We are still digging up details and background but according to several reports including this story from Bloomberg Businessweek legendary cellular pioneer Craig McCaw is set to resign as chairman of Clearwire on Friday.
Just pure guessing (and no inside information) would lead us to surmise that some significant transfer of power (and a likely infusion of new funding) is happening at the top of Clearwire, and whatever that is, perhaps those who are bringing the new money in don’t want the heavy presence of McCaw around? We are still waiting to hear the reasons behind Sprint’s recent board nominations of some industry heavyweights including longtime telephony leader Hossein Eslambolchi, and maybe this is part of the machinations. In the meantime, here’s some video of Craig McCaw talking about Clearwire at a CTIA show a while back. Watch this space for more info Friday!
While the date is officially “tomorrow,” the press release for the Clearwire 4G WiMAX network launch in the San Francisco Bay Area is live late Monday night along with some very detailed coverage mapping that shows more than a few gaps in coverage both in and around San Francisco, as well as down the Peninsula and in many parts of Silicon Valley.
We’re laughing a little bit here at Sidecut HQ near downtown San Mateo, which is one of the bigger non-covered areas — though according to the Clearwire map if we walk down to the end of our block we should be able to see a signal. No worries here, since there are a bunch of buildings in downtown San Mateo that will probably get an antenna array sometime soon if the Clearwire model of quickly beefing up networks after initial deployment follows suit.
But the fairly incomplete coverage throughout the greater Silicon Valley region, especially in the south Bay towns of Palo Alto, Sunnyvale and Mountain View, means that Clearwire’s claim of users “never having to seek out Wi-Fi hotspots” may not be as complete as the company would like — and those gaps are right in the nexus of where a lot of computer/Internet industry folks live, work and play. Kind of an auspicious way to introduce a service to Silicon Valley, where skeptics abound. If those holes don’t get filled quickly Clearwire runs the risk of being tabbed as something not quite as good as advertised; and that rep is tough to live down in what is perhaps the nation’s most technologically savvy set of side-by-side suburbs.
From a marketing perspective, it’s worthy that Clearwire met its own-stated goal of launching the big markets of New York City, Los Angeles and San Francisco before year’s end, even with big budgetary concerns staring the company in the face. And covering the whole “Bay area” is a huge project with multiple challenges including the Bay itself (water isn’t friendly to Clearwire’s spectrum) and multiple small hilly patches that increase the difficulty factor. Still — kudos to Clearwire for being honest and showing where coverage is, and where coverage isn’t, allowing potential users to make their purchase choice using real, solid data. Verizon’s LTE maps, by comparison, paint the region a very simple 4G red — with no tower-level views for street-by-street coverage comparison. Will potential customers start to make such data part of their 4G buying decision? If so then Clearwire is far ahead in the information department.
(Clearwire coverage map close-up below; non-green areas indicate no 4G coverage.)
With the Clearwire/Sprint 4G WiMAX launch happening in San Francisco sometime this week (my guess is that we may see press releases crossing the wires sometime Monday night) the Sprint folks asked me for some commentary on 4G devices, how people use them, and how the Sprint/Clearwire service plans stack up against other offerings. Watch the video for some 30,000-foot views on the subject from yours truly. And while you can take my ramblings with the usual grains of salt, I do think the editing and production from the Sprint folks is top notch… I think their videos in the 4G space offer a good mix of information without too much emphasis on pure marketing. Video embedded below for your viewing pleasure.
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