Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Mobile
  4. Legacy Archives

Clearwire moving away from retail business?

Add as a preferred source on Google
Image used with permission by copyright holder

WiMax operator Clearwire has been struggling to fund build-out of its 4G WiMax network, recently laying off 15 percent of its workforce and announcing a $1.1 billion debt offering to raise money. However, reports are now circulating in the Wall Street Journal (subscription required) and elsewhere that the company is looking to get out of the retail business—offering WiMax modems, hotspots, and notebook cards to consumers—and instead focus on offering wholesale services to clients who would rebrand the service for sale to consumers.

The move could be a benefit to wireless operator Sprint, which owns a 54 percent ownership stake in Clearwire, and is the only major U.S. mobile operator offering WiMax service. If Clearwire were to get out of the consumer retail business, that would largely leave the consumer market to Sprint and its 4G products; Clearwire instead would focus on selling services at a wholesale level to ISPs, telcos, and other potential customers. Sprint has long been at odds with Clearwire’s strategy, complaining that the company charges Sprint too much for WiMax service, and competes against it in the consumer marketplace.

Recommended Videos

Industry reports and Clearwire’s previous financial reporting indicate that the bulk of the company’s revenue currently comes from its retail business, with the company earning about 10 times as much revenue from a retail customer as from a customer brought to WiMax through a wholesale service, such as Sprint’s 4G offerings.

Clearwire currently operates about 140 retail locations in the United States. There’s no information available as to whether Clearwire would shutter existing stores, although reports have the company scaling back retail operations gradually, including reducing expenses for advertising. Clearwire is expected to report its quarterly earnings on February 17; it would be a natural opportunity for the company to announce shifts in its retail strategy.

Both Clearwire and Sprint have indicated they’re looking at operating both WiMax and LTE 4G services.

Geoff Duncan
Former Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
The maker of ChatGPT wants to make open-source projects less of a security bargain
OpenAI launches Patch the Planet for open-source security, with over 30 open-source projects on board.
openai-chatgpt-os

OpenAI has launched Patch the Planet, a new initiative aimed at fixing one of the internet's quietest problems – the chronically underfunded security of open-source software.

Patch the Planet pairs OpenAI's most security-capable AI models with Trail of Bits, a security firm that has committed its entire research organization to the effort, alongside support from HackerOne and Calif.

Read more
I sifted through the Prime Day chaos to find the best Apple deals actually worth buying
Apple's about to hike prices. Prime Day 2026 is your last chance to save up to $150 on MacBooks, AirPods, and iPads.
Prime Day Deals on Apple Products

Apple is set to increase the prices for its upcoming iPhones and MacBooks, as the company can no longer offset the rising RAM and storage costs. That means, if you are looking to upgrade your aging device, you should buy the current-generation Apple products rather than wait for the new ones.

And since Amazon Prime Day is offering good discounts on the latest iPhones, iPads, MacBooks, and other Apple accessories, this is the perfect time to buy them. Here are my favorite Amazon Prime Day deals for Apple products. 

Read more
This sneaky photo trick gets AI chatbots to ignore their safety rules
Florida International University researchers built a method that nearly doubled the rate of harmful responses from a tested AI model using nothing but pixel-level edits in an image.
JaiLIP AI chatbot exploit image

A photo that looks completely ordinary to you could carry a hidden instruction to trick an AI chatbot into ignoring its safety rules, according to new research out of Florida International University. The study found that pixel-level alterations in an image that are invisible to the human eye can be enough to confuse the model reading the image and lead it to generate responses it would normally block.

Hacking what the AI sees

Read more