Business prospects of Wimax - An ISP Point Of View
The prospects for WiMAX technology as a viable business opportunity are also the subject of debate among many real or perceived challenges. Applying these innovative insights can disappear these arguments and challenges.
Unlike the expectation of most people in rural installations, you could target SMEs in urban areas. There are several reasons for this:
• There is a growing demand in the economy is to ensure the bandwidth traffic can be balanced forVoice, applications and uploading of large files.
• There is a small but growing demand for services separately last mile. Currently, however many wired service providers have, they all use the incumbent's last mile-infrastructure based on its nearest telephone exchange location if you have paid for an expensive dig from the nearest exchange. This leads to single points of failure and the potential for business communication are, for the day, as happened, ie with aCable duct fire somewhere in the spoke.
Your worst case environment would be a very high density urban area with many disturbing building has multiple fiber optic networks, ADSL and SDSL in every exchange, hundreds of competing suppliers, a restrictive planning regime with many property "listed" buildings, and no spare frequencies for FWA except the public 5.8GHz band.
To do this, as is competition from other providers, your model to have a negative impact. Ithas to offer, things that companies need (such as QoS, VoIP, toll-quality, high-quality video, symmetric bandwidth, higher capacity and network separation etc) at a lower price.
This means stripping all unnecessary costs from the model. You benefit from a quality RF planning tool that gives you a great advantage over other operators - mapping exactly where you can service as you offer the customer antenna, what bandwidth can be achieved etc, based on your base station. Youneed to know exactly how to tune the base stations to avoid the danger spots - without that an RF team.
Although the Wi-Fi and WiMAX are often confused, they are very different from an operator perspective. Wi-Fi is plug and play without any control over the wireless interface. WiMAX is not, it behaves more like a carrier ATM network. Wi-Fi is built into laptops and handsets, whereas FWA WiMAX requires larger standalone receivers (your customer should focus on the rooftops for optimum utilty mount).
TheAdvantage is that WiMAX is very spectrally efficient, at least 50% more than 3G networks, but that a much higher data-carrying ability in limited spectrum. All Wi-Fi work shares the same public spectrum - WiMAX can in a broad spectrum. Wi-Fi provides service over a range of 100m, offering WiMAX suit your needs to 10Mbps over a range of 1.3 kilometers from a base station non-line-of sight.
WiMAX can provide carrier-class networks, Wi-Fi can not - not even with mesh networks. However, with Wi-FiWiMAX backhaul is built some of the benefits of WiMAX as a backhaul, such as VPN, see "Many customers of WiMAX devices with wireless Internet access
Do not wait for mobile (802.16), WiMAX - their experiences with providers may be that they're around fourteen months to two years in arrears on the promised delivery dates, and further delays occur, could the most important requirements. Do not expect good enough for 802.16 devices on a network with the end of 2007 to build on the first and no usefulCPE until 2008 - as it is the mobile battery life is crucial and that takes time to do properly.
They are big enough markets for FWA now. The most important thing is to make the scarce resources first grave - Spectrum etc - and they sell. Except in the underdeveloped countries without a mobile operator, mobile WiMAX to be very difficult to determine against the incumbent operators with large installed base since the importance of the areas covered, the customer - this is not aConsideration for FWA.
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