Australia to Become WiMax Testbed 105
shrewd writes "AU News site Whirlpool has news on a huge AUD $37 million investment by Intel in a WiMax project. From the article: 'Australia will become the world's testbed for WiMAX - Intel's wireless broadband technology - with the announcement that the chip giant will invest AUD $37million in the expansion of the Unwired network in Australia ... Unwired CEO David Spence said the investment will make WiMAX an absolutely mainstream technology. 'Unwired will be in the unique position of having access to the majority of the WiMAX-designated 3.5 GHz and 2.3 GHz licensed bands in Australia's major metropolitan areas,' Spence said.'"
Crikey! (Score:5, Funny)
"She's a beautiful critter! Look at the power of her jaws as she's chomping on my laptop!"
Australia gets screwed right now (Score:5, Funny)
Oh yeah, and here's the obligatory bash quote for the local phone monopoly:
Re:Australia gets screwed right now (Score:1)
Re:Australia gets screwed right now (Score:2)
Optus are #2, that's why they try harder - I suppose that explains the 4 hours outage we had the other night mid WoW instance run.. *sigh*
Re:Australia gets screwed right now (Score:3, Informative)
In many areas, it's not been so bad since ISPs took things into their own hands and started installing their own DSL equipment at the exchanges - I'm sitting here in South Melbourne on ADSL2 (only 12mbs at the moment), paying about US$70 per month for 80GB downloads, unlimited 1mbs upload - more than I generally need.
The thing is, i'm moving to San Franci
WIMAX (Score:2, Insightful)
Until somebody comes onboard and provides the same kind of service, talk about monopoly.
Re:WIMAX (Score:1)
There's probably only 1 satellite provider in your area. Without them, there would be zero. You can still get DSL.
Re:WIMAX (Score:1)
Re:WIMAX (Score:2)
Re:WIMAX (Score:2)
Take Standard Oil, for example. Before Rockefeller, no one used petroleum. He got his monopoly because he invented a new industry from scratch. I'm not excusing his later collusion with the government to prevent competition, but he started out as just an ordinary businessman with an idea.
Monopolies are generally limited to new industries. AT&T, IBM, Microsoft, etc
Condemn the methods used for sticking around (Score:2)
The big question is whether you want to condem a company for being first, or condem a company for sticking around.
The latter. But specifically, I condemn a company for raising barriers to entry by using "collusion with the government to prevent competition," as you put it in the case of Standard Oil, as a means to stick around. AT&T owned what was by far the largest telephone network, and it chilled innovation in phone hardware and services by requiring that only its own phones be connected to the B
Re:WIMAX (Score:2)
Microsoft first marketed software as a product to the home user.
No, that's historical revisionism. There were dozens if not hundreds of companies selling similar products at the same time to home and business users. The Apple II, Commodore Pet, S100 computers and the software that ran on them come to mind. They all had wordprocessors, spreadsheets etc. M$ just rode on IBM's coat tails initially.
With the necessity of interroperability leading to an unstable, winner-take-all market; the legitimacy provi
Huge? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Huge? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Huge? (Score:1)
If it doesn't work well, (Score:3, Funny)
Ok, that was lame. I really need to get some lunch!
Re:If it doesn't work well, (Score:4, Funny)
You're supposed to put the follow-up explanation to your joke in an immediate (well, 2 minutes later) post.
You're right, you do need lunch.
AOL and others should take heed (Score:2, Insightful)
Companies like AOL and other dial-up or broadband types should start thinking about alternative methods for bringing in revenue, because their market is quickly diminishing.
Re:AOL and others should take heed (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, there is doubt. In fact, there is 100% certainty that it will not happen. Because it will not, and can not, be free. Someone has to pay for it. If your vision is correct (however badly described), I'd say that entity would be... people and businesses who pay taxes. Or, it will be indirectly so, by showing up as more arcane usage fees on your cell phone and cable bills. There is no "free" wireless service! It's not sunshine. Companies ("like AOL and other dial-up or broadband types") will be the ones providing this service, or companies like them, either directly, or through contracts with municipal or other governments. You say the market is dimishing, I say it's just re-arranging. But what about the millions that live in rural areas, or those that are out of line-of-site for these city-centered services? Traditional ISPs, in one form or another, will be around for a long, long time. Non-traditional ISPs will become the traditional, but someone still has to pay for the hardware, the people, the systems, the security, etc. Not free! Never will be - any more than tap water is, or electricity.
