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This profile was automatically generated using 3 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 3 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
Web References
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1. www.eeplace.com
www.eeplace.com/eeplace/eventD - [Cached]Published on: 6/29/2006 Last Visited: 6/29/2008
Dave Chee Product Marketing Manager APAC Product & Platform Marketing Group
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Dave CheeDave Chee is the APac Product Marketing Manager for Intel LAN silicon and adapter products.Dave started at Intel in 2001 where he held product marketing responsibilities for Intel's wireless LAN products.Prior to joining Intel, Dave was a Product Marketing Manager at Xircom Asia Pacific Pte Ltd. -
2. sg.lycosasia.com
sg.lycosasia.com/press/rel_200 - [Cached]Published on: 12/3/2001 Last Visited: 9/1/2002
Participants also found out the reward of wireless networking that promised higher employee productivity, from Dave Chee, Intel's product marketing manager.Three technologies have this promise realisable -- Bluetooth for personal wireless communication (around 10m range), Wi-Fi for intra-office communication (at 100m range) and GPRS for outside communication of over 1,000m.
The need for mobility is driving wireless LAN adoption, Mr Chee said.Workers are becoming more untethered but need to maintain access to the network.Resellers are jumping at the chance to service this growing opportunity.
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3. CMPnetAsia
www.cmpnetasia.com/ViewArt.cfm - [Cached]Published on: 12/2/2002 Last Visited: 12/2/2002
Dave Chee, product marketing manager with Intel Asia Pacific, says that the newer "a" standard will likely prevail-eventually.Intel, for example, is working with 802.11b and is aiming to put it directly in its chipsets, meaning that before too long it will be ubiquitous."In the near future it will be a mix of technologies, but the direction will be 802.11a because of higher bandwidth and less interference," he says.Another problem is that 802.11b and Bluetooth, a wireless technology with a shorter range than Wi-Fi that aims to replace cables, also works in the unlicenced 2.4GHz (as does everything from microwave ovens to remote controls) and has been known to interfere and reduce the bandwidth when in the same area as a WLAN card.But again, Chee believes that both technologies will eventually be seen side by side-something that Intel is now working on.
Future ProspectsThere's no doubt that WLAN is a potential bright spot for the telecom industry-the question is how bright and who the winners will be.
Revenue figures and hot-spot rollouts don't tell the full story.Much of the revenue is in the enterprise sector and is based on low-cost WLAN cards and hubs, but whether this is a driver for broadband infrastructure is a different story altogether.The number of hot-spot roll-outs is also not an indication, especially if many of the operators fall by the wayside and if the business models do not work out as planned.

