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DiegodelaPuenteFirstPaper 22 - 23 Jan 2012 - Main.DiegodelaPuente
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META TOPICPARENT | name="FirstPaper" |
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> > | UNDER REVISION | | A proposal to live in a free mobile telecommunications world
-- By DiegodelaPuente - 29 Sep 2011 | | By the end of 2010 there were approximately 5.3 billion mobile subscribers according to the International Telecommunication Union. This reflects that mobile network owners have an immense control and power over the life of millions who must submit to their wills and rules. Therefore, I argue that the actual scheme must be changed in society's favor and that technology advances are the way to achieve it. Unfortunately, mobile network operators and the U.S. government have opposed any change to the actual scheme through the years.
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< < | Why does the link have
to be standing apart, as though it weren't a link? How about what
I've done above? Doesn't that make it easier to read, without the
flow-disruption of the URL? Writing for the web is actually natural,
and you should do it. Instead you first produce a reference list that
requires the reader to scroll up and down like a madman to follow your
references, and then create visual blockage by putting URLs in the
text. A moment's effort gives you text that's clean, simple, and
informative. Hypertext is better text. You need the exercise of
finishing the transformation. | | | |
< < | Nowadays, the most used technology to perform phone calls by advanced mobile operators and phone service providers over the Internet, such as Skype, is Voice over IP (VoIP? ), also called Internet Telephony, which transforms voice into data packets that travel through the Internet to its destination. Given this, it is technically possible that we do not need mobile network operators to process our phone calls if we can be connected to a giant Wi-Fi network and have Wi-Fi enabled mobile devices. | > > | Nowadays, the most used technology to perform phone calls by advanced mobile operators and phone service providers over the Internet, such as Skype, is Voice over IP (VoIP? ), also called Internet Telephony, which transforms voice into data packets that travel through the Internet to its destination. Given this, it is technically possible that we do not need mobile network operators to process our phone calls if we can be connected to a giant Wi-Fi network and have Wi-Fi enabled mobile devices. | | | |
< < | VoIP? technology: http://transition.fcc.gov/voip/ | | 2. How to achieve the change?
My proposal is to use of Wi-Fi enabled VoIP? phones under super Wi-Fi environments, which is coherent with actual's trend to shift from voice towards data. However, mobile network operators have opposed Wi-Fi environment's promotion and related discoveries, because they considered that it would represent a serious threat for their voice revenues. For example, 2010 AT&T’s and Sprint’s voice revenue were US$28,315 millions and 2,249 millions, respectively. |
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