• Sprint Nextel shareholders: What’s the backup plan if AT&T/T-Mobile merge?

    Deals @ Amazon:

    Xingtone 5 Create Share Ringtones & MoreXingtone 5 Create Share Ringtones & MoreWhat’s a Xingtone? It’s a unique ring tone on your mobile cell-phone or similar communication device. With Xingtone Ringtone Maker 5 from Roxio, you c… Read More >
    WILSON ELECTRONICS 815226 SLEEK-WSN815226WILSON ELECTRONICS 815226 SLEEK-WSN815226WILSON ELECTRONICS 815226 SLEEK
    INSTALLS EASILY IN ANY VEHICLE; SIGNIFICANTLY IMPROVES BOTH TRANSMITTED & RECEIVED SIGNAL LEVELS; REDUCES DROPPED C… Read More >

    Sprint Nextel shareholder Rob Stitt of Lee's Summit (left) examines products the company had on display at its annual shareholder meeting.

    Sprint Nextel shareholder Rob Stitt of Lee’s Summit (left) examines devices the company had on display at its annual shareholder meeting.

    • Alyson Raletz
    • Reporter
    • Email: araletz@bizjournals.com

    “What if?” was the question on the minds of Sprint Nextel Corp.

    proposed $39 billion merger between ATT Inc. (NYSE: T) and T-Mobile USA

    hurt innovation, leaving ATT and Verizon Wireless

    Hearing details and a full lineup of speakers scheduled to testify are available online.

    bizWatch

    See all your followed company news on your personalized dashboard.

    To access the full benefits of bizWatch and receive a weekly email with aggregated news on all the companies you are following, please provide your email address below.

    You must have a bizjournals account to follow a company.
    Please Log In or Register.

     
  • AT&T and T-Mobile defend merger on Capitol Hill

    Deals @ Amazon:

    ATT CEO Randall Stephenson (left) chatted with T-Mobile USA CEO Philipp Humm as they waited for the start of a hearing before the Senate's Antitrust, Competition Policy and Consumer Rights Subcommittee

    ATT CEO Randall Stephenson (left) chatted with T-Mobile USA CEO Philipp Humm as they waited for the start of a hearing before the Senate’s Antitrust, Competition Policy and Consumer Rights Subcommittee.

    NEW YORK (CNNMoney) — The federal government famously smashed up ATT in a landmark antitrust action that completely revamped the telecom market. Almost 30 years later, is ATT once again poised to grow so big it eclipses all rivals?

    Congress is set to press ATT and T-Mobile’s top executives on that issue Wednesday during a Senate subcommittee hearing about the companies’ proposed $39 billion merger. Critics of the deal, including the CEOs of Sprint Nextel and Cellular South, also turned out to voice their opposition.

    Antitrust concerns arose immediately after ATT (T, Fortune 500) announced in March that it would acquire T-Mobile USA from Deutsche Telekom. A few weeks later, analysts at an ATT presentation asked pointed questions about how the company would keep the wireless industry competitive.

    ATT CEO Randall Stephenson tackled the issue in his opening statement to the subcommittee.

    The U.S. wireless industry “remains one of the most competitive in the world,” Stephenson said, pointing to ATT’s pledge to better serve its customers by continuing to expand its 4G network.

    As part of its merger agreement, ATT committed to expand its 4G/LTE network by 1.2 million square miles, making it accessible to an additional 46.5 million Americans, mostly in rural and smaller communities.

    “T-Mobile does not have enough spectrum to compete on LTE,” said Philipp Humm, the CEO of T-Mobile USA. “[The deal] will allow LTE to reach 97% of the U.S. population, which is something T-Mobile could not do on its own.”

    But Daniel Hesse, CEO of Sprint Nextel, bitterly disagreed.

    “This merger is unfixable,” Hesse said bluntly in his opening statement. “It will stifle the vibrancy of the wireless industry. It will turn back the clock to the time of Ma Bell.”

