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New Tablet Tipped for CTIA Show

PC Mag: A "significant" new tablet will be announced at the CTIA wireless trade show from March 22-24, CTIA vice president Rob Mesirow said today.
North America's largest wireless show, CTIA will attract around 40,000 people to Orlando later this month. Executives speak, deals get done, and new products are shown – this year, not only phones, but tablets as well.

60°

Mobile Insights from CTIA Super Mobility Week

Here's a breakdown of all the important speeches and conferences from last week's Super Mobility Week in Las Vegas. Hear what everyone from Wikipedia's Jimmy Wales and Dreamworks' Jeffrey Katzenberg to FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler think about the future of mobile content.

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thoughtforyourpenny.com
120°

Starting February 11, 2015, All Four Major US Carriers Will Let You SIM Unlock Your Phone

If you've ever gone to a foreign country with a carrier-branded phone, or tried to use that phone on a different operator in the US, you've probably encountered the problem many have: it's locked. While most carriers did honor unlock requests in the past, or sell their handsets unlocked (like Verizon, mostly), there was no universal policy on the practice in America. As of February 11th, that's changing - the CTIA (basically, the wireless industry's special interest group) is laying out a set of phone unlocking (that is, SIM/network unlocking) principles that AT&T, Verizon, T-Mobile, Sprint, and US Cellular will abide by in the wake of the congressional un-banning of phone unlocking.

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androidpolice.com
150°

CTIA Posts Counterpoint Video to Net Neutrality Argument

Maximum PC: I haven't spoken with every individual at Maximum PC about net neutrality and asked what their stances all, though I'm fairly confident we all agree it's a good thing. Certainly our new Editor-in-Chief Tuan Nguyen does, as evidenced by his recent articles on the topic here and here. And obviously so does Federal Communications Commission Chairman Tom Wheeler, who recently proposed reclassifying the Internet as a public utility. But not everyone does. Among the comments to some of the articles we've posted on the subject are arguments opposed to treating the Internet like a public utility, which would thereby give the government increased oversight. The CTIA also opposes reclassifying the Internet as such, but I'm not sure their video on the topic will do them any favors.

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maximumpc.com
SilentNegotiator3358d ago (Edited 3358d ago )

Oh yeah, those random people on the street were TOOOOOOOTALLY believable.

I agree with the article completely; there might be some valid concerns about broad laws that treat mobile almost exactly the same as regular ISPs, but the "concerns" in the video have pretty much zero merit.

And about that Pandora comment...if said networks/providers didn't have pointless data caps ( https://www.techdirt.com/ar... ), that would never be a problem anyway.

Gondee3358d ago (Edited 3358d ago )

The companies imposed the data caps as fees... now of course companies need a way to guarantee access to the customer. Fuck cable companies... Please Elon free us from the blood sucking capitalists soon! lol