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« Muni-Fi Watch; San Antonio, West Virginia | Main | Minneapolis Coffee Chain Promotes Its Free Wi-Fi »
The number of hotspots in India is expected to grow tenfold with 3,000 active by December: for a country with many times the U.S. and with a vast technically trained population—and extremes of poverty as well—hotspot growth is a given. The government only recently legalized the use of 2.4 GHz and 5.1 GHz devices for this purpose.
Dishnet announced a 6,000-hot spot network this week with 2,000 planned to be active by December; Microsense has 200 now with 1,000 expected by December; other networks have hundreds of locations targeted, too. Prices have plummeted as growth has expanded—but probably not fallen “100 percent” as the article indicates.
Posted by Glennf at April 3, 2005 9:35 PM
Categories: International
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lack of infrastructure and planned investments for rural area development is a major push. Telecom laws still need to be refined to avoid conflicts between already existing providers (CDMA/GSM).
Posted by: blaze at April 4, 2005 9:41 AM