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What can government CIOs and IT managers learn from this spring's crop of midsized citywide broadband-wireless deployments? More
Weekly Roundup of Headlines
» Rural Cambria County (PA) Network Goes Live
» TimeWarner Cable Tries Metering Internet Usage
» Korea's Intelligent Highway Infrastructure to Deploy Mesh
» Taiwan to Become Top Wireless Region, Says Premier
» Ubiquitous Networking to Jump-Start Economy
» Oklahoma City Claiming Largest Wi-Fi Network at 555 Square Miles
» Santa Fe (NM) Residents Fighting Muni Wi-Fi with ADA
» France Rolls Out Ambitious Plan to Turn Digital
» Ocean City (NJ) Municipal Wireless on Hold Pending Review
» Akamai Compares State Broadband Speeds
» FCC's Adelstein Urges National Policy with Municipal Wi-Fi
» North Carolina Should Pay to Connect the Last Mile
» UK Rural Areas Better Connected Than Urban Areas
» Riding the Wireless Network to the Smart Grid
» Obama Tech Aide Hails from MIT, McCain's from TimeWarner
» SF’s BART in Talks for Full Wi-Fi Rollout
» Foster City (CA) Rejects MetroFi Network Sale Offer
» OpenAir Boston Rearticulates Measured Citywide Strategy
» Wireless Philadelphia's Goldman: It's No Time to Quit
» Rankings: The Sad State of U.S. Broadband
Published electronically every Thursday, the W2i Government Broadband Wireless Report (The W2i Report) explores the issues surrounding the planning and implementation of broadband-wireless infrastructures, applications and services for cities, communities and regions. The W2i Report features commentaries and interviews with CIOs, wireless field practitioners, industry experts, and local-government association leaders, as well as a dozen independent bloggers. It includes data bases on leading case studies, business opportunities (RFPs) and headlines. All broadband-wireless stakeholders — from local-government officials and IT managers to the ecosystem of equipment and application vendors and systems integrators — are encouraged to subscribe.
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