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more on Sides chosen in Logan WiFi battle


From: David Farber <dave () farber net>
Date: Tue, 3 Jan 2006 13:26:20 -0500



Begin forwarded message:

From: Glenn Fleishman <glenn () glennf com>
Date: January 3, 2006 1:21:27 PM EST
To: dave () farber net
Subject: Re: [IP] more on Sides chosen in Logan WiFi battle

Greg Brooks <gregb () west-third com> wrote:
While I support