Instead of leading the way with 5G coverage, a combined Sprint/T-Mobile carrier would best operate as a more robust counter to AT&T and Verizon.
The post Sprint/T-Mobile merger pitch to FCC pivots from 5G to competition appeared first on Pocketnow.
Instead of leading the way with 5G coverage, a combined Sprint/T-Mobile carrier would best operate as a more robust counter to AT&T and Verizon.
The post Sprint/T-Mobile merger pitch to FCC pivots from 5G to competition appeared first on Pocketnow.
T-Mobile's got plenty of space to work with in that 600MHz spectrum, but it's taking the first step to deploy 5G on that network.
The post T-Mobile completes 5G connection over 600MHz appeared first on Pocketnow.
GitHub, the world's top software development platform, will soon become Microsoft's third costliest acquisition in history, behind LinkedIn and Skype.
The post Microsoft wants to close $7.5 billion GitHub acquisition by the end of the year appeared first on Pocketnow.
He sees the merger as a crisis and an opportunity to protect the prepaid wireless market from data price gouging and reduction of choice.
The post Boost Mobile founder wants to take it back from Sprint and T-Mobile appeared first on Pocketnow.
MetroPCS, Boost Mobile and Virgin Mobile would come under the T-Mobile ownership umbrella and would have a combined 54 percent of the prepaid market.
The post Low income earners watching Sprint/T-Mobile merger with concern appeared first on Pocketnow.
Just five months after the two wireless networks decided to walk away from the negotiation table, they are said to be back at it. Again.
The post Sprint and T-Mobile talking about merging once again appeared first on Pocketnow.
They say Qualcomm's management is opposed to any Broadcom deal right now, but $130 billion sounds like an offer the semiconductor giant can't refuse.
The post Broadcom makes formal $130 billion offer for acquisition of arch-rival Qualcomm appeared first on Pocketnow.
It’s somewhat ironic, but instead of waiting to see how a far-reaching current mobile industry stagnation plays out and maybe cut expenses in the face of underwhelming financial reports of late, several tech veterans and market leaders continue to branch out and splash the cash on mergers and acquisitions.
Wireless service provider extraordinaire Verizon is still keen to spend as much as $4.8 billion on oft-loathed Yahoo to build an unstoppable digital media beast, smartphone processor-making specialist Qualcomm will become an IoT force to be reckoned with once its $47B NXP purchase closes, and perhaps most surprising of all, Samsung is now annexing Harman.
Now, as in mere months after the unprecedented Galaxy Note 7 scandal erupted, costing the world’s largest smartphone vendor billions in direct and indirect short-term losses, plus billions more down the road.
Granted, this $8 billion deal is only expected to be sealed sometime in “mid-2017”, if Harman shareholders and regulatory approvals give it the green light, which should be just a formality. There will obviously be no opposition from investors, considering the 28 percent premium Samsung has agreed to cough up based on the 1980-founded American company’s November 11 closing stock price.
It goes without saying HTC will never get to release another Harman Kardon Edition handheld, though Samsung doesn’t just want to “greatly enhance the competitiveness of its mobile, display, virtual reality and wearable products to deliver a fully differentiated audio experience for customers.”
First and foremost, Harman’s value lies in the automotive industry, with “more than 30 million vehicles currently equipped with its connected car and audio systems, including embedded infotainment, telematics, connected safety and security.” So, yeah, Samsung is finally going after Google’s Android Auto and Apple CarPlay in the “smart car” arena.
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