Clearwire Offers 4G Prepaid Service – WSJ.com

Clearwire Corp. unveiled a pay-as-you-go mobile-broadband service on Monday that uses its fourth-generation wireless network, as the company seeks to attract a new class of customers before rivals launch competing plans.

The service, called Rover, is launching in all of Clearwire’s 49 markets that offer its 4G wireless technology. With Rover, Clearwire is targeting 18- to 24-year-old customers who want to be constantly plugged into the Internet but don’t want to be locked into contracts.

The target customers “come to expect high-speed Internet whenever they connect,” Seth Cummings, a Clearwire general manager, said Monday.

The service costs $5 a day, $20 a week or $50 a month for unlimited 4G usage but requires the purchase of either a “puck,” a portable Wi-Fi hotspot that will support up to eight devices, costing $150, or a “stick,” which supports one device and costs $100.

via Clearwire Offers 4G Prepaid Service – WSJ.com.

The Internet in America: A YouTube Interview with the FCC | The White House

If you’re reading this, then you’re probably on the Internet — via your laptop, your mobile phone or other handheld device, or maybe even through your television. But even in 2010, millions of Americans do not have access to the wealth of information made available on the Web. Even though the Internet was invented in the U.S. over 20 years ago, many Americans lag behind in both access to the Internet and speed of connections, which is why the Federal Communications Commission (or the FCC, the federal agency that regulates the U.S. communications industry) is launching its much-antipated National Broadband Plan next Tuesday, to lay out its strategy for connecting all Americans to fast, affordable high-speed Internet.

via The Internet in America: A YouTube Interview with the FCC | The White House.