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Frank Hanzlik, managing director of the Wi-Fi Alliance, thinks its a happy accident that the 3,000th product the industry group has certified for interoperability just happens to be a Wi-Fi/cellular phone from Motorola (the multi-mode Motorola A910, at right). "It's a great example of how Wi-Fi is moving from massive success in notebooks with probably 90% of the market [using Wi-Fi] to other categories of products," Hanzlik says. "Categories that could someday eclipse the PC." That's 3,000 products since March of 2000, when certification testing began -- though that's not to say there are 3,000 Wi-Fi products you can buy today. Hanzlik says of the wireless networking lifecycle, especially for consumer products, "If a product lasts a year, that's a long time." He didn't want to speculate on the number of products available today with the Wi-Fi Certified seal of approval. Computers will likely be using Wi-Fi for a long time to come, but the Alliance wants to stay relevant by continuing to test for important new features as well as testing new products. Fixed/Mobile Convergence "There's strategies from various types of carriers those out earliest probably had UMA networks," Hanzlik says. "Some are going more SIP-based... there's stuff starting to happen. Some operators may have a more data-centric approach, some may do data and voice. We'll see a lot of experimentation. This is a nascent space; we'll figure the best ways to go to market." |