Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Clearwire Activates 10 More Markets


As Clearwire activates 10 additional markets, it also is elaborating on service plans that offer casual use in addition to the more-standard monthly subscriptions.

The new markets include Boise, Idaho; Bellingham, Wash.; and eight Texas markets, including Abilene, Amarillo,Corpus Christi, Killeen/Temple, Lubbock, Midland/Odessa, Waco andWichita Falls.

Clearwire mobile and residential plans can be purchased by the day or by the month. Home Internet service plans start at $25 per month; while mobile Internet plans start at $35 per month, or customers can purchase a convenient mobile day pass for $10.

For a limited time, customers can also choose the "Pick 1 Unlimited" plan; offering an unlimited home or mobile Internet for $22.50 for the first three months and $45 per month thereafter.

Equipment options include USB modems for PCs, including WiMAX-only or dual-mode modems that allow roaming on Sprint’s nationwide 3G network service whenever the Clear 4G service is not available.

Pricing for modems start at $49.99, after instant rebate, or may be leased for prices as low as $4.99 monthly.

For residential service, modems can be purchased for $69.99 or leased for just $4.99 monthly. Residential customers can also add in-home voice service with purchase of the "Clear Voice Adapter" for $15, and receive unlimited local and long distance service for just $25 per month.

With the "Clear Spot," any existing, off-the-shelf Wi-Fi device (802.11b/g) can connect to Clearwire’s 4G WiMAX network. The Clear Spot creates a personal Wi-Fi hotspot that travels with consumers anywhere they happen to be within CLEAR’s mobile WiMAX service area.

This $139.99 device is a portable, battery-powered router that seamlessly connects up to eight standard Wi-Fi-enabled devices (computers, mobile phones, portable gaming, consoles, cameras). The Clear Spot is compatible with both the Clear 4G and Clear 4G+ mobile USB dual-mode service options.

Clearwire also sells Intel Embedded WiMAX laptops, including the Dell Studio 17, Studio XPS 16, Latitude E4300, Latitude E6400, Latitude E6400 ATG, Latitude E6500, Precision M2400, Precision M4400 and Vostro 1220.

The company also offers the Fujitsu LifeBook P8020. WiMAX-ready laptops from Lenovo include the ThinkPad line: SL400, SL500, X200, X200s, X200 Tablet, X301, T400, T500, W500 and W700.

Samsung offers the X460 notebook as well as the NC10. The Samsung Mondi is a mobile WiMAX-enabled handheld device.

No comments:

Will AI Fuel a Huge "Services into Products" Shift?

As content streaming has disrupted music, is disrupting video and television, so might AI potentially disrupt industry leaders ranging from ...