The following list details this week’s infrastructure awards for the cellular, Wi-Fi and WiMAX industries. The contracts are broken down by transmission technology, country and vendor. The value of the contract is included when available.
Cellular
–India: Idea Cellular Ltd. chose Nokia Siemens Networks to provide GSM network equipment for an expansion contract. The deal is valued at $500 million.
–Russia: Nokia Siemens Networks said it won a contract to build a 3G W-CDMA network for Mobile Telesystems.
Wi-Fi
–Switzerland: Go Networks said it has been chosen by Monzoon to provide its Wi-Fi solution to provide hotzone coverage throughout the country.
–United States: Proxim Wireless Corp. said the village of Bellwood, Ill., deployed its Wi-Fi mesh municipal network. Also in the United States, EarthLink Inc. said it will expand its Wi-Fi network in Philadelphia to cover 135 square miles.
Miscellaneous
–Kazakhstan: JSC Kazakhtelecom selected Nortel Networks to provide a Next Generation Network.
–United States: MobileAccess said it deployed its Universal Wireless Network at the University of Pennsylvania Health System’s three hospitals for in-building coverage. In Pittsburgh, Point Park University deployed Corrigo Inc. Web-based wireless work order management software to dispatch, manage and track service requests and work orders.
Infrastructure awards wrap-up: Nokia Siemens, Proxim, Nortel and more
ABOUT AUTHOR
Jump to Article
What infra upgrades are needed to handle AI energy spikes?
AI infra brief: Power struggles behind AI growth
The IEA report predicts that AI processing in the U.S. will need more electricity than all heavy industries combined, such as steel, cement and chemicals
Energy demand for AI data centers in the U.S. is expected to grow about 50 gigawatt each year for the coming years, according to Aman Khan, CEO of International Business Consultants
AI infra brief: Power struggles behind AI growth
The IEA report predicts that AI processing in the U.S. will need more electricity than all heavy industries combined, such as steel, cement and chemicals
Energy demand for AI data centers in the U.S. is expected to grow about 50 gigawatt each year for the coming years, according to Aman Khan, CEO of International Business Consultants