Statewide Wireless Broadband

Posted by Daily Wireless on April 30th, 2007 - 9:04 am

A statewide wireless broadband network is planned for South Carolina. The goal is for schools, homes, public safety workers, municipalities, hospitals and health care workers, businesses and visitors to have Internet access anytime and anywhere, in rural or urban areas, says Rep. Dwight Loftis, a Greenville Republican who co-authored the bill to fund the project.

Loftis has told The Greenville News that he hopes South Carolina can provide free basic wireless broadband service in exchange for letting providers use the towers, some excess state licensed frequencies, and charge for faster services. The state’s network of educational television towers provides an initial infrastructure to make this futuristic sounding venture a reality, said state

But Rep. Greg Delleney, opposes the bill because he said the network would compete with private businesses already offering Internet access.

Meanwhile, Vermont’s e-state initiative is gathering bi-partisan support.
Passage of Vermont’s broadband and telecommunications bill, which calls for border-to-border broadband and cellular coverage, is expected soon.

The $20 million wireless network would allow collaboration between industry, and the public and private sectors. Users would include government agencies, businesses, and education institutions. It is not planned to provide network access for individual consumer usage.

The Bill is now before the state Senate. It is the centerpiece of Gov. Jim Douglas’s e-state initiative to provide ubiquitous broadband coverage across his state by 2010.

Unwire Oregon, May 1st in Corvallis (on the campus of Oregon State), brings national and international leaders together to discuss how broadband wireless will change our communities. This conference is not about how technology works but how technology changes how we work and learn.

Unwire Oregon features lots of great speakers including Ron Resnick, Chairman of WiMAX Forum, Chris Sacca, Head of Special Initiatives for Google, One Economy’s Rey Ramsey, M2Z Networks’s Jon Muleta, Tropos Network’s Ron Sege, and many others.

The economics of municipal WiFi is still a question for EarthLink, which said Thursday it will study the performance of its municipal wireless Internet networks in four cities — Philadelphia, New Orleans and California’s Anaheim and Milpitas — before deciding how to move forward with similar Wi-Fi networks elsewhere.

EarthLink is “not yet able to establish that comfort level” that the investments are really profitable, said Kevin Dotts, EarthLink’s chief financial officer.

That doesn’t mean EarthLink is pulling the plug on cities under contract, like Houston, which would eventually be the nation’s largest network at about 600 square miles, Dotts said. EarthLink is also pitching a muni plan for Chicago.

Taipei’s Wi-Fi system, the world’s largest, with more than 4,200 antennas and counting, has fallen far short of expectations, reports the SF Chronicle. But that hasn’t detered the city, which plans to expand their network using WiMAX.

All citizens of India may receive free 2Mbps internet by 2009, according to IndiaTimes. The government is proposing that the service would be provided by the state-owned BSNL and MTNL. Officials backing the plan are hoping that giving all residents access to high-speed internet would “boost economic activity”.

Wireless Singapore utilizes three local wireless operators to deploy a free wireless broadband network. Using Firetide mesh products in the first phase, it supplies access speeds of up to 512kbps in public areas. The Wireless@SG project, targets people on-the-go who require wireless broadband access.

Large-scale wireless deployments are complex and governments should spend time upfront to develop a plan that will fit the needs of the community, says Firetide. They found the following areas to be key project elements that can be replicated for U.S. municipalities:

  • Select a Model That Works for Your Community - Singapore instituted for a government sponsored initiative Wireless@SG to ensure Wi-Fi access would be available to all its citizens. To cover the entire country of Singapore, multiple operators were utilized for regional zones to make the deployment more manageable.
  • Consider Future Applications - The government decided that it would include Wi-Fi access throughout all regions. It also called for future applications for voice and mobility so that wireless connectivity could be tapped while on the go. Firetide’s mesh network offers both VLAN capability, Quality of Service (QoS) and multiple levels of encryption for network security. This allows Singapore to offer secure services to its users and to prioritize critical voice traffic ahead of data for optimal VoIP performance.
  • Test and Correct Installation at Every Step - During the deployment, the service provider learned that the best location for an access point was not necessarily the best location for a wireless mesh node. Firetide’s modular architecture allowed for the ability to deploy each function with flexibility. Based on “test and correct method,” iCELL and Firetide engineers learned that placing wireless nodes up high, for best backhaul performance and place access points closer to the user communities allowed for the best network coverage. As Firetide’s hardware could be de-coupled, it allowed additional ways to work with any environment.
  • Set Clear Expectations About Coverage: The free Wi-Fi service is slated to be available island-wide in major indoors and outdoors public places, but not in residential areas, where broadband connections are readily available. Setting expectations upfront, and planning for reliable performance in indoor public venues (cafes, malls, government buildings) prevented issues commonly seen in some of the U.S. Wi-Fi deployments. From the technical stand-point, Firetide’s products allow seamless network management from indoors to the outdoors. “We didn’t want to have to manage an indoor network and a different outdoor network,” Chua added.

Original Source: dailywireless.org

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Sam Churchill and Don Park run the DailyWireless.org website which summarizes the news from Community Lan and other industry related sectors with detailed updates from around the world. It is full of sausy talk, viscious rumors and tantilizing tidbits.