This morning the New York Times has an analytical article titled: Cellphone Straightjacket Is Inspiring a Rebellion. Along with analysis, the piece includes some vocabulary of control for the Shibuya Epiphany from the canine world:
At the heart of the tension between the different camps is whether the wireless network should be open, much like the Internet is today, or remain under the watchful control of companies like AT&T and Verizon Wireless, a joint venture of Verizon Communications and Vodafone. Carriers, who paid billions of dollars to build their networks, are unwilling to open them.
For others, change can’t happen soon enough. As such the alliances and partnerships struck now are likely to shape the industry over the next five years.
“It is the battle of the overdogs,” said Tom Wheeler, a venture capitalist and former chief of the CTIA, a trade group for the wireless industry. “They are all jostling back and forth to be leaders of the next generation. The question is, how do I position myself? It is a
This morning the New York Times has an analytical article titled: Cellphone Straightjacket Is Inspiring a Rebellion. Along with analysis, the piece includes some vocabulary of control for the Shibuya Epiphany from the canine world:
At the heart of the tension between the different camps is whether the wireless network should be open, much like the [...]













