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Entries in WiFi (17)

Wednesday
Apr112012

Cordova Telephone: Where Rural Meets Cutting Edge in Alaska

Remote Cooperative Offers Broadband, WiMax, and Wi-Fi, while Questioning FCC Changes

This past January, Cordova, Alaska, made headlines for getting 20 feet of snow in nearly as many days. The town on the edge of Prince William Sound was declared a disaster area, and utility workers and emergency personnel scrambled to keep roads open and essential services running. But Cordova's residents are used to weather-related hurdles, and for Cordova Telephone Cooperative and Cordova Wireless Communications, weather and topography is a daily consideration that effects everything from line repairs and service to the co-op's business plan. “Weather-related situations like this are common here in Cordova,” said Paul Kelly, general manager and ceo of Cordova. “We’ve learned to rise above them with ingenuity, hard work and stubbornness.”

According to Kelly, being rural doesn't mean Cordova's member companies can't provide first-rate services. In fact, the location has required Cordova to get creative in order to offer broadband connectivity, cellular services, mobile broadband through WiMax, and even internet hot spots via a newly-launched WiFi Cloud in the town of Cordova. “Being in a remote community like Cordova, we will always face challenges concerning access to facilities,” Kelly said. “We use a combination of bush planes, four-wheelers, boats, helicopters and luck to access a great deal of our territory and remote sites. We also rely on bear spray to protect us when we arrive.”

This past August, CTC completed a $12m project, three years in the making, by rolling out 100 miles of undersea fiber optic cable. Kelly said this “finally connected our rural community to the rest of the world in a reliable way.” He explained that Cordova is a remote community which, despite being on the mainland, has no road to it. “We’ve relied on satellite to fulfill our community’s internet needs for many years, but have been working toward this accomplishment for some time,” Kelly said. Now the new fiber optic cable stretches from Cordova to Valdez, and it was deployed from a 200-foot barge over a “mere three days,” as Kelly said.

Marketing and public relations director Cathy Long said that the community is now better connected to the surrounding towns and the rest of the world, thanks to the undersea cable. Member companies now “have speeds and broadband capacity second to none—even better than many places in the lower 48,” Long said.

Completion of the fiber optic line also has bigger implications for the rural Alaskan cooperative: “This accomplishment now qualifies us for the 'new rules’ that the FCC has imposed in the USF and ICC reform order, as well as allows us to deliver the Internet and wireless experiences the modern-day customer has come to expect or take for granted,” Kelly said. Until now, the cost of transport was always the co-op's biggest challenge, but with the cable connection, that burden has been lessened.

The financial reprieve couldn't come at a better time, either, as changes to rural funding make the future uncertain. “We feel we are well positioned to weather the storm we saw coming,” Kelly said, “and our investment in facilities over the past several years will protect us from a good portion of the damage this order will cause the industry. We are also filing for a waiver in hopes of protecting our wireless company.”

But the RUS/ICC changes are already having an impact. “Lost funding will result in fewer jobs at CTC and CWC, and has already resulted in less investment being made in our network,” Kelly said. “Until we are told our past and future investments are protected and recoverable we have no choice but to severely curtail investment and employment.” He said that, like other rural telecom companies, Cordova was disappointed by the FCC's rural funding changes, but says the cooperative is “positioned better than most coming into this change.” Candidly, however, Kelly said, “We do expect our revenues to be impacted in the years to come, especially on the wireless side, and intend to file a waiver with the FCC concerning this order. We feel there is pertinent information that has not been taken into account when writing this new order, and hope to be a poster-child for rural telcos providing service in remote and isolated areas.”

Long reserved her strongest comments for the new FCC order, which she said conflicts with what rural telecom has been doing for decades. “For 90 years, rural telecoms—mostly cooperatives—invested as they were supposed to, using USF and RUS loans to connect rural America at prices comparable to urban areas,” Long said. “Now the FCC commonly refers to what we have done for 90 years as waste, fraud and abuse, yet the OIG audits performed prior to the formulation of the NBP identified almost no waste, fraud and abuse of the USF system whatsoever. The telecom industry was nearly 90% broadband capable and had been building out for years in a very responsible manner. That fact was grossly ignored in the NBP [National Broadband Plan] and credit has not been given by the administration for all the great work performed leading up to the FCC order.”

Nearly 100% of Cordova's member companies have had true broadband access to their businesses or homes for the past six years—“long before any National Broadband Plan,” Long said. Now, CTC “typically provides up to a 4-to-1 meg service to the home but can provide speeds up to 100 megs if there is a need,” Long said. “Take rates are very good and getting better each day as more people discover the Roku devices and over the top TV.”

The cooperative has also been working to expand into non-traditional services through wireless broadband and its wireless subsidiary, Cordova Wireless Communications. CWC just built a 100-foot cellular tower on Naked Island, and now it can provide GSM cellular service all across Prince William Sound. Long explained that “because Cordova’s economy is primarily based on commercial fishing, and many of its residents are commercial fishermen, this is a huge and needed accomplishment” for the community.

CTC's new WiMax service also allows for mobile broadband in Cordova, with plans to expand (via the Naked Island tower) to the Copper River Flatts fishing grounds. The area is also blanketed by the company's Wi-Fi Cloud. Long said these “hotspots are able to seamlessly hand-off to each other, similar to the way cell phone towers do. All this, and we are providing both WiMAX and WiFi Cloud access to all our broadband internet customers as a free service.”

