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Re: TEKI rumors

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Lawyerkill

unread,
Dec 31, 2009, 10:41:40 AM12/31/09
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On Dec 31, 10:25�am, John Ryan <john.ryan3...@gmail.com> wrote:
> rumor is that something big is up... �patent lawsuit against major
> voip companies for using proprietary technology without licensing the
> technology.. �could be huge play from here! �monster volume today.
> could be HUGE! �do your own dd.
>
> disclaimer: �do your own dd. am not a licensed investment anything.

rumor is that GCOG may buy TEKI and make Bob CEO(We're only telling
that rumor to Bob).

-=DirtBag©

unread,
Dec 31, 2009, 11:00:49 AM12/31/09
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On 12/31/09 7:25 AM, John Ryan wrote:
> rumor is that something big is up... patent lawsuit against major
> voip companies for using proprietary technology without licensing the
> technology.. could be huge play from here! monster volume today.
> could be HUGE! do your own dd.
>
> disclaimer: do your own dd. am not a licensed investment anything.

TEKI is just so unknown and I cant find much at all on it especially the
important stuff.

IMHO (ALVR) Alvarion is the big dick daddy of WiMax John. I is a
Israeli company with some very good technology and they have a track
record worthy of investing your hard earned money into. WIMAX IS PERFECT
for small to large cities. 31 mile circle of fast internet. Line of
sight is not necessary. Read below:


http://northamerica.alvarion.com/b100/?ref=ALVR&source_type=GoogleAds&so

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WiMAX

http://computer.howstuffworks.com/wimax2.htm


Read this:

WiMAX Coverage and Speed

Intel Paves the Way
Intel will start making their Centrino laptop processors WiMAX enabled
in the next two to three years. This will go a long way toward making
WiMAX a success. If everyone's laptop already has it (which is predicted
by 2008), it will be much less risky for companies to set up WiMAX base
stations. Intel also announced that it would be partnering with a
company called Clearwire to push WiMAX even further ahead. Clearwire
plans to send data from WiMAX base stations to small wireless modems.
See Intel, Clearwire to Accelerate Deployment of WiMAX Networks
Worldwide (Oct. 25, 2004).
WiMAX operates on the same general principles as WiFi -- it sends data
from one computer to another via radio signals. A computer (either a
desktop or a laptop) equipped with WiMAX would receive data from the
WiMAX transmitting station, probably using encrypted data keys to
prevent unauthorized users from stealing access.

The fastest WiFi connection can transmit up to 54 megabits per second
under optimal conditions. WiMAX should be able to handle up to 70
megabits per second. Even once that 70 megabits is split up between
several dozen businesses or a few hundred home users, it will provide at
least the equivalent of cable-modem transfer rates to each user.

The biggest difference isn't speed; it's distance. WiMAX outdistances
WiFi by miles. WiFi's range is about 100 feet (30 m). WiMAX will blanket
a radius of 30 miles (50 km) with wireless access. The increased range
is due to the frequencies used and the power of the transmitter. Of
course, at that distance, terrain, weather and large buildings will act
to reduce the maximum range in some circumstances, but the potential is
there to cover huge tracts of land.

IEEE 802.16 Specifications
Range - 30-mile (50-km) radius from base station
Speed - 70 megabits per second
Line-of-sight not needed between user and base station
Frequency bands - 2 to 11 GHz and 10 to 66 GHz (licensed and unlicensed
bands)
Defines both the MAC and PHY layers and allows multiple PHY-layer
specifications

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