Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Mobile virtual network operators (MVNOs) in the United States lease wireless telephone and data service from the four major cellular carriers in the country—AT&T Mobility, Boost Mobile, T-Mobile US, and Verizon—and offer various levels of free and/or paid talk, text and data services to their customers.
Mobile data offloading is the use of complementary network technologies for delivering data originally targeted for cellular networks. Offloading reduces the amount of data being carried on the cellular bands, freeing bandwidth for other users.
A private hotspot, often called tethering, may be configured on a smartphone or tablet that has a network data plan, to allow Internet access to other devices via password, Bluetooth pairing, or through the moeex protocol over USB, or even when both the hotspot device and the device[s] accessing it are connected to the same Wi-Fi network but ...
A phone tethered to a laptop. Tethering or phone-as-modem (PAM) is the sharing of a mobile device's Internet connection with other connected computers.Connection of a mobile device with other devices can be done over wireless LAN (), over Bluetooth or by physical connection using a cable, for example through USB.
A Novatel MiFi 2372 "Intelligent Mobile Wi-Fi Hotspot" MiFi is a brand of wireless router that acts as a mobile Wi-Fi hotspot device.. In many countries, including The United States, Canada, and Mexico, Inseego Corp. (previously known as Novatel Wireless) [1] owns a registered trademark on the "MiFi" brand name; in the United Kingdom, mobile operator Hutchison 3G owns the "MiFi" trademark.
Walmart may not be alone in making changes to its cashier-free kiosks. Target has also been cited among social media users for reducing self-checkout hours.
While everybody is familiar with Walmart -- the company operates 10,500 retail units under 46 banners in 24 countries (and e-commerce sites) and is the largest U.S. private employer -- some may be...
Initially, WISPs were only found in rural areas not covered by cable television or DSL. [4] There were 879 Wi-Fi based WISPs in the Czech Republic as of May 2008, [5] [6] making it the country with most Wi-Fi access points in the whole EU.; [7] [8] which was a consequence of the then de facto monopoly of the former telecom operator on fixed data networks.