A WiMax breakthrough in India

By Manjeet Kripalani , BusinessWeek
Thursday, March 13, 2008 12:00 PM

India is about to become the frontier for high-speed, mobile Internet connections. On Mar. 4, India's Tata Communications, an emerging broadband player, announced the countrywide rollout of a commercial WiMax network, the largest anywhere in the world of the high-speed, wireless broadband technology.

Already 10 Indian cities and 5,000 retail and business customers use the product, and by next year Tata will offer service in 115 cities nationwide. The folks at Tata can hardly contain their excitement. "WiMax is not experimental, it's oven-hot," says Tata's Prateek Pashine, in charge of the company's broadband and retail business.

Of course WiMax is not new. Most everyone in the industry has been talking about it for years. Intel Chairman Craig Barrett has been propagating its virtues in pilot projects across the world, including India and Africa.

Powered by Intel chips
Sprint will be rolling out a WiMax network in Washington next month, and in other U.S. cities next year. Until now the most advanced use of WiMax has been in Japan and Korea, where Japanese carrier KDDI and Korea Telecom offer extensive WiMax networks. However the Japanese and Korean services are not available nationwide--KDDI will have its major rollout only in 2009--and most people use them as supplements to the wired services.

It's in emerging economies like India, where there is little connectivity and where mobile usage is soaring because of the difficulty in getting broadband wires to homes and offices, that WiMax is likely to see its full potential as a commercially viable technology. Intel, whose silicon chips power WiMax, has been pushing for this technology for some years and its executives are practically salivating at the thought of the successful rollout in India. "The more countries and telcos that get behind this technology the better," says R. Sivakumar, chief executive of Intel South Asia. Predicting that the new technology will make other types of Internet access obsolete, he boasts "Tata will set the cat among the pigeons".

Tata Communications has been working on setting this up for a couple of years, and successfully completed field trials last December. It has used the technology from Telsima, a Sunnyvale (Calif.) maker of WiMax base-stations and the leading WiMax tech provider in the world. For now, the technology will be restricted to fixed wireless, but Tata plans to make it mobile by midyear. The company has invested about US$100 million in the project, which will increase to US$500 million over the next four years as it begins to near its goal of having 50 million subscribers in India.

The world is watching
Global tech analysts are will be watching carefully. Though WiMax is prevalent in Korea, the Korean service is a slightly different version, says Bertrand Bidaud, a communications analyst with Gartner in Singapore. It's a Korea-specific pre-WiMax technology called WiBRO.

But the Indian market is where the conditions for a WiMax deployment are the best, he says, because of limited fixed lines. That means Tata has fewer hurdles to overcome. And as WiMax scales up fast, it will give service providers greater flexibility and costs will drop equally rapidly.

"If it doesn't succeed in India, it will be difficult [for it to succeed] anywhere else, and Bharti, Tata has been virtually asleep, with a limited subscriber base for its limited product," says Alok Sharma, chief executive of Telsima. "In fact, even with as many as seven broadband providers in the market, the total Indian subscriber base is just 3.2 million and there is no clear market leader. But with the WiMax rollout Tata can gain a leadership position and add a few thousand subscribers a day."

Tata is, of course, going for the heavy-billing corporate customer--a target audience that is beginning to make big investments in technology.

Temple Service via WiMax
But also important is the ordinary Indian retail customer who can watch movies via WiMax and enjoy Tata's other unique offerings. For instance, users can take in an early morning worship service at the famous Balaji temple in South India. The temple permitted Tata to install cameras so that Hindu devotees from around the world could watch the proceedings in the temple around the clock. To get connected initially, users will simply have to go to a store, buy a router, install it, and then they become instantly connected. It will be as easy as buying apples, Tata executives promise.

The Tata rollout is a chance for India to become cutting-edge in mobile Internet services, say WiMax boosters. For India, which "always used last year's fashion to dress itself up", says Sharma, it is a chance to launch a brand new. fourth-generation technology that the world can follow. "India is becoming the knowledge center of the world; it should take the lead in this," he adds.


See also:  WiMax
WORTHWHILE?

0

0 votes
Blog

Talkback 0 comments

There are currently no comments for this post.

Guest user

Guest user

Level: 
Joined: —
Already a member? Log in »



 

Loading...

Tech Jobs Now!

Mainsoft: Opening options for Java, .NET developers

Java

Mainsoft provides tools for running .NET code on the Java platform.


Read more »


Tags

  1. 3g
  2. apps
  3. blackberry
  4. boom
  5. business
  6. china
  7. earnings
  8. gartner
  9. iphone
  10. location-based
  11. mainstream
  12. mobile
  13. motorola
  14. nbn
  15. next
  16. nokia
  17. phone
  18. phones
  19. rim
  20. sales
  21. singapore
  22. sony
  23. spore
  24. tech
  25. time
  26. unified
  27. video
  28. wimax
  29. windows
  30. year
 
Increase performance with eco-technology innovations
Simplify your infrastructure and unify management, while lowering power and cooling costs of your datacenter.
» Maximum flexibility with powerful blade technolgy
» Bring new services and applications online faster
» Lower energy use and cost
Oracle SOA Business Software Centre
Many companies are recognizing the need to adopt standards in their efforts to build service-oriented applications.
Secure the "Next-Gen SOA Infrastructure" & "Bringing SOA Value Patterns to Life" whitepapers here

» Visit the Power Center

Up close and personal with a merger

Blog thumbnail

What can you get for 13.9 billion buckaroos? For Hewlett-Packard, US$13.9 billion would allow you to buy your way into becoming the second biggest IT services company in the industry...... by Eileen Yu

Read more »