| 27th September - WiMAX-enabled
devices will be coming to town next year, according to a pact made between chip
giant Intel and Nokia/Nokia Siemens Networks on Wednesday. The trio announced
that they are testing interoperability across Intel's forthcoming WiMAX silicon
for laptops and mobile devices, Nokia WiMAX devices and NSN network kit. Nokia
is to use Intel's WiMAX chipset, codenamed "Baxter Peak", in its forthcoming
Nseries internet tablets. The tablets are expected to ship in 2008, the company
said. Nokia Nseries internet tablets are based on the open source Linux
operating system also favoured by Intel, and feature a Mozilla based browser,
email functions and support for applications such as Skype and Rhapsody. Nokia
tablet devices are due to ship to US carrier Sprint next year for use on its Xohm
WiMAX network. "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."
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