Later that same year, McCaw founded NEXTLINK Communications, planning to enter the
broadband and
internet service provider market. In 2000, the company merged with Concentric Network and was renamed
XO Communications. The company filed for
bankruptcy protection in 2002. In 1994, McCaw and
Bill Gates teamed up to form
Teledesic, with an ambitious plan to form a broadband satellite communications system with hundreds of
low Earth orbit satellites. In 2002, Teledesic halted satellite production; and in 2003, it sold its
spectrum licenses. In 2000, McCaw invested in
New ICO, a refloating after bankruptcy of ICO Global Communications, a mobile-satellite service (MSS) constellation company. The company did not complete its planned satellite constellation. In August 2004, McCaw founded Clearwire Corporation, a provider of wireless broadband Internet service. The company's U.S. broadband network is deployed in markets ranging from major metropolitan areas to small, rural communities. At the end of 2007, Clearwire offered service in 46 markets in the U.S. as well as four markets in Europe. McCaw, who served as Chairman of Clearwire until December 31, 2010, once said to an interviewer, "Filling a need that others aren't addressing has always been a focus of the companies that I have been involved with." In November 2008, Clearwire completed a landmark transaction with Sprint combining their next-generation wireless broadband businesses into a new wireless communications company, which retained the name Clearwire. With the closing, Sprint contributed all of its 2.5 GHz spectrum and its WiMAX-related assets, including its XOHM business, to Clearwire. In addition, Clearwire received a $3.2 billion cash investment from
Comcast,
Intel,
Time Warner Cable,
Google and
Bright House Networks. The new company traded on the
NASDAQ as CLWR. As part of the announcement, then Clearwire Chairman Craig McCaw said, "The power of the mobile Internet, which offers speed and mobility, home and away, on any device or screen, will fundamentally transform the communications landscape in our country. We believe that the new Clearwire will operate one of the fastest and most capable broadband wireless networks ever conceived, giving us the opportunity to return the U.S. to a leadership position in the global wireless industry." In January 2009,
Clearwire launched its first 4G mobile
WiMAX network in
Portland, Oregon, making it only the second city after
Baltimore to offer a high-speed network at true
broadband speeds. By the end of 2010, the company had expanded its 4G network to 71 markets in the U.S. covering more than 110 million people. ==Political activities==