Rover Puck WiMAX hotspot gets FCC’d, traction on ice subject of fierce debate
Posted in Engadget by adminThe pool of choices for WiMAX hotspots continues to expand, and thanks to the FCC, we now know of another up-and-comer. The Rover Puck — trademarked by Clearwire and previously unheard of — joins the ranks Sprint’s Overdrive and its various rebrandings by providing pocketable 4G WiFi service. Unlike its predecessors, however, we finally have a new, more aerodynamic form factor. There isn’t much to the glean from the user manual at this point, and the oft-referenced Rover website still isn’t live — a WHOIS lookup reveals it was last updated via GoDaddy on July 2008 with no other details disclosed. So, until we get some word from the official news pipelines, a plethora of external / internal photos and user manual screenshots are only a mouseclick away.
Gallery: Rover Puck user manual
Rover Puck WiMAX hotspot gets FCC’d, traction on ice subject of fierce debate originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 30 Jul 2010 21:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Permalink | | Email this | Comments
Meta
Nye indlæg
- ASUS Windows Phone 7 proto shows up on video
- Qualcomm’s CEO confesses: tablets killed the smartbook star
- Qualcomm’s CEO confesses: tablets killed the smartbook star
- Olympus E-5 leaks point to September 15th launch, familiar design
- HDR video accomplished using dual 5D Mark IIs, is exactly what it sounds like
- Intel CEO reveals Google TV launch is this month, explains McAfee purchase
- Google Walking Navigation beta and Street View now available for Android
- Debunk: Bing not replacing Google on all Verizon Android devices
- HTC Desire HD rendered, looks pretty legit to us — oh, except for that WinMo UI
- FanVision handheld makes NFL nosebleeds far more bearable
- Acer Liquid Metal wraps Android 2.2 in aluminum
- Samsung i8700 for Windows Phone 7 leaks, puts developer prototype to shame
- ECTunes adds sound to silent EVs, but only where and when you need it (video)
- Sony’s PSP Go post-mortem continues, Kaz Hirai concedes ‘pricing is perhaps an issue’
- iOS 4.1: any problems for you?
