Wireless Valley

Wireless Valley is a term that was coined by Professor Ted Rappaport in 1990 when he was a faculty member at Virginia Tech, and was used to describe the Roanoke/Blacksburg, Virginia region and the potential of research to create spin-out companies. He and his students founded TSR Technologies in 1990, a company that made software-defined cellular and paging intercept and drive test equipment that was sold to Allen Telecom in 1993, and Wireless Valley Communications in 1995, a company that pioneered the creation of computer-aided wireless network prediction and management software that was sold to Motorola in late 2005. This term was later used as nickname to describe several regional clusters of companies in the information technology sector, in analogy to California's Silicon Valley:

References

  1. Markoff, John, “‘Wireless Valley’ Growing in San Diego Area,” New York Times, March 24. 1997, URL: http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=990DE4D7133BF937A15750C0A961958260
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