    Hesse said the merger would snuff out regional competitors and keep prices high for consumers. Ultimately, he said, the deal is positive for only the three major wireless parties: Shareholders of ATT, Verizon (VZ, Fortune 500) and Deutsche Telekom — the sole shareholder of T-Mobile. To top of page

     
  • AT&T, T-Mobile CEOs to defend mobile mega-merger

    Deals @ Amazon:


    WASHINGTON |
    Wed May 11, 2011 12:09am EDT

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The impact of ATT Inc’s proposed acquisition of T-Mobile on competition, pricing and consumer choice will be examined at a congressional hearing on Wednesday where top executives are due to appear.

    ATT has touted fewer dropped calls and faster data speeds to entice consumer and policymaker support for its $39-billion bid to take over Deutsche Telekom AG’s T-Mobile USA.

    ATT Chief Executive Randall Stephenson and T-Mobile USA CEO Philipp Humm are scheduled to appear before the Senate’s antitrust subcommittee to defend the deal that would concentrate 80 percent of U.S. wireless contract customers in just two companies — ATT/T-Mobile and Verizon Wireless.

    Congress has no direct role in reviewing the merger, but has oversight of the Federal Communications Commission and the Justice Department. Those two agencies are expected to take a year to complete their reviews.

    A congressional staffer said lawmakers were looking for ATT to address concerns about potential harms to competition and the threat of job losses brought on by the merger.

    The deal’s potential to expand faster 4G wireless services to more parts of the country, and to provide a short-term solution to the spectrum crunch threatening voice and data services in high-density areas, were appealing considerations that the subcommittee would also address, the staffer said.

    ATT’s Stephenson said in prepared testimony that the merger will allow ATT to improve its services, handle more data traffic and bring mobile Internet to 55 million more Americans than it could have done on its own.

    Critics of the merger, including Sprint Nextel, Cellular South and public interest groups, will also testify before the subcommittee.

    No. 3 mobile operator Sprint already faces tough competition from industry leaders Verizon Wireless and ATT.

    “We continue to believe that this transaction would be bad for consumers, bad for the wireless industry and bad for the economy,” Sprint spokesman John Taylor said.

    The FCC is tasked with deciding if the merger is in the public interest, while the Justice Department will evaluate its antitrust implications.

    The merger is already proving a tough sell for ATT.

    More than 4,800 comments have flooded the FCC’s electronic filing system in just a month. A majority of the comments are from consumers unhappy with the prospect of losing T-Mobile as a carrier.

    “Consumers are coming out in droves as no part of any kind of planned advocacy campaign… This is grassroots opposition,” Public Knowledge President Gigi Sohn said in a telephone call with reporters.

    FCC Commissioner Michael Copps has expressed concern about the power and influence the combined entity would hold. Approval of this deal, he said, after it was announced in March, “may be an even steeper climb” than the Comcast-NBCU merger, which he voted against.

    (Reporting by Jasmin Melvin; Editing by Tim Dobbyn)

     
  • Best Buy Receives Dummy Units of Verizon's HTC Trophy

    Deals @ Amazon:

    Adjust text size:

    May 11th, 2011, 13:00 GMT| By Ionut Arghire

     
  • JAGTAG and Verizon Wireless' On-Campus Mobile Marketing Campaign Generates Up to a 32% Engagement Rate on Campuses

    Deals @ Amazon:


    TMCNet:  JAGTAG and Verizon Wireless' On-Campus Mobile Marketing Campaign Generates Up to a 32% Engagement Rate on Campuses


    NEW YORK, May 11, 2011 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ –
    JAGTAG (www.jagtag.com), the U.S. leader in mobile 2D barcode advertising, today announced that its “Wireless Wednesday” campaign with Verizon Wireless generated 383% more requests than last year’s text-2-win campaign.

