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Municipal Wireless Networks Generating Controversy (Nov 2, 2006)
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Municipal Wireless Networks Generating Controversy
Nov 2, 2006
Contact:
Dan Chmielewski
Madison Alexander PR, Inc.
714-832-8716
949-231-2965
dchm@madisonalexanderpr.com
Posted By Wayne
Slavin at NetStumbler.com
- InnerWireless spokesman Tony Katsulos said that
the "wireless clouds that are being discussed for
Philadelphia, Minneapolis and other cities will not only be
very difficult to implement, but they won't provide
in-building coverage, for the same reason that cell phone
signals can't penetrate buildings."
-
- Municipal wireless networks are generating a great deal
of controversy lately, compelling some state legislatures to
seek t outlaw them. The reason for the public policy power
play at state houses? Powerful wireless service providers
and cable companies are lobbying behind the scenes, in
states like Florida, to stop the local governments from
creating free wireless an WiFi networks when they have
millions of customers who are still perfectly willing to pay
for services.
-
- "I expect more states to introduce anti-municipal
broadband bills and in states where the bills died in
committee, I expect their sponsors to re-introduce them in
the next session," writes wireless analyst Esme Vos, in the
MuniWireless.com March 2005 Report. Vos says that the
opponents of municipal broadband networks have created their
own think tanks, at the state level, to argue in the media
and before legislators that the networks are a waste of tax
dollars. "They purport to have altruistic motivation," said
Vos.
-
- For the last three years, many local governments in the
U.S. and in Europe have quietly sought to build wireless
networks. Many cities are building WiFi networks, because
they can be easily deployed by city employees, police and
firemen, reducing overall telecom costs. Some of the
municipal wireless networks are already quite popular,
including those in Fullerton, Calif., Spokane, Wash., Los
Lunas, N.M., Lexington, Ky. and Columbia, S.C.
-
- Pilot Programs
-
- A firm called AirTegrity Wireless is currently
"deploying a WiMax pilot program for greater Lake Tahoe," a
spokesman said. And earlier this month, government officials
in Philadelphia announced one of the most high-profile
wireless municipal networks to date. The city's mayor, John
Street, recently detailed the plan for Wireless
Philadelphia, the city's project to bring wireless broadband
to everyone in its surroundings.
-
- It will cost US$10 million dollars to install up to
3,000 wireless nodes on light poles all over the
135-square-mile city. An additional $5 million is being
budgeted to run the network for the first two years. The
money will be raised through taxable bonds. No vendor has
been picked yet to do the install or to provide equipment
for the wireless network.
-
- That hasn't stopped some critics from caviling about the
plan. "Swiss cheese -- that's one way to describe the
planned municipal wireless networks," said Tony Katsulos, a
spokesman for InnerWireless, a wireless networking
technology vendor. "Whether it's WiFi, or WiMax, the huge
holes in the plan are how or whether wireless will work
indoors."
-
- Katsulos said that the "wireless clouds that are being
discussed for Philadelphia, Minneapolis and other cities
will not only be very difficult to implement, but they won't
provide in-building coverage, for the same reason that cell
phone signals can't penetrate buildings."
-
- He adds that the municipal wireless networks may also
wreak havoc on corporate networks, running on their own
wireless protocols. There are a number of "physics and RF
[radio frequency] challenges of providing in-building
wireless voice and data coverage," said Katsulos.
-
- Different Perspectives
-
- Other analysts disagree. "The increased interest in
municipal wireless broadband networks is driving innovation
among software developers -- back office, network security
and hotzone management -- and vendors of mesh networking
equipment and antennae," writes Vos.
-
- In Europe last week, at the industry's first awards show
to honor innovation in wireless municipal networks,
Sweden-based Appear Networks was honored for its creativity.
The company developed a WiFi project for the Paris bus
system, and earned an award for Best Public WiFi Product at
the Wireless Broadband Innovation trade show in London.
Other high-profile wireless municipal projects from Bristol,
U.K. and Sweden, also received plaudits at the conference.
- Dave Mock, an analyst with CurrentOfferings.com, said he
has used the municipal wireless network in Fullerton,
Calif., regularly, for free, without problem. "Many cities
are attracted to wide area WiFi nets because they can be
deployed quickly for use by city employees and safety
personnel," said Mock, author of Tapping Into Wireless
(McGraw-Hill). "The ability to also offer wireless broadband
to residents is icing on the cake. Often, large sections of
cities and suburbs are not even covered by DSL [digital
subscriber lines] or cable, so a wireless service is a very
attractive way to get ignored residents connected."
-
- Interference Minimized
-
- To be sure, there may indeed be interference problems
with the networks, but that is the kind of challenge that is
always there when new wireless networks are built, said a
spokeswoman for Wireless Valley, an Austin, Texas-based
software firm. But "to prevent coverage holes and spotty
service, resulting from network interference, detailed
network design and planning will be a crucial part of the
deployment process," the spokeswoman said.
-
- Networks built for the new terminal at Heathrow Airport
in London and for the New York City subway have utilized new
network development tools -- and eliminated interference
problems.
-
- The same can be done for municipal-wide networks.
"Software allows users to visualize the entire city on the
computer screen, and account for objects, like skyscrapers
and trees," said the spokeswoman for Wireless Valley.
-
- In the meantime, as the technology continues to emerge,
lobbyists for municipal wireless networks are working their
legislatures, just like their opponents are. "State
legislation we are fighting right now in Tallahassee would
essentially ban municipal communications services," said
Justin Campfield, a spokesman for the Florida Municipal
Electric Association (FMEA), a 32-member organization of
utilities owned by cities.
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- Original URL:
http://www.technewsworld.com/story/Municipal-Wi...
- Content Copyright © Original Author
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