Re:AOL and others should take heed (Score:4, Interesting)
I guess Philadelphia intending to offer the following, "Once a citywide wireless network has been deployed, the goal will be to provide some level of free wireless Internet access to everyone living, working or visiting in the city."
Was just my imagination... or was it? Read Article [phila.gov]
Maybe diminishing wasn't the correct word, perhaps shifting is more appropriate. ... and yes nothing is entirely free, but the old methodology for charging to use wireless internet is definitely changing.
Re:AOL and others should take heed (Score:2)
Well, let's see. There are only two ways that sitting out in a public space popping onto a wireless 'net connecciont is (or is going to be) "free" to the end users:
1. Someone provides that access because they want to (like Panera... "please enjoy net access and we hope you buy a sandwich")
2. Enough voters vote for people with the authority to use tax dollars to prop up that aspect o
Re:AOL and others should take heed (Score:2)
Perhaps not in the US, but over here in Western Australia, we've been building a free-as-in-beer network since the early days of wireless networking. http://www.e3.com.au/ [e3.com.au]
Re:AOL and others should take heed (Score:2)
But... it's not free! Who writes the checks for the people that operate the network (or, in the absence of paid techs, who provides their own technical time)? Who buys (or otherwise provides) the hardware? Who pays for the grid power, the backup generators, and the pipes to the internet? I'm going to guess it's donors, sponsors, or taxpayers... probably even
Re:AOL and others should take heed (Score:2)
It is free. I can connect to freenet with an AP and that AP becomes a shared node on the network. The cost to me is the AP I'd need to connect to any network. This is one of the times when the whole is greater than the sum of the parts.
Re:AOL and others should take heed (Score:2)
Re:AOL and others should take heed (Score:2)
Politicians like Gavin Newsome use the word "free" to fool the gullible. What's sad is that there are so many gullible people. "Free" wifi might not be as expensive as "free" roads or "free" education, but it's still "free" with a monetary
Re:AOL and others should take heed (Score:2)
Way I see it, its better than snarfing off your neighbors wireless and risking a quick trip to the pokey. yeouch!
Re:AOL and others should take heed (Score:2)
Maybe so. But who is going to maintain all of it? Who is going to be administering the network? It's not going to run itself. And as more and more people get deluded into thinking it's free, the bandwidth requirements go up.
Or do you really think people will vountarily limit their bandwidth usage for something that's "free"?
Way I see it, its better than snarfing off your neighbors wireless
Instead, you'll snarf off o
Re:AOL and others should take heed (Score:1)
- Because it will not, and can not, be free.
Because technology is getting better, bandwidth and startup costs will always get cheaper and cheaper, so in the end it may as well be free.Think of cost as in 1/n, where n progresses towards infinity
Re:AOL and others should take heed (Score:1)
Re:AOL and others should take heed (Score:3, Informative)
Re:AOL and others should take heed (Score:2)
Which, even if they did, would not be "free," in the sense that people have to actually show up with materials and do it. And manage those people. And insure them. And pay for the dental insurance. Etc.
Yes, it's possible for an investment to return more than what it cost (um, otherwise it's a "loss"). But the investmen
Re:AOL and others should take heed (Score:2)
You've lost me. Are you talking "free" to the city? To the consumers? To the companies that are installing it?
Sure, there is an opp
Re:AOL and others should take heed (Score:2)
Re:AOL and others should take heed (Score:2)
Are you new here? (Score:1)
Just slap on a tinfoil hat, make some new window shutters, and go back to your tofu on a stick...
Re:is this healthy? (Score:1, Funny)
Been expecting this (Score:5, Informative)
I heard about this a while ago I can't recite the source, but when I spoke to the Unwired consultants they said they were looking into this for sometime next year.
The only benefit this will provide me as an existing customer of Unwired is hopefully better pricing, coverage in trouble spots and I would be able to use the service while roaming as opposed to having to log in everytime I change to a different suburb.
