discussing and analyzing about the 2.6GHz band its importance, what’s in store and bulleting the future of mobile broadband.
2.5 GHz band,
2.6 GHz band,
2.6 GHz spectrum,
2.6 GHz spectrum Auction,
2500-2690 MHz,
3G expansion band,
4G,
700 MHz,
digital dividend,
European Union,
FDD vs TDD,
FDD/TDD,
GSMA,
IMT 2000,
ITU-T,
LTE,
mobile broadband,
next generation network,
paired spectrum,
unpaired spectrum,
WiMAX,
WRC