You can't put the population of NYC on wireless broadband. The density will not allow everyone to have broadband speeds. Why not? Does not anyone in NYC has a cell phone? It is the same thing with more bandwidth. Yes, it would be difficult, but it is possible.
What? Being a muslim Turkish, I know this thing has nothing to do with muslims in Turkey. It is just the Turkish constitution that this law is based on. In fact, the constitution is based on western ideologies anyways.
4 years ago, my professor for personal mobile communications class said wi-fi and cellular complements each other. It was his first year at school after 5-6 years of experience in one of the biggest cellular (hardware) companies. Later, he corrected himself by saying both sides are trying to kill each-other: cellular is trying to provide higher data rates (and hence WCDMA etc.) and wi-fi is trying to incorporate mobility and hand-off which are essential for voice communications (and hence WiMAX, IEEE 802.20 etc.). I believe at some point both will merge if the IP rights issues could be solved.
Competition is always good for both end user and for engineers (and engineers to be like myself).
What? Being a muslim Turkish, I know this thing has nothing to do with muslims in Turkey. It is just the Turkish constitution that this law is based on. In fact, the constitution is based on western ideologies anyways.
What is your point? Have you ever been to one?
hah. that is nothing. look at my number. conclusion: he is not new!
Enormous amount of data supporting it?? http://www.tallarmeniantale.com/
4 years ago, my professor for personal mobile communications class said wi-fi and cellular complements each other. It was his first year at school after 5-6 years of experience in one of the biggest cellular (hardware) companies. Later, he corrected himself by saying both sides are trying to kill each-other: cellular is trying to provide higher data rates (and hence WCDMA etc.) and wi-fi is trying to incorporate mobility and hand-off which are essential for voice communications (and hence WiMAX, IEEE 802.20 etc.). I believe at some point both will merge if the IP rights issues could be solved.
Competition is always good for both end user and for engineers (and engineers to be like myself).
What is the big deal, it is only a half-adder. Not even a full one.
my hands are dirty?