We present our new Technology White Paper as yet another piece of evidence of iUHBA’s ability to dominate the future fiber optic networking industry. Please note: this document solely describes the patented wired technology segment of iUHBA’s FiberBroadband Strategy; the wireless segment is not discussed. To receive a copy you have to become a member of our Linkedin Group (1,000 members). Follow this link: http://glassified.wordpress.com/group/ and then look for the announcement. An intro to the document follows below.
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Most players in the telecom industry are still talking about what possibly could be the “killer application” for 100 Mbps or even 1 Gbps services. It therefore does not surprise us that many industry players and observers find iUHBA’s plans extremely ambitious. In fact, Randall Stephenson, AT&T’s CEO, recently said in an interview that 50 Mbps should be enough. It should be understood that dinosaurs like AT&T will not be the dominant players of the future. Another mammoth, Verizon Communications, will have invested approximately $30 billion in its FiOS project by 2010, but the highest speed they would be capable to provide may not exceed 100 Mbps. Companies like these incumbents will seldom be as innovative as companies like iUHBA, because they have to consider existing interests, especially because they own legacy systems. With this White Paper, we will prove that iUHBA is the only company in the world capable of building the most advanced fiber optic infrastructures in the most effective way (technologically and cost-, design-, and deployment- wise). Four major patents, developed by iUHBA’s Vice Chairman, a pioneering inventor in the fiber optics industry, Dr. Mahmoud El-Sherif, play a crucial role in iUHBA’s technology vision. For the first time in their decade-long effort, iUHBA’s principals lift the veil on their Fiber To The Home/Office vision and the patented Fiber Optics technologies behind iUHBA’s unique FiberBroadband Strategy.
Telecom industry terms and expectations that were commonly accepted by 2005-2006 are outdated today. The industry is being dominated by incumbents who set the overall, global agenda, but they are still stuck to their legacy systems. Even industry leaders such as Verizon, with its visionary FiOS project in the USA, are betting on the wrong horses, most likely because of their legacy infrastructure ownership. Thus, it is not a great surprise that yesteryears’ vision of 1 Gbps connectivity speeds is deemed fantastic and “futureproof”; industry decision makers, and politicians are stuck in their old telecom mud, while the world moves on, at an incredible speed. And this is where iUHBA enters the playing field.