Thursday, October 05, 2006

WiFi corp CEO Gary Brown gives an update!

Here's the latest update...straight from the horses mouth.

I wanted to update everyone on the progress of the WiFi project as of October 1, 2006. First and foremost I know how much all of you are anxiously awaiting the launch of this new technology, and believe me I want it to happen as much as you do as well!

It has been nearly 5 years since the inception and continued development of this high speed internet technology for the masses, and a very long 5 years as well. Many issues had to be resolved to make this dream become a reality.

Over the past year I have lost 2 engineers (programmers) due to death and other technical setbacks in field testing which is critical to assure funding of the entire project. Currently we are waiting on the site survey crew to allow us to start the testing of the very critical rugged terrain signal tests. Once we have the data from these tests we will be in a much better position to project a launch of this new technology! I look forward to providing all of you a tentative start up date in the near future.

Regards,

Gary R. Brown


That's great news for the ItsYourNet members who have been patiently waiting for this ground-breaking product. Remeber, we are talking about a global, High Speed Wireless Internet for $19.95 per month.

This is patented technology that will absolutely change the Internet as we know it today.


These are exciting times that we live in...indeed.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Yes, it's been a long time in coming. Here we are on the verge of 2008 and it looks like it will be the year this amazing technology rolls out. Anyone want to stay abreast of when it comes to your area go to http://www.AwirelessAge.com

Anonymous said...

I see an awful lot of marketing for this "revolutionary" technology and precious little in the way of deliverables. No discussion of how the end-user will connect to these access towers with a 30+ mile coverage area, are there any agreements in place for production of laptop adapter cards or maybe a handheld access device? Without these in place there will be no 1-year nationwide roll-out. With the advent of the 3G iPhone and AT&T cellular broadband download speeds already in the neighborhood of 1.4Mbps the window is closing for this as-yet-unnamed wireless Internet access platform.