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Updated Saturday, January 8, 2011 8:26 pm TWN, AP |
![]() Verizon displays the 4G HTC Thunderbolt at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Nevada, Thursday, Jan. 6.
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Verizon reveals first 4G wireless tablets, phonesThe companies are boosting their wireless data speeds and revving up the marketing hype. They're moving away from talking about call quality and coverage, and focusing on data speeds: megabits in place of minutes. For consumers, there are benefits in the form of faster service and cooler gadgets. Yet some of the marketing campaigns seem designed to confuse consumers about the gadgets' speed. At the International Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas this week, Verizon Wireless revealed the 10 gadgets with built-in access to its new high-speed wireless data network, including smart phones, tablet and laptops. Some are to launch as early as March. Along with Sprint Nextel Corp.'s subsidiary Clearwire Corp., Verizon is at the forefront of the move to a new network technology, designed to relay data rather than calls. Verizon's fourth-generation, or “4G” network, went live for laptop modems in last month. The new wireless network is the nation's fastest. Verizon is hoping to cash in on that advantage by selling tablets and smart phones that devour data. One of the devices, Motorola Mobility Inc.'s Xoom tablet, will come with a 10.1-inch (25.65-centimeter) screen and two cameras: one for video chatting, the other for high-definition videos. The Xoom will begin selling by March. Initially, it will work with Verizon's 3G network but will be upgradeable to work on the speedier 4G network. Motorola's Droid Bionic smartphone will also have two cameras, to help with video conferencing, a data-hungry task. It will be one of the first phones with a so-called “dual-core processor” that will roughly double its computing capacity. That should help with video processing. LG Electronics Inc., Samsung Electronics Co. and HTC Corp. are bringing out similar phones for the network. Hewlett-Packard Co. is adding 4G capability to a laptop and a netbook. There will also be two “mobile hotspot” devices for the network: small battery-powered bricks that act as Wi-Fi access points, connecting Wi-Fi-equipped computers to the 4G network. Verizon didn't reveal what the new devices or wireless plans will cost. Verizon's size — by number of subscribers, it's the largest U.S. wireless carrier — and the quality of its network are helping it gain traction with manufacturers. | |||||||||||||