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Monday, May 30
by
Mark Evans
on Mon 30 May 2005 04:56 PM EDT
You know the feeling you got - or still get - on Christmas Eve where the anticipation of what's to come the next day is almost overwhelming. Well, it kind of feels like Dec. 24 today given Nortel CEO Bill Owens is slated to give a keynote speech at the Canadian Telecom Summit tomorrow morning. The excitement is almost killing me. Will Owens talk about Nortel's ambitous plans for India? Will he discuss the fast-moving world of U.S. government services? Will he articulate Nortel's plans for strategic acquisitions? Or will he will he finally provide details of the company's strategic vision? Personally, I'm planning on getting there early to get a prime seat. Of course, this will probably be a necessity for reporters hoping to lob a question or two at Mr. Owens given there won't be a press conference afterwards, and it's likely he will be whisked back to the friendly confines of Nortel's corporate headquarters in Brampton.
by
Mark Evans
on Mon 30 May 2005 10:56 AM EDT
To be honest, I'm baffled by Bell ExpressVu/Bell Mobility CEO Robert Odendaal's decision to not do a Q&A with the media today at the Canadian Telecom Summit. Given that Nadir Mohamed, Odendaal's counterpart at Rogers Communications, pulled out on his keynote speech today at the last minute, Odendaal has an excellent platform to deliver the Bell message. Maybe Bell hasn't got much to say, or perhaps it's got a lot to say about issues such as its IP-TV strategy but it's not ready to talk yet. Either way, his post-keynote "no comment" decision is puzzling.
by
Mark Evans
on Mon 30 May 2005 09:14 AM EDT
Toronto-based venture capitalist Rick Segal - a.k.a. The Post Money Value - has some gripes this morning about accessing "free" Wi-Fi at Cora's, a local breakfast spot. He criticizes the access provider - Sesame Networks - for its user-unfriendly process to log on to the free service. Among his woes is some fine print the user may be charged for a SMS message that Sesame sends out to verify people trying to access its network. In the end, Rick talks about getting a Sierra Wireless card, and signing up for a wireless data plan. His comments are a nice complement to a column in the National Post last week and blog posting about why the business model for Wi-Fi is disappearing. If 3G and Wi-Max technology live up to the hype, Wi-Fi may soon become marginalized into just an inter-household networking technology.
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