I do find it curious that the only company making "negative" comments on HDR is Nortel. I don't know if these comments are about HDR, but they're not exactly positive. In particular: "U S West experimented with a wireless-data system developed by Qualcomm Inc. earlier this year, using two of its cellular-system sites in Minneapolis to deliver fixed Internet access at about 1.5 mbps over an unused segment of its personal-communications-services spectrum.
"You can take our plans for the Denver trial with Adaptive as a sign that the Qualcomm solution didn't pan out," the U S West source said.
Then again, this comment is about fixed wireless only.
Message 11838762 To: DUCT TAPE HAIR CLUB who wrote (31) From: DUCT TAPE HAIR CLUB Sunday, November 7, 1999 8:28 PM EST Reply # of 33
from broadband week. Broadband Week for November 8, 1999
U S West Looks to Broadband Wireless
By FRED DAWSON November 8, 1999
U S West and start-up competitive local-exchange carrier Fuzion Wireless Communications Inc. have opened still another path into wireless-broadband communications by exploiting new technology that operates over the unlicensed frequency band at 5.8 gigahertz.
Both companies are deploying a system supplied by Phoenix-based Adaptive Broadband Corp. with very different agendas in mind. U S West is looking at the technology as a possible market-coverage backup to its digital-subscriber-line service, while Fuzion has already launched an all-wireless business service in southern Florida, which it intends to extend across the country and into other countries, as well.
Publicly, U S West would only acknowledge that it is looking at the AB technology "to better understand the characteristics of broadband-wireless technologies" and "to help us understand the value customers may place on high-speed wireless data."
But sources said the carrier -- with a trial slated to get under way soon in the Denver area -- has high hopes for this wireless system on the basis of its previous experiences with various wireless options.
"We need a way to reach all of the people we can't reach with DSL, and this may be the way to go," said a U S West official, speaking on background.
The AB system U S West is deploying operates over a 200-megahertz segment of what is known as "U-NII" (Unlicensed National Information Infrastructure) spectrum at the 5.8-GHz tier to deliver multiple data channels at 25 megabits per second each on a shared-use basis.
The system also operates at the multichannel-multipoint-distribution-service frequency and other broadband tiers, AB vice president of customer marketing Jeff Kolluch said.
U S West experimented with a wireless-data system developed by Qualcomm Inc. earlier this year, using two of its cellular-system sites in Minneapolis to deliver fixed Internet access at about 1.5 mbps over an unused segment of its personal-communications-services spectrum.
"You can take our plans for the Denver trial with Adaptive as a sign that the Qualcomm solution didn't pan out," the U S West source said.
The move to the U-NII tier represents an opportunity to offer a more flexible, higher-speed service over wireless than the carrier could offer in a limited portion of PCS spectrum, the source said.
And because the spectrum is unlicensed, it's available immediately at no cost to whomever makes use of it first in any given service area. "We've already had experience working with unlicensed spectrum, so we are comfortable with this option," the official noted.
Fuzion -- a venture-capital-backed company begun by a team that includes experts who helped to spearhead Siemens AG's fixed-wireless broadband-product initiative -- plans to build a nationwide business on the U-NII spectrum by quickly putting the application to use in targeted markets ahead of potential competitors.
"We're a CLEC offering all types of broadband-wireless data, including Internet access and private Intranets," Fuzion vice president of marketing and business development John Wind said. "We're in the process of partnering with ASPs [applications-service providers] so that by January, we'll have providers offering specialized applications such as e-commerce and VPNs [virtual private networks]."
Fuzion is building an asynchronous-transfer-mode-based infrastructure using backbone facilities supplied by Qwest Communications International Inc., with provisions in place for supplying connectivity to local markets around the country, Wind said. Fuzion is employing DS3-links to tie its wireless hubs into the backbone, he noted.
The flexibility of the AB system allows Fuzion to offer guaranteed symmetrical access rates at any speed up to 25 mbps, starting at 500 kilobits per second in each direction and moving to 1 mbps and beyond in 1-mbps increments, Wind said.
The technology also allows the company to offer "burst" services, allowing a customer to get regularly scheduled increases in bandwidth to accommodate periods of high-volume file transfers, he added.
"Bandwidth on-demand really shines as an advantage we have over traditional wireline systems," Wind said. "This is something the market wants."
The AB system employs a "packet-on-demand" media-access-control mechanism that assigns precisely the bandwidth needed by a particular end-user only when that user is online, Kolluch said.
"We also use time-division duplexing to maximize bandwidth efficiency," he added. TDD employs time slots for sending messages in either direction over a given spectrum segment, thereby eliminating the need for separate upstream and downstream channels and a guard band in between.
The system is able to assign bandwidth dynamically as needed and only when a user goes online through the use of dedicated "request" time slots assigned to each user.
These dedicated request links occupy only a very small portion of available bandwidth, but they carry enough information to ensure that as soon as the user goes on, the system will provide the bit rate required for the application, Kolluch said. Fuzion's "bread-and-butter" service so far is the 2-mbps connection, which it offers for $1,495 per month, including a voice-over-IP (Internet protocol) local-loop solution that will be implemented after the first of the year, Wind said. This is about what it costs users to obtain local-loop and shared T-1 service from BellSouth Corp., where the average access rate works out to be about 384 kbps, Wind noted.
Fuzion has also arranged for satellite capacity to link networks that it plans to build in parts of Latin America, Africa and Europe back to Qwest's U.S. backbone. He said preparations for use of wireless spectrum in those regions are under way, but he declined to discuss details.
Stateside, Fuzion hopes to establish "squatter's rights" for use of the U-NII spectrum on as broad a basis as possible, Wind said. "We're the first ones anywhere to deploy this [AB] technology, but a lot of others are looking at it, including BellSouth," he added. |