“Speaking at CTIA Wireless IT & Entertainment in San Diego today, FCC head Julius Genachowski has said that he wants to ‘close the spectrum gap‘ — the difference between the spectrum it’s making available for wireless data versus enormous usage projections (400 petabytes a month by 2013, he says) that’ll be brought about by smarter, easier-to-use devices and ubiquitous high-speed data through a handful of initiatives including the promotion of the smart use of existing spectrum through the use of femotcells, WiFi, and smart antennas, and — more importantly — reallocation of existing spectrum. Genachowski says there are ‘no easy pickings’ for reallocation, but the Commission is aggressively pursuing additional airspace that can help keep 4G rollouts on track. He’s gone on to say that they’ll be adopting the widely-discussed ‘shot clock’ policy for placement of new towers, giving locales a limited window to protest placement of cell sites that’ll help spread 4G services over wider footprints. The guy seems genuinely concerned about keeping 4G rollouts rolling, so let’s see just how far the guys in Washington are willing to go to do that.”
…like fish in a microwave, one of these days. So much man-made electromagnetic energy zipping around the world Tesla is going to see his dream of pushing electricity around through magnetism… albeit as an accident. One day you’ll be walking down the street, answering a text message on your iPhone and *ZZZZZAP*
A pile of just is all that will be left…
Edited 2009-10-09 03:01 UTC
Ah yes, and when you take a photo of someone you have stolen their soul. Please, leave the superstition to the 17th century with the witch trials.
Please tell me you didn’t take me seriously? OR do you just jump at any opportunity to be self-righteous?
The fact that you gave no indication of sarcasm by indication of emoticon tells me you actually believe it. Learn netetiquette so you’re not misunderstood in the future.
Wrong. The sheer absurdity of it should have clued you in. Work on your interpretive language skills to avoid future misinterpretations.