Mar 25, 2009 By:Steven J. Steinberg, Rebecca Degagne, Michael Gough
In many areas of the United States, such as rural northern California, residents lack access to broadband Internet connectivity. The Redwood Coast Connect initiative was launched to examine market demand, availability, and infrastructure issues that affect broadband access in four California counties. The project incorporated survey-based data in conjunction with characterization and mapping of the existing broadband infrastructure, and explored a variety of broadband delivery options in context of the physical and environmental challenges of the region.
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Jan 29, 2008 By:Donald Wilkins
Current radio frequency assignments — which are static, inflexible, and inefficient — have a detrimental effect on military communications. A potential solution, the cognitive radio, uses an onboard digital map system to select transmission frequencies and potentially shape the RF beam.
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 | Dec 18, 2006 By:Mike Sheldrick
Navigation is hands-down the top dog in location-based services. Sales of portable nav systems in the United States are predicted to finish 2006 somewhere north of 2.5 million, more than double last year's sales. Betting that the past is prelude to future, many analysts project a similarly rosy future ahead for PNDs.
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Traffic.com has a unique relationship with government agencies, through which it was paid to install and maintain traffic information collection infrastructure in return for supplying information to state DOTs. Now NAVTEQ owns it. Nov 16, 2006 By:Mike Sheldrick
For years, Navteq has considered itself as more than a mapping company, perceiving itself, instead, as a road-related content supplier. Earlier this month, however, NAVTEQ made its most dramatic move yet to reposition itself by acquiring Traffic.com — a roughly $50 million per year traffic supplier.
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Apr 5, 2005 By:Jim Engelhardt
On March 15 at the CTIA Wireless 2005 Conference in New Orleans, NAVTEQ, a global provider of digital map data for vehicle navigation and location-based solutions (LBS), awarded the winners of the second annual Global LBS Challenge. The contest, which challenged developers to build location-enabled applications for wireless devices, was an expansion on the first contest that was launched in October 2003. . . .
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