Clear is getting their act together as well. They have the commitment from Sprint through 2012 worth about a Billion, they are adding infrastructure to current Clear cities, they are increasing their Wholesale business, Best Buy is picking them up, they are farming out Managed services to Ericsson to save cash, etc. Yes they are currently losing money, partly because they should not have attempted retail, but they have good things in the works. Even their stock price is up like 5%. The deal with Sprint handles the cash flow problem.
Clear is probably the worst company I have ever done business with in my entire life. They are far from getting their act together, and deserve every bad thing that happens to them including bankruptcy. Peruse their forum for 30 seconds and you'll see how hated they are.
Sprint made a terrible mistake in getting in bed with Clear because they've tethered themselves very deeply to an organization that can only drag them down.
I have no idea what Sprint is going to do to fix the current situation, but getting unhitched from Clear's sinking ship should be a priority. It almost appears Clear is intentionally falling apart to force a buyout.
From Google's perspective, I can't see any good reason why they would want to directly inherit all the debts and pains of a multi-billion dollar cellular infrastructure. Sprint is viable, Clear is not, which in itself is going to be a pain to fix.
If I were Google, I'd buy a majority stake in Sprint, and liquidate all interests in Clear, phase out wimax over 4 years, and give Sprint the cash injection needed to roll out LTE without needing to outsource to anyone else.



