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Wireless
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Wireless technology sits at the intersection of engineering, business, and public policy, making it a frequent subject in communications, information technology, and business courses. The topic covers the transmission of data and voice signals without physical connections, encompassing everything from cellular networks and Wi-Fi infrastructure to mobile devices and emergency response systems. Students are drawn to it because wireless technology shapes how individuals, organizations, and governments operate, raising practical questions about connectivity, reliability, security, and access that remain genuinely unresolved.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a wide range of approaches. Some take a comparative angle, weighing dial-up against wireless connections or examining competing network solutions. Others are industry-focused, analyzing specific companies and their customer-facing strategies. Historical and developmental threads appear in work tracing the evolution of the cell phone in America, while applied and design-oriented essays tackle wireless IT infrastructure and cybercrime vulnerabilities. Policy and social impact perspectives emerge in work on emergency response systems in rural areas and the role of geoinformatics in contemporary society, showing that writers move comfortably between technical and humanistic frames.

A strong essay on wireless technology begins with a clearly bounded thesis — arguing for a specific claim about network design, market behavior, or social impact rather than surveying the field broadly. Evidence drawn from technical specifications, company performance data, or documented case studies tends to carry more weight than general claims about convenience or progress. The most common pitfall is treating wireless as a uniformly positive development; acknowledging limitations such as coverage gaps, security risks, and infrastructure costs produces a more credible and analytically rigorous argument.

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Essay Doctorate
Wireless access and IT deployment: learning basic technology concepts for IT professionals
Wireless Technology Is Difficult to Connect
Research Paper Undergraduate
UMTS and WCDMA technologies
HSPA and evolved HSPA with VoIP over HSPA as compared to the R99 CS referring to 3GAmericas.com for R7 and R8.
Paper Doctorate
Verizon SWOT Analysis Verizon Communications
Verizon Communications (NYSE: VZ) is one of the world's leading providers of wireless and wireline-based communication services including broadband, data, network access and global internet protocol (IP) Services. In their latest full fiscal year the company reported revenues of $110, 875 million with an operating profit of $12,880 million during FY2011 (Verizon Investor Relations, 2012). At present the company has 192,000 employees and operates in 150 nations both in a franchised and direct selling model (Verizon Investor Relations, 2012). The strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats (SWOT) of Verizon are the basis of this analysis. Strengths Verizon continues to have a commanding market presence globally with one of the most profitable brands in the telecommunications industry (Brown, 2010). The strength of their brand has given the company the ability to manage customer churn more effectively than competitors, reducing the relative churn rate of customers by 56% over the last three years while competitors have seen churn rates increase by over 67% (Verizon Investor Relations, 2012). The combination of the Verizon brand stability and customer loyalty has given the company a unique level of stability in a very turbulent global telecommunications market (Zoakos, 2002). Another significant strength of Verizon is their ability to orchestrate and complete alliances, mergers and questions quickly. They have also been one of the few telecommunications companies to pioneer the development of effective shared-risk mergers that drastically reduce the downside risk of being an industry consolidator, a role they continue to take on globally (Peaks, Arbogast, O'Keefe, 2009). The well orchestrated acquisition of Alltel by AT&T that Verizon played a central role in is a case in point (Seidenberg, 2002). Verizon also is moving aggressively into new markets including cloud computing using their core strengths in mergers and acquisitions. An example of this strength is the company's recent $1.4B acquisition of Terremark (Ya, 2011). Verizon continues to aggressively and successfully pursue an inorganic growth strategy by concentrating on mergers and acquisitions to bring greater cloud-based innovations to their customers (Gorski, 2005). Verizon continues to also seek out opportunities to define advanced e-commerce encryption standards globally, looking to become the global e-commerce platform at the infrastructure level for enterprises (Everett, 2012).
Research Paper Doctorate
Design of Miniature Antennas for Biomedical Applications
Most of the studies on microwave antennas for medical applications have concentrated on generating hyperthermia for medical treatments and monitoring several physiological parameters.
Essay Doctorate
Software engineering fundamentals and wireless technology applications
Computer Software Is Still a Major Barrier to Wireless Information Systems
Paper Undergraduate
Regulatory framework for telecommunication interception and access in Jordan
Telecommunication Interception and Access in Jordan
Research Paper Doctorate
Climate Change Policy and Agriculture in Mexico
The shift in the teaching and learning model is steadily evolving as technology evolves (Reid, 2003). Students are becoming more and more responsible for discovery and self-learning while teachers are assuming more of a…
Paper Doctorate
Wireless Prevalence or Not There
There is presently much controversy regarding wireless technology, as while some prefer to consider that the future looks promising when regarding it, others are pessimistic because of its negative effects.
Research Paper Doctorate
Economic Model for Monopoly Analysis
Proposal to demonstrate Uniqueness. Mathematical Economic Model.
Paper Undergraduate
Case study on Australian telecommunications
The merger of Vodafone and Hutchison Whampoa's Australian operations has created VHA, a firm with 27% share in the Australian mobile market, good for #3 out of 3 players. The company needs to determine how to best…