Instant Live: Verizon Wireless Amphitheater, Bonner Springs, KS 06/27/04

No description for this product could be found, but have a look over at Amazon for reviews and other information.

No description for this product could be found, but have a look over at Amazon for reviews and other information.

No description for this product could be found, but have a look over at Amazon for reviews and other information.
In terms of cellular service, there’re 2 technologies competing in the market right now. They are GSM, i.e. Global System for Mobile Communications, and CDMA, i.e. Code Division Multiple Access. Cellular carriers inclusive of Verizon, Sprint PCS, Cingular Wireless, and T-Mobile make use of one of these two technologies. Comprehending difference between CDMA and GSM would simplify the way of choosing a carrier which utilizes the network technology preferable for your needs.
GSM association can be referred to as one of the international organizations founded in the year 1987, which is dedicated toward the provision, development, and overseeing of GSM standard across the globe. CDMA is amongst the proprietary standards designed by a company called ‘Qualcomm’ in the US. It has been dominant with regards to network standards for certain Asian countries and the whole of North America. GSM networks, but, continue making roads in US. There’re camps on…
Cellular Phones Today
With over 200 million users (in excess of one per household, on average) today, cellular products are more well loved than ever before, and an increasing number of those users are electing to use their cell phones as their only phones. Because the demand for more user friendly and more advanced communications technology becomes greater all the time, companies are regularly coming up with creative, new additions to something that was once merely a way to call another person in an emergency.
No longer are mobile phones simply used to cause calls. They are portable televisions, day planners, digital cameras and even a mobile office. They can connect to the internet, remind of your boss’s birthday and act as a gaming device. Cellular phones can be as simple as you would like them to be, or as technologically advanced as just about anything on the…
Have you ever signed a contract to subscribe to a certain type of service? If you have, then you probably encountered the term, termination fees. Service industries such as mobile phone service and subscription television commonly have termination fees or early termination fees as they are more commonly known.
The process usually works this way. A person buys cellular phone service from a particular wireless carrier. He or she might be required to sign a two-year contract in order to avail of a wireless phone plot. Now that contract might stipulate a $200 fee in the event that the customer breaks the contract or wants to opt out of it.
But, the imposition of these termination fees has been criticized by consumer interest groups. These fees prevent users from migrating to superior services so they are labeled as being anti-competitive. A lot of people would rather stick to their…
Verizon Wireless announced that it will provide customers the option to use, on its nationwide wireless network, wireless devices, software and applications not offered by the company. Verizon plans to have this new option rolled out nationwide by the end of 2008. Any device that meets the minimum technical standard will be activated on the network.
This is a huge shift for the wireless industry known for protecting their networks and the apps and devices that work on them. Just a few weeks ago sources reported Verizon’s opposition to Google’s push for open access on the nascent 700 MHz spectrum re-allocation. Verizon even sued (and withdrew) the FCC who is imposing so-called open-access rules for parts of the spectrum.
So why the sudden turnabout? According to Verizon, there is no change.
In a July 19th statement Verizon reiterated its position on the auction: we oppose the rules not…