"Robert Tomlinson "Bob" Wheeler, III" was an United States/American Sportsperson/athlete in track & field who specialized in the Middle_distance_track_event#Mile/mile. Born in Timonium, Maryland, he went to Dulaney High School in Baltimore County, Maryland, and attended Duke University. He represented the United States at the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich, where he ran the 1500 metres. He is still the Duke record holder at the mile (indoor), the 1500 metres (outdoor), and the 1000 metres (indoor), records he ran between 1971 and 1973.

More Bob Wheeler on Wikipedia.

We're saying, like a lot of communities do, that here's a value to these jobs. It's a wise investment to look at a differing rate structure for industry.

We think there is a value to these jobs, and it's a wise investment to look at a different rate structure for big industry.

IEEE 802.11n will be ratified sometime in 2007.

We wanted to be in the southern part of the country to take advantage of the growth and emergence of these markets versus what we're seeing in the northeast region. The company's intent is to bring local people on board and offer them the opportunity to join us as long-time associates. We're not here to fill 200 jobs from other places. We want to use local people.

For consumers (with a single router and wireless card) it is not a big issue, but the enterprise will wait for standards. Most enterprise customers wouldn't deploy an IEEE 802.11n product until it is ratified or very stable.

There is indeed such a bottleneck, and if their software does what they claim, it should get wide support.

The more medical services available - the better I feel.

The applications running in home networks don't demand that much throughput.