By
Richard Shim
Monday, June 28 2004 10:23 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/hardware/0,39042972,39184935,00.htm
A key electronics industry group has approved a significant standard for
wireless broadband specifications known as "WiMax," giving a boost to a
technology proclaimed as a breakthrough for cheap high-speed Internet
access.
WiMax is essentially radio
technology that promises to deliver two-way Internet access at speeds of up to
75 megabits per second at long range. Its backers claim that WiMax can transmit
data up to 30 miles between broadcast towers and can blanket areas more than a
mile in radius with bandwidth that exceeds current DSL and cable broadband
capabilities.
As a result, some believe that it could slash the cost of bringing broadband
to remote areas and potentially open the doors to new broadband competition,
leading to lower prices and faster consumer adoption.
In a campaign speech Wednesday, Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry
sang the praises of wireless broadband as a fix for the anemic state of the
country's Internet fabric, which lags other developed nations such as South
Korea. But the technology is still in the early test stage, and many of its
claims have yet to be proven in real applications.
With Thursday's
blessing from the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE), a
technology that has been mostly hype finally has a chance to start proving
itself.
"There is now an agreed-upon technical base for these (WiMax products), which
is essential, if you're going to have interoperability leading to mass market
adoption and low-cost service (for wireless broadband access)," said Craig
Mathias, an analyst at research firm Farpoint
Group.
Unwiring the last mile
WiMax, short for Worldwide Interoperability
for Microwave Access, is the latest--and so far, the most promising--of the
wireless "last mile" broadband technologies. Carriers see WiMax as a means of
connecting rural or remote areas with broadband service, something that would be
technically, physically or economically difficult to do by burying wire for DSL
or cable connections. In congested cities, equipment makers say, WiMax products
could shift traffic to help relieve heavy demand on broadband networks.
WiMax will work with other shorter-range wireless standards, including Wi-Fi,
which has taken off as an easy way to provide Internet access throughout a home
or business. Eventually, WiMax advocates hope to see the standard evolve into a
mobile wireless Internet service similar to cellular data technologies such as
EvDO (Evolution Data Only).
"This technology gives companies significant advantages when it comes to
deployments, because you don't have to set up a new infrastructure...so there
isn't a lot of tearing up of streets needed to set up networks," said Joe
English, a WiMax campaign manager for chipmaker Intel, which has been a major
backer of the technology.
The emergence of WiMax products could help reduce expenses for broadband
carriers and consumers by doing what Wi-Fi did for wireless home
networking--make it affordable and in turn widely used.
Thursday's IEEE decision will bring cohesion to development efforts that
until now have been pushed ahead piecemeal by a handful of companies, including
Alvarion, Redline Communications and Wi-LAN.
All WiMax products will be interoperable, using the 802.16-2004 standard.
Industry group WiMax Forum will test and certify products for interoperability,
much the same way the Wi-Fi Alliance does for Wi-Fi products. This will produce
an equipment market of standardized components.
Products based on prestandard versions of the 802.16-2004 specification are
already on the market. British carrier BT is testing wireless broadband services
in the United Kingdom, using Alvarion equipment based on draft versions of the
specification.
Intel announced a deal this month with Proxim to co-develop
WiMax equipment, with base stations available by early next year.
Analysts estimate that subscriber stations for home access will initially
cost up to US$300. Base stations will cost as little as US$5,000 but will reach
US$100,000, depending on their range. In some cases, consumers would lease
subscriber stations from carriers the way they do with cable set-top boxes as
part of their service plans.
Providing a patchwork
Analysts said the first WiMax-certified
products will likely be base stations for carriers looking to expand coverage in
remote areas and take on traffic burdens in congested areas. Base stations are
similar to cell towers in that they send and receive transmissions. WiMax base
stations can blanket an area by connecting to a wired connection or linking with
other base stations.