That said we also have http://www.iburst.com.au/ [iburst.com.au] (iburst) who provide true roaming, but their plans are ridiculously expensive.
What's more interesting news for me is the announcement Unwired recently made of a partnership with an Australian company called Engin http://www.engin.com.au/ [engin.com.au] who are an awesome VoIP provider (I also use).
That does remind me, the only place I had trouble with reception using Unwired was in an apartment block 30+ floors up.
-Sj53
Re:Been expecting this (Score:1)
Do Pass Go and Collect $$$ (Score:4, Insightful)
Most monopolies do make whatever they touch a mainstream technology. Looks like competition will be scarce here however.
Re:Do Pass Go and Collect $$$ (Score:2)
WiMax is screaming out for cities to license it for their a
Re:the future is open (and wireless) (Score:3, Informative)
Re:the future is open (and wireless) (Score:1)
Re:the future is open (and wireless) (Score:2)
Intel gobbles again..., (Score:1, Insightful)
Nice Sig (Score:2)
Nice Sig... reminds me of the quote:
"Necessity is the mother of all invention. Laziness is the father."
In Australia or... (Score:2, Interesting)
I like how easily accessible Internet is becoming. I still know people that either can not afford it, or have it so slow that they don't use it.
WiMax is a nice idea, but hopefully it won't be replaced or hacked right away. What about p2p over these networks? Will the speeds be evenly distributed between clients? You know people are going to try and leech/abuse their privalege
Finally definitive proof (Score:1, Troll)
Wait 5 years and see what happens to the Australian population.
I mean Australia got like 20 million people, with 66% of the population covered that's over 13 million test subjects
open access? (Score:1)
Clearwire (Score:2, Informative)
Truly Machiavelian (Score:3, Funny)
Centrinos for everyone!!!
Re:Truly Machiavelian (Score:1)
Really? Exactly where over here did all of this money allegedly end up?
Re:Truly Machiavelian (Score:1)
safer this way (Score:5, Funny)
This is good news. If WiMAX turns people into zombies, the problem will be confined to Australia.
Re:safer this way (Score:1)
"Braiiiiiiins!
?
Oh never mind."
(heads back to shore)
Re:safer this way (Score:2)
8 out of 10 Great White Pointers agree, Zombies taste better with braiiiiiiins...
Re:safer this way (Score:2)
How will anyone be able to tell if it has an effect?
Disclaimer: I am an Aussie, and I still want to know the answer
Re:safer this way (Score:1)
The only problem would be trying to distinguish one form the other
Why Australia? (Score:2)
Re:Why Australia? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Why Australia? (Score:3, Informative)
Except for the Great Dividing Range along the eastern coast, which is where about 3/4 of Australia's population lives. There's plenty of hills big enough to block line of sight anywhere in Australia - and the places where there isn't any hills, well, line of sight isn't far enough to get to the next outpost.
the remote cattle stations certainly would be users that would benefit from long distance wireless internet.
Except that this is *still* not long-distance enough. 100km is the d
Re:Why Australia? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Why Australia? (Score:1)
Why? (Score:1)
Re:Why? (Score:1)
But yeah, LSOL sucks.
Why MAX? (Score:1)
If this is true I can't see WiMAX hitting critical ma
Oz is the easy option (Score:2)
Re:Read the article - you culturally ignorant moro (Score:1)
Canberra (Score:2, Funny)
Intel using Oz trial to break CSIRO WiFi patent? (Score:1)
Got to love marketing. (Score:3, Informative)
Guess I must have dreamed that.
Nice strong 1Mbit/512Kbit (down/up) link at around 4Km from the transmitter on 3.5GHz.
Only about 30% more expensive than wired ADSL broadband, which is not available here as we have fibre bearers out here in the country (go figure, Telecom wont install local DSLAMS).
There are tons of these system rolled out over here, have been for quite some time.
Re:Got to love marketing. (Score:2)
I'd love to get some fast access here in West Melton, 20km west of Christchurch.
"in Australia's major metropolitan areas" (Score:1)
Re:Truly American (Score:1)