    The program is aimed to engage college students on campus and to promote “Wireless Wednesday” recruiting events. By interacting with JAGTAGs on signage and backstage passes at the Wireless Wednesday events, students instantly entered a mobile sweepstakes to win Verizon devices, and were counted as a vote for their school in the contest to win a concert from B.o.B. on their campus. Students were also able to interact with JAGTAGs on posters and postcards around campus to enter the concert contest. In return, students received a short video and were driven to Verizon’s mobile site or to their website, www.vzwcampus.com, to learn more about Verizon Wireless careers or to instantly apply for a job.

    This year’s campaign generated 383% more requests than the full program generated last year, and some schools have seen up to a 32% engagement rate. Students have also mobilized around the campaign, creating Facebook groups and Tweeting about the WW events.

    JAGTAG works on all camera phones and across all major wireless carriers in the United States without requiring users to download an application, to reach 90 percent of all mobile users.

    “JAGTAG’s ability to reach and engage all standard phone and smartphone owners allowed Verizon Wireless to easily communicate with all students on campus,” said Ed Jordan, CEO, JAGTAG.

    Verizon Wireless runs Wireless Wednesday events on the first Wednesday of every month on select campuses nationwide, and hosts a career booth where students can learn about career opportunities with Verizon Wireless.

    About JAGTAG
    JAGTAG is the only mobile 2D barcode solution that does not require the consumer to download an application prior to use and the only mobile medium that can successfully deliver optimized multimedia to both standard phones and smart phones. Anywhere a mobile consumer encounters a JAGTAG, they can use their phone to request and receive multimedia content (video, audio, pictures, text) sent immediately to their phone. To learn more, visit www.JAGTAG.com.

    About Verizon Wireless
    Verizon Wireless operates the nation’s most reliable and largest wireless voice and 3G data network, serving more than 93 million customers. Headquartered in Basking Ridge, N.J., with more than 79,000 employees nationwide, Verizon Wireless is a joint venture of Verizon Communications and Vodafone. For more information, visit www.verizonwireless.com . To preview and request broadcast-quality video footage and high-resolution stills of Verizon Wireless operations, log on to the Verizon Wireless Multimedia Library at www.verizonwireless.com/multimedia.

    Contact: Elpi Paradiso, 609-367-9911, elpi@jagtaginc.com
    SOURCE JAGTAG

    [ Back To 4g-wirelessevolution.tmcnet.com/wimax's Homepage ]

     
  • Sprint Ahead, Loss Narrows

    Deals @ Amazon:


    SymbolPriceChangeCLWR4.72-0.18Chart for Clearwire CorporationS5.28-0.01Chart for Sprint  Nextel Corporation CommT31.57+0.22Chart for ATT Inc.VZ37.51+0.26Chart for Verizon Communications Inc. Com{“s” : “clwr,s,t,vz”,”k” : “a00,a50,b00,b60,c10,g00,h00,l10,p20,t10,v00″,”o” : “”,”j” : “”}

    The third-largest U.S. wireless carrier Sprint Nextel (NYSE: SNews) reported first quarter 2011 adjusted net loss per share of 15 cents, which surpassed the Zacks Consensus Estimate of a loss of 22 cents. Adjusted net loss narrowed from the year-ago loss of 29 cents.

    Despite competitive pressure from its chief rivals ATT Inc. (NYSE: TNews) and Verizon Communications Inc. (NYSE: VZNews), Sprint generated solid results, thanks to its cheap service plans, fourth generation (4G) leadership, healthy service and a successful multi-brand strategy.

    Consolidated operating revenue grew 3% year over year to $8.3 billion in the reported quarter and was ahead of the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $8.12 billion. Higher revenues were driven by strong post-paid and prepaid average revenue per user (ARPU), healthy prepaid subscriber additions and higher wireless equipment revenues partially offset by lower contributions from its wireline business and post-paid wireless subscribers.

    Adjusted OIBDA (operating income/loss before depreciation, amortization, asset impairments and abandonments) rose 2% year over year to $1.5 billion. Higher handset subsidy was offset by strong wireless post-paid and prepaid ARPU.