Base stations will be able to connect to other base stations within a range
of up to 30 miles with data transfer speeds of up to 75 megabits per second.
Subscriber stations, the set-top box-like devices, will connect to base stations
with ranges of up to three miles and transfer speeds of up to 15 megabits per
second.
Carriers and service providers will also have greater control of what
services and plans they can offer subscribers from a base station. A carrier
offering 700 kilobit-per-second and 1.4 megabit-per-second service plans could
deliver both from the same base station.
Despite its momentum, WiMax still has a long way to go, and it may yet falter
in the marketplace. Sky-high expectations for wireless broadband services are
not new, but neither are disappointments. History is pock-marked with dramatic
wireless failures, such as those of Ricochet
Networks and MobileStar.
"The hype is way outpacing the substance right now," said Jim Smith, a
general partner at venture capital firm Mohr,
Davidow Ventures. "Even when it becomes widely available, I don't expect it
to be the solution carriers will use in their tier-one markets; I see it more
likely to be used in second- and third-tier markets, and even there, it won't be
big for another three to five years."
Even Wi-Fi, embedded in nearly every new computing gadget to provide
short-range networking, has not yet established a service market with
significant revenues. However, the opportunities are much higher in the wireless
broadband market than they are in wireless networking, making WiMax something
service providers and carriers can't dismiss as just another overhyped fad.
Use of broadband connections in the United States shot up 42 percent to 28.3
million connections in 2003, according to the Federal Communications Commission.
WiMax could theoretically make it easier and less expensive for carriers to
entice even more subscribers.
"What we're talking about is radically affecting cost...but the question is:
Will it spur the market?" Mathias said. "That's what we expect, but by how
much?"
WiMax rivals
There are a number of other wireless data and
broadband technologies being tested by companies looking for alternatives to
wires. Power line broadband and next-generation cellular technologies such as
EvDO are also being kicked around. Another standard that is considered very
similar to 802.16 specifications is 802.20.
Supporters of the 802.20 envision megabit-per-second data transfers with
ranges of several miles. Initial enthusiasm was behind 802.20, which was
designed as a standard for mobile devices, but the shift of industry support to
WiMax's 802.16 specifications have put the brakes on 802.20. In fact, some of
its major proponents have joined the WiMax Forum, including Navini
Networks.
Chipmaker Intel's support
for WiMax gave WiMax a significant boost over 802.20. Many observers recall
that Intel's support for Wi-Fi propelled the growth of that technology, and they
expect similar results for WiMax.
Intel gave the 5-year-old technology a boost when it became a member of the
WiMax Forum in 2003, joining Alvarion, Airspan Networks, Nokia, Proxim, Redline
and Aperto Networks, among others.
"We envision (wireless) broadband connectivity everywhere, all the time,"
said Ron Resnick, president of the WiMax Forum and a director of marketing at
Intel. Intel is expected to have WiMax-ready chips available by the end of the
year. "Through broadband, we feel we can sell more (central processing units)."
Resnick said timing played a major role in Intel's decision to back 802.16
standards, as did direction. WiMax-compliant gear is expected by early next
year, but 802.20-based products aren't expected until 2006. Resnick added that
802.20 was more focused on being a cellular competitor, while Intel was looking
for more of a data technology.
While 802.20 was designed for mobile devices, WiMax will include mobile
features when 802.16e is completed, which is expected by early 2006. WiMax
products will initially be for fixed broadband wireless services such as
delivering broadband to the home, but WiMax's mobile specification, 802.16e,
will allow portable WiMax devices to send and receive data over broadband
wireless networks.
Still, it will probably be several years before WiMax will challenge wired
services. Broadband wireless services aren't likely to enter
the mainstream until 2007, according to a report from two telecommunications
consulting firms, BWCS and Senza Fili Consulting.
"This will not be an overnight transformation, and it will be tough (for
WiMax) to establish itself," said Michael Cai, an analyst at research firm Parks
Associates.