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WIMAX WORLD, Chicago, Sept. 26, 2007 – In an effort to ensure that mobile WiMAX wireless products work well together
and with other
products globally,
Intel Corporation, Nokia and Nokia Siemens Networks
today announced that they are testing interoperability across Intel's
forthcoming WiMAX
silicon for laptops and mobile Internet devices,
Nokia WiMAX devices and Nokia Siemens Networks WiMAX infrastructure
equipment.
Nokia also said it will use Intel's WiMAX silicon product, which is
codenamed "Baxter Peak" and designed specifically for mobile Internet
and consumer electronic devices, in its forthcoming Nokia Nseries
Internet Tablets. The Internet tablets will be among the very first
WiMAX-enabled open Internet devices expected to ship in 2008.
"WiMAX enables the mobile Internet and makes it possible to get
content on a variety of new mobile devices at broadband speed, and our
Baxter Peak solution is designed specifically for these exciting new
devices," said Raviv Melamed, general manager of Intel's Mobile
Wireless Group. "Intel, Nokia and Nokia Siemens Networks all recognize
our collective responsibility in ensuring that people can take full
advantage of WiMAX. Simply put, the infrastructure behind the networks
and the devices that access those networks must work together
seamlessly."
Mobile WiMAX is a broadband wireless technology that provides
multi-megabit speed, great throughput for accessing large amounts of
such data as movies and multi-media content, and wide range to access
the data over long distances. WiMAX devices and equipment that have
been tested for compatibility with each other will help make it easier
for consumers to roam from network to network with their Internet
devices wherever they go for an always-connected, mobile experience.
"WiMAX will translate into people being able to take their favorite
Internet experiences -- be it watching videos, streaming music or doing
research on the Internet -- on the go without compromising on quality,"
said Ari Virtanen, Vice President, Nokia Multimedia.
Intel, Nokia and Nokia Siemens Networks have already started testing
their equipment and devices with dozens of other equipment vendors'
products for interoperability and conformance with industry standards
in Sprint's Herndon, Va. testing labs. Early interoperability testing
between multiple industry partners will help to reduce the amount of
time required for their respective products to successfully pass
through the technical requirements from the WiMAX Forum thus
accelerating time-to-market.
Intel and Nokia will continue to champion efforts with 500 other
Forum members to deliver end-to-end specifications for global
interoperability of WiMAX devices and infrastructure.
Nokia Internet Tablets to Become WiMAX-ready
The Nokia Nseries Internet Tablets are designed to provide a rich
Internet experience on a new innovative multimedia computer platform
that is small enough to fit into the pocket. The Internet-savvy
audience targeted features include a full, familiar Internet
experience, powered by Mozilla based browser, e-mail functions and
support for many popular applications, such as the previously announced
Skype and Rhapsody.
Nokia Nseries Internet Tablets are based upon the open source Linux
operating system, to enable both Nokia and Intel's vision of the "open
Internet" -- delivering broadband Internet experience to users on the
go. In 2008, this platform with Intel's Baxter Peak WiMAX silicon will
work on the Sprint Xohm* WiMAX network.
Based on the same WiMAX baseband silicon found in Intel's "Echo
Peak" MiniCard module for laptops and ultra-mobile devices, Baxter Peak
is optimized for small form factors and low power consumption. It also
includes multiple input/multiple output antenna techniques, supporting
better reception and faster throughput in challenging environments.
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