    Segment Results

    Wireless revenue increased 5% year over year to $7.4 billion. Sprint gained approximately 1.1 million subscribers in the reported quarter, representing a net addition of 732,000 in retail subscribers and 389,000 in wholesale and affiliate subscribers. This represents the best wireless subscriber growth in five years.

    Sprint lost 114,000 net post-paid customers during the quarter, which reflects a considerable improvement from a net loss of 578,000 customers in the year-ago quarter but a massive deterioration from a net gain of 58,000 subscribers in the previous quarter. The company added 253,000 post-paid subscribers from the CDMA network while lost 367,000 customers from the iDEN network.

    With regard to prepaid subscription, Sprint added a total of 846,000 customers, which represents a net addition of 1.4 million CDMA customers, partially offset by a net loss of 560,000 iDEN customers.

    At the end of the first quarter, Sprint had 51 million customers (including 33 million post-paid, 13.1 million prepaid and 4.9 million Wholesale and Affiliate) compared with 49.9 million in the year-ago quarter.

    Post-paid ARPU increased to $56 from $55 in the year-ago quarter as higher monthly recurring revenue counterbalanced lower overage, casual data and text revenues. Prepaid ARPU rose to $28 from $27 in the year-ago quarter, owing to increased ARPU from Boost Mobile customers.

    Sprint posted a churn of 1.81%, the best-ever in five years compared with 2.15% in the previous-year quarter and 1.86% in the previous quarter. The lower churn was driven by improved customer retention, handsets upgrades and new handset offerings. Prepaid churn improved to 4.36% from 5.74% in the previous-year quarter and 4.93% in the previous quarter. The year-over-year improvement was attributable to the lower churn of Boost Monthly Unlimited subscribers and Assurance Wireless customers.

    Wireline revenues dropped 14% year over year to $1.12 billion, as erosion in voice and data revenues declining 16.9% and 15.9%, respectively. Internet revenues also fell 10.1% year over year.

    Liquidity

    Sprint enjoys a strong balance sheet with approximately $4 billion in cash and short-term investments at the end of first quarter 2011 compared with $5.5 billion at the end of 2010. Long-term debt declined to $16.3 billion from $18.5 billion in the previous quarter.

    The company spent $644 million in the reported quarter compared with $505 million in the year-ago quarter. Sprint generated free cash flow of $178 million, down from $506 million in the year-ago quarter.

    Guidance

    For fiscal 2011, Sprint Nextel expects post-paid and total net subscriber additions to improve annually. Capital expenditure is expected to be approximately $3 billion. The company is also likely to generate positive free cash flow for the remainder of the year.

    Our Analysis

    The company’s 4G WiMax is a major opportunity in the wireless market, which may drive its future revenue. Sprint will continue its prime focus on 4G network that currently covers 71 U.S.markets in 28 states via the Clearwire Corp. (NasdaqGS: CLWRNews) network. However, Sprint is now no longer the only major carrier offering the 4G network and its market advantage has eroded as other carriers started offering competitive services.

    Further, we believe Sprint’s business has been depressed since the proposed merger of ATTand Deutsche Telekom’s unit T-Mobile USA was announced in late March. The merged ATT would be almost three times the size of Sprintand might further hurt Sprint’s profitabilty and shrink its subscriber base.

    On the other hand, Sprint has started gaining ground from this month following new contracts wins, the appointment of the new CFO and resolved wholesale pricing dispute with Clearwire, which was plaguing Sprint’s revenue since last year. Last year, Sprint announced a multiyear network initiative, Network Vision, which could be a significant long-term margin driver and is expected to generate $10 billion to $11 billion in savings over the next seven years.

    We believe all these factors will serve as a major catalyst to Sprint’s growth plan going forward. Hence, we are currently maintaining our long-term Neutral recommendation on Sprint, supported by the Zacks #3 (Hold) Rank.

