Press Clippings

Wi-Fi the Highway

The CANAMEX Corridor, created by Congress in 1995, is a series of highways connecting Mexico and Canada via rural areas in Arizona, Nevada, Utah, Idaho and Montana.
Government Technology
Go To Article

Craig Cameron: metro Wi-Fi plus mobile VOIP looks like a winner

Craig Cameron of RoamAD discusses what the key business drivers are for rolling out large-scale metro/muni Wi-Fi networks in the near future.
Muniwireless
Go To Article

Homeland Security coup for RoamAD: Data at any speed

As a police officer in hot pursuit, you wouldn't expect to be able to send live streaming video of the chase.. but in Arizona it's today's technology.
NBR
Go To Article

Siemens Deals Out RoamAD Solution

New Zealand metro Wi-Fi supplier RoamAD has signed a distribution agreement with Siemens. The pact helps the Wi-Fi developer extend its reach into Asia, Europe and the U.S. The distribution agreement first takes aim at the New Zealand market, naturally.
Wi-Fi Planet
Go To Article

LAN Dressed as MAN: Metro-Zone 802.11 Wireless

Two features important to making such hot-zones successful, says Craig Cameron, CEO of RoamAD, are "continuous indoor and outdoor WiFi coverage" that is "as good as GSM" within the hot-zone, and the ability to provide wireless VoIP/VoWiFi with full roaming, low latency, and fast handoffs.
Unstrung Insider Report
View Report

Local Wireless Technology Wowing World

It's in Auckland where [RoamAD's] technology powers the world's biggest multi-storey, complex, three-dimensional wireless network. The Auckland network, which contains RoamAD's latest hardware and software, was built for Reach Wireless, who wanted to own and operate core Wi-Fi infrastructure in strategic central business district locations.
Computer Express
View Article

RoamAD gets ready to roam as wi-fi goes on an upswing

Cameron, an Australian, has over 22 years experience in executive positions in five different countries, in both start-up and mature businesses, according to RoamAD.
NBR
Go to article

RoamAD and Reach fire up city wi-fi

RoamAD has resurrected plans for a wireless internet network in Auckland's inner city, but this time it will supply only the technology, leaving the service to be run by growing "wi-fi" operator Reach Wireless.
NZ Herald
Go to article

Alternative for 3G, Wi-Fi MAN: RoamAD

If you have a PDA, laptop or dual mode cell handset with Wi-Fi feature, you
can have WLAN service seamlessly anytime, anywhere in a RoamAD network.
ATLAS Research Group
Go to report

RoamAD: Kiwis Build 802.11 MAN

This document discusses how significant RoamAD's introduction of 802.11b metropolitan area networks (MANs) is.
IDC
Go to report

Syndicate content