By
Marguerite Reardon
Friday, December 09 2005 09:50 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/communications/0,39044192,39297068,00.htm
An industry standards group has approved a new specification for WiMax
that includes mobility support, thus paving the way for chipmakers and device
manufacturers to start working on new products.
The standard, called 802.16e, was finalized two months ago, but it was formally ratified on Wednesday by the
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers. Finalizing the standards
process is an important milestone in the life of a technology and should help
spur adoption.
"Carriers don't like their futures dependent on a single vendor," said Paul Sergeant, director of marketing for WiMax at
Motorola. "They may only buy from one vendor, but they want a choice. So it's
very important to have a standard that gives them the security to know they can
go to another supplier and the equipment will interoperate."
WiMax is considered a
promising next-generation wireless technology because it supports high data
rates and has a long transmission reach. The technology supports peak data
speeds of around 20 megabits per second with average user data rates between 1
mbps and 4 mbps, Sergeant said. Transmission distances range from a few hundred
feet in densely populated areas to between one and two miles in suburban
areas.
Some WiMax supporters see the technology as a both a complement to cellular
telephone networks and a replacement for citywide Wi-Fi. Even though phone
companies have spent billions of dollars upgrading their cellular networks, they
are still limited in capacity. Today's 3G wireless networks transmit only
between 400 kilobits per second and 700 kilobits per second per user.
Cellular still has a longer reach than WiMax, but supporters of WiMax believe
that cellular operators could use the technology to augment their networks and
provide more capacity for data applications like mobile Web surfing or
e-mailing. Sprint Nextel is already testing the technology in its laboratories.
On the other hand, WiMax supporters also see the new technology as a
replacement for Wi-Fi, which was originally designed to be used inside offices
and homes. Wi-Fi offers comparable data rates, but its radios transmit up to
only about 50 feet. This means that when Wi-Fi
is used in an outdoor setting to blanket a city, hundreds of access points
are needed.
Many cities, such as Philadelphia
and San
Francisco, have already started working on plans that include using mesh
Wi-Fi technology to blanket their cities. One of the things that makes Wi-Fi
attractive is that the radios and chipsets that receive the signals are
extremely inexpensive. Practically every laptop built today has a Wi-Fi chipset
embedded.
But Sergeant believes the new 802.16e standard will do for WiMax what the
802.11 standards have done for Wi-Fi. Intel and Motorola have already announced
that they plan
to collaborate to speed up adoption of the new standard.
Sergeant predicts that products designed for fixed WiMax applications, such
as providing broadband connectivity directly to residential customers, will be
available in 2006. In 2007, mobile devices such as PDAs (personal digital
assistants) and smart phones will use the standard technology. And by 2008 and
2009, 802.16e chipsets will be manufactured in large volumes, spurring even
further adoption.
"WiMax was built for outdoor mobility," Sergeant said. "Wi-Fi wasn't. The
challenge we face going forward is getting WiMax into more devices; 2006 and
2007 will be the introduction and build-out years, and products will start
shipping in volume in 2008 and 2009."