    ATT INC (T): Read the Full Research Report

    SPRINT NEXTEL CORP (S): Read the Full Research Report

    VERIZON COMMUNICATIONS INC (VZ): Read the Full Research Report

    Zacks Investment Research

    ADVERTISEMENT

     Zacks Investment Research

    Zacks Investment Research

     

     

     
  • Sprint wants access to confidential information in AT&T/T-Mobile filing

    Deals @ Amazon:

    Sprint Nextel (NYSE:S) wants to see all of the more than 100-page document ATT (NYSE:T) filed last week with the FCC as part of its proposed $39 billion purchase of T-Mobile USA–not just the heavily redacted version that is available to the public.

    According to Bloomberg, Sprint asked the FCC to grant it access to the unedited version of the filing. Outside attorneys for Sprint signed confidentiality agreements and filed the request with the FCC yesterday. Sprint has retained the law firms of Lawler, Metzger, Keeney Logan LLD and Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher Flom LLP as well as consulting firm Charles River Associates to help it fight ATT’s proposed acquisition of T-Mobile USA.

    ATT redacted a range of information in its filing with the FCC, including information on its network coverage, performance and capacity.

    Sprint is gearing up to do battle against ATT and has pledged to lobby against the deal on multiple fronts, including through congressional hearings. The operator recently hired three new lobbying firms: Thorsen French Advocacy, Franklin Square Group and The Fritts Group as part of its efforts.

    In addition, last week Sprint announced it would join the Rural Cellular Association as an affiliate member to be part of that group’s plans to do battle with the two largest U.S. operators: ATT and Verizon Wireless (NYSE:VZ). Sprint is a member of CTIA, but CTIA has come under fire for only representing the interests of the nation’s two largest operators.

    In ATT’s filing with the FCC, the company essentially argues why its proposed purchase of T-Mobile is in the public interest. ATT touts many of the benefits it has noted previously, including that the deal will result in increased spectral efficiencies, fewer dropped calls and better service. ATT also argues that the deal is the most efficient way for it to avoid exhausting its spectrum.

    For more:
    - see this Bloomberg article

    Related Articles:
    Sprint, ATT load up on lobbyists for T-Mobile deal
    ATT files with FCC to acquire T-Mobile
    Sprint blasts ATT over T-Mobile deal, claims ‘false’ allegations
    RCA goes after bigger fish, lands Sprint as new member
    FCC sets wheels in motion to review ATT/T-Mobile deal
    FCC’s Copps pushes back against ATT/T-Mobile deal
    ATT’s Stephenson: T-Mobile deal likely will require divestitures
    State attorneys general take aim at ATT/T-Mobile deal
    Sprint announces plan to attack ATT/T-Mobile deal
    Sprint to lobby Congress against ATT/T-Mobile deal

     
  • Sprint Nextel Relies on ContentWatch Products for Internet Filtering

    Deals @ Amazon:

    Award-winning solutions block inappropriate content in retail stores

    SALT LAKE CITY–(BUSINESS WIRE)–ContentWatch, Inc. (www.contentwatch.com),
    the leading provider of parental control and Internet filtering
    solutions, announced today that Sprint Nextel Corporation
    (NYSE:S) uses ContentProtect Pro on employee and demo
    desktop computers and Net Nanny for Android on tablets in its
    retail stores to prevent intentional and accidental exposure to
    inappropriate content on mobile display devices and employee PCs.

    “ContentProtect Pro
    has kept those devices from exposing us and our customers to
    inappropriate content. ContentWatch’s new award-winning mobile
    application even protects Android tablets.”

    The business class Internet filtering solutions protect Sprint Nextel
    from potential liability and from upsetting customers. The solution
    stops employee cyberslacking by preventing Internet access to
    non-business-related sites and also provides usage reports for
    management review.

    “In over 1,000 Sprint Nextel retail locations, we have thousands of
    computers and tablets that access the Internet,” said Fared Adib,
    Sprint Nextel vice president for device operations. “ContentProtect Pro
    has kept those devices from exposing us and our customers to
    inappropriate content. ContentWatch’s new award-winning mobile
    application even protects Android tablets.”

