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Subject: [IP] access may be the next Internet revolution
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com> Subject: Broadband A Go-Go / In city after city, high-speed wireless access may be the next Internet revolution WIRELESS Broadband A Go-Go In city after city, high-speed wireless access may be the next Internet revolution By Steven M. Cherry I've got a Dell laptop on my knees and the wind is in my (very short) hair. I've got as many windows open as a beach house in summer-Google searches and instant messages to my wife; in the background, a new batch of e-mails downloads and my hometown public radio station streams on. It's the usual cruise down the information superhighway at 2 Mb/s. But I'm also hurtling down an actual superhighway-U.S. Interstate 4, at a very real 115 km/h. I'm in a Ford Mustang convertible, under cotton-ball clouds and a postcard-blue Florida sky. The Dell is outfitted with a prototype card that communicates with a test network set up by broadband wireless start-up MeshNetworks Inc. Earlier and a few miles away in Mesh's Maitland headquarters, outside Orlando, I had asked Rick Rotondo, whose business card calls him Mesh's "director of disruptive technologies," how fast we could go and still retain a broadband connection. After all, laptops using the best-known wireless Internet technology, IEEE 802.11, will move beyond an access point and lose their connections at mere bicycle speeds. Rotondo had grinned impishly and asked, "How big a speeding ticket do you want to pay?" Even at speed-limit speeds, the Mesh network held up, with download data rates of at least 500 kb/s. That's faster, on the road and in the air, than Aerie Network Inc.'s Ricochet service, which blankets Denver with 128 kb/s coverage, maintaining connections at city-street driving speeds of about 45 km/h. Though slower than Mesh, Ricochet is no experiment-it made a highly publicized but failed attempt to go national in 2000, and now lives on in the Mile High City with several thousand subscribers. One, the Denver Police Department, uses it to put squad cars on the department's internal network. ... http://www.spectrum.ieee.org/WEBONLY/publicfeature/jun03/bb.html
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