Going forward, Long and Kelly both said that future investment was uncertain, due to the precariousness of rural funding. “Until we know our past and future recovery on investment under the rules is protected, CTC has no plans for future investment in-plant, and our wireless company will soon follow,” Long said. “There is never a business case to be made for investing in the most rural of rural areas without universal support.”

Monday
Apr092012

A Quarter of Households Worldwide Now Have Wireless Home Networks

Source: Strategy Analytics Press Release

According to new research from the Strategy Analytics, by the end of 2011, 439 million households worldwide had installed home Wi-Fi networks, equivalent to 25 percent of all households. This report predicts that the total worldwide number of Wi-Fi households will reach nearly 800 million in 2016, a penetration rate of 42 percent.

Jia Wu, Senior Analyst, Connected Home Devices, said, “Developed broadband markets are currently the leading countries in terms of Wi-Fi household penetration. However, because of its population size, China already has the highest number of Wi-Fi households in the world, followed by USA and Japan.”

Wednesday
Dec012010

Boingo Expands Wi-Fi Roaming Agreement with T-Mobile USA

Source: Boingo Press Release

Boingo Wireless, a provider of Wi-Fi software and services, today announced a renewed and extended bilateral roaming agreement with T-Mobile USA for subscriber access to Wi-Fi hotspots. The agreement covers both laptops and Wi-Fi enabled handheld devices. With the new agreement, T-Mobile Hotspot and postpaid mobile broadband subscribers will now have Wi-Fi access at no additional charge at 53 Boingo airport locations in the United States and Canada, including major airports in the New York and Chicago metropolitan areas. The expanded agreement also includes the Washington State Ferries in the Seattle area. Similarly, Boingo subscribers will have continued Wi-Fi access at T-Mobile Hotspot airport locations and expanded access at T-Mobile HotSpot airline club and hotel locations, including the airline clubs of American Airlines, United Airlines, US Airways and Delta Airlines and Hyatt hotels.

Monday
Nov222010

AT&T; Claims Nation's Fastest Mobile Broadband Network 

Source: AT&T Press Release

AT&T (NYSE:T) announced that it has invested nearly $6 billion in wireless-related initiatives over the first three quarters of 2010, a 55 percent increase over the first three quarters of 2009, and that these efforts are resulting in national average mobile broadband speeds that are substantially faster than the competition, with the nearest competitor running 20 percent slower than AT&T on average nationally, and its largest competitor by subscriber count running 60 percent slower than AT&T on average nationally.

AT&T also noted that over 106.9 million WiFi connections were made on its U.S. network in the third quarter, as opposed to the total 85.5 million connections made during the entire year of 2009.

These are the findings from the latest comprehensive, scientifically validated national drive testing conducted by industry expert testing firm Global Wireless Solutions (GWS).  GWS compiles wireless network performance results covering more than 950,000 road miles in more than 400 U.S. markets representing about 88 percent of the U.S. population.

“Data is now the preferred form of mobile communication, and faster mobile broadband speeds make virtually every app more enjoyable and efficient for the user,” said Iain Gillott, president of wireless industry analyst firm iGR.  “As the market continues to develop, wide availability of fast mobile broadband will be increasingly important to mobile subscribers, both consumer and business users alike.”

Assuming a positive regulatory environment, AT&T plans to invest between $18 billion and $19 billion in its wireless and wireline networks in 2010, including a $2 billion increase in wireless-related network investment over 2009 levels.  AT&T is investing to enhance the speed and coverage of its mobile broadband network through the addition of hundreds of new cell sites; additional layers of wireless capacity in markets across the country; and deployment of HSPA 7.2 and HSPA+ software and fiber-optic backhaul connections to support even faster mobile broadband speeds.

Wednesday
Nov172010

AT&T; announces Mobile Hotspot, MiFi® 2372 from Novatel Wireless

Source: AT&T Press Release 

AT&T (NYSE:T) announced November 17, 2010 the upcoming availability of the AT&T Mobile Hotspot, MiFi® 2372 from Novatel Wireless.

The AT&T Mobile Hotspot offers simultaneous Wi-Fi connectivity for up to five devices, including PCs, cameras, digital media players, tablets and gaming devices, and runs on AT&T’s HSPA 7.2 network.

Beginning November 21, 2010, the AT&T Mobile Hotspot will be available at AT&T company-owned stores nationwide or online for $49.99 after $100 mail-in rebate (pay $149.99 and after mail-in rebate receive $100 AT&T Promotion Card.).

Over the past year, AT&T Wi-Fi use has been increasing significantly each quarter, with third-quarter 2010 connections up more than 320 percent versus third-quarter 2009. AT&T’s Wi-Fi network has more than 23,000 public hotspots.  Globally, AT&T offers access to more than 125,000 hotspots through roaming agreements

AT&T’s Mobile Hotspot MiFi 2372 enables enhanced performance for simultaneous uploads/downloads and large file transfers while on-the-go. A built-in microSDHC™ slot provides expandable storage capacity of up to 32GB (microSDHC card not included with the device). The mobile hotspot is also GPS-capable for location-based services.

“No matter if your holiday travels take you to sandy beaches or snowy slopes, the MiFi 2372 mobile hotspot will help you connect to the devices and content that matter most,” said Michael Woodward, vp, Mobile Phone Portfolio, AT&T Mobility and Consumer Markets. 

“We congratulate AT&T on its introduction of the MiFi 2372 with the MiFi OS, widgets and applications support,” said Peter Leparulo, chairman and CEO of Novatel Wireless. “The AT&T MiFi 2372 introduces intelligence and added capabilities beyond pure Internet connectivity and is a great complement to AT&T’s extensive mobile broadband offering.”