    The two ContentWatch solutions provide several key benefits, such as:

    • Productivity – limiting cyberslacking through monitoring
      and blocking Internet usage, including use of proxy-sites
    • Security – reducing malicious apps and viruses that reside
      on company-inappropriate web pages
    • Liability – masking profanity and preventing inappropriate web
      pages from being viewed on company-owned assets

    “Internet filtering on computers and mobile devices is vital in a world
    where employees easily access inappropriate Web sites or spend
    inordinate amounts of time doing non-work-related web surfing,” said
    Russ Warner, CEO of ContentWatch. “Filtering computers, tablets and
    smartphones is simply smart business.”

    ContentWatch’s Android solution will be available to consumers and
    businesses this summer. In addition to content filtering, the mobile
    product strategy includes threat management and productivity tools for
    consumers, businesses, carriers and retail outlets. The desktop solution
    is currently available through www.contentwatch.com.

    About ContentWatch, Inc.

    Based in Salt Lake City, ContentWatch has been delivering Internet
    security solutions for consumers and businesses since 2001. With the
    emergence of mobile devices, ContentWatch’s mission is to integrate its
    suite of solutions from the desktop to the mobile market.

    For more information on ContentWatch products, visit www.contentwatch.com.

     
  • Lowell ZBA wants peer review of cell-tower bid

    Deals @ Amazon:

    Among those opposed to a cell-tower proposal off Boston Road are, from left, Gay Rinker, Claudine Langlois and Jim Collins. SUN / David H. Brow

    Sun staff photos can be ordered by visiting our MyCapture site.

    LOWELL — The city’s Zoning Board of Appeals last night delayed making a decision on T-Mobile Northeast LLC’s proposal to install a cell tower at 363 Boston Road, and ordered a peer review of the project.

    City officials will put out a request-for-proposal for the review and T-Mobile will pay for the cost of the work conducted. The ZBA will discuss the proposal again at its June 27 meeting.

    “There is a lot of technical jargon we have to go through and we don’t have that expertise on the board,” said ZBA Chairman William Bailey.

    T-Mobile Northeast LLC and US Wireless have proposed building a 150-foot-high tower with nine telecommunications panel antennas in a wooded area near the Lowell/Chelmsford line. The tower would be enclosed within a fenced 3,000-foot compound and would be positioned near two softball fields that are part of the Manning Field complex and across the street from the Edson Cemetery.

    The space is zoned for traditional single-family use, so T-Mobile and US Wireless are applying for a special permit under the city’s ordinance code. The plan received approval from the city’s Planning Board last week.

    A lawyer for T-Mobile and US Wireless could not immediately be reached following the ZBA’s decision.

    The project has generated strong opposition from some abutters to the proposed location. Many residents from the Woodland Park Condos have joined a group called the Neighbors against the Manning Field Tower.

    Gay Rinker,

    a Woodland Park resident, said T-Mobile wants to improve data access and coverage for customers driving on I-495, so they are arguing that customers near the proposed site are without good coverage. Rinker said no one in the neighborhood has complained about poor T-Mobile Coverage.

    “They are trying to a manufacture a need,” Rinker said.

    Jim Collins, a Chelmsford resident who lives on Dunstan Road, said the tower will be visible from his home and will reduce property values in the area.

    “The height of the tower will be much higher than the trees around here,” Collins said.

    Other residents are concerned about the impact the tower would have on animal life. T-Mobile would likely have to cut down many trees to install the tower, which would scare away some of the birds Claudine Langlois, a Woodland Park resident, feeds.

    “One of the reasons I bought this place is because of the wooded area in the back,” Langlois said. “I don’t want it to be touched.”

    Rinker, Collins and Langlois said they would all like to see the tower placed in another location.

    The federal Telecommunications Act, which was passed in 1996, makes it difficult for communities to deny cell-tower proposals.

