Providing market intelligence for more than 35 years

The Seattle Times

Closure of Cometa not likely to hurt area Wi-Fi network

The Seattle TimesSeattle Wi-Fi users may find slightly fewer hotspots because Cometa is closing its doors, but the shutdown shouldn't hurt the overall growth of the hotspot market.

Despite Cometa's big-name backers, its business focus was questionable, said Michael Cai, a senior analyst with Parks Associates. "They targeted the wrong venues. People who really need hotspots are frequent travelers, and the locations they need hotspot services are hotels, airports and maybe coffee shops," he said.

From the article "Closure of Cometa not likely to hurt area Wi-Fi network" By Nancy Gohring

Previously In The News

Xbox One vs PS4 vs Wii U: Game console shopping tips

Apparently the economy’s doing all right and the game industry is poised for a big rebound, following this month’s launch of the Xbox One and PlayStation 4. Some 40 percent of broadband-connect...

Fire TV has limitations but is appealing overall

Increasingly these capabilities are built directly into TV sets, so they can connect wirelessly to a home network, stream video and run apps like a smartphone. It may come to be a standard TV featu...

Hulu releases remote control for consoles

Control of other set-top devices and smart TVs is “coming soon,” according to the company’s announcement. Some 55 percent of U.S. smartphone owners use TV apps at least once a month, mostly to...

Smart thermostat sales heat up

Parks Associates, a Dallas market-research firm, estimates about 1 in 10 U.S. homes with a broadband connection now has a smart thermostat. “Six (million) to 8 million thermostats are sold annu...