    Residents of the Highlands neighborhood are outraged that city councilors leased space to T-Mobile to put cell antennas on the water tank at 78 Wedge St. because they fear children will face increased health risks.

    The Highlands Neighborhood Association will host a meeting at 7 p.m. tomorrow in the Daley School auditorium to discuss the Wedge Street proposal. The City Council voted Jan. 18 to lease the space to T-Mobile for five years with the stipulation that the company pay the city $1,800 a month with a yearly escalation of 3 percent.

    City Councilor Edward “Bud” Caulfield filed a motion late last month asking City Manager Bernie Lynch to report on the possible health impacts of cell towers on city structures. The council is expected to get a report back in the coming weeks.

    www.twitter.com/lylemoran

     
  • T-Mobile SnapPad Tablet coming?

    Deals @ Amazon:

    Mysterious SnapPad Tablet name appears in trademark filing of T-Mobile.

    May 10 2011, 8:01am CDT | by Luigi Lugmayr

    T-Mobile SnapPad Tablet coming?

    A new tablet with a mysterious name is coming to T-Mobile. PocketNow reports that T-Mobile filed a trademark for SnapPad. T-Mobile also has registered several domain names with the SnapPad name in it. Which tablet maker is behind the SnapPad is unclear. The name also suggests that the tablet is somehow unique.

    Snap could imply that this tablet features two screens and folds like the Sony S2. I do not thing though that Sony lets their tablet to be renamed by T-Mobile. It could be that another vendor is coming out with a dual screen tablet. T-Mobile has a long history of renaming HTC made devices. Maybe HTC is extending their Tablet offering with a dual screen model.

    Don’t miss …

    news

    T-Mobile wants to be the Number Three in USA within Four Years

    T-Mobile wants to be the Number Three in USA within Four Years

    Jan 31 2011

    The mobile phone market in the United States has two…

    rumors


    T-Mobile’s Fastest 4G Phone On The Way?

    Jan 12 2011

    Rumor says yes

    rumors

    HTC, Samsung amp; Motorola: Their 2011 Plans

    HTC, Samsung Motorola: Their 2011 Plans

    Dec 2 2010

    Samsung is bullish on WP7, Motorola is scared of the iPhone…

    shopping

    Wirefly Black Friday T-Mobile Sale starting Tomorrow

    Wirefly Black Friday T-Mobile Sale starting Tomorrow

    Nov 11 2010

    Save on T-Mobile Phones including myTouch 4G and HTC HD7,

    Four More Years! (Of iPad Domination)

    Read More

    a href=/latest_stories/all/all/2Luigi Lugmayr/aLuigi Lugmayr
    Luigi is the founding chief Editor of I4U News and brings over 15 years
    experience in the technology field to the ever evolving and exciting
    world of gadgets. He started I4U News back in 2000 and evolved it into
    vibrant technology magazine.
    Luigi can be contacted directly at ml@i4u.com. Luigi posts regularly on LuigiMe.com about his experience running I4U.

    reddit

    delicious

    digg

    stumbleupon

    Follow I4U News on Twitter
    Follow us on Facebook

    Please enable JavaScript to view the comments powered by Disqus.
    blog comments powered by Disqus

    Comments

    Latest stories

    Communicate like a Cat with Neurowear Necomini Brain-Controlled Robot Cat Ears

    T-Mobile SnapPad Tablet coming?

    Microsoft confirms Skype Acquisition

    Microsoft unveils Windows Phone Mango on May 24

    Latest Deals

    Acer Iconia Tab A500-10S16u Tablet is on Sale on Amazon for $449.99

    Sony eBook Reader Digital Book PRS-300 Bundle w/ Bonus Case with Built-in Light ($60 Value)

    Star Wars: The Complete Saga (Episodes I-VI) [Blu-ray] (1977) is on Pre-order for only $89.99

     

Bad Behavior has blocked 2086 access attempts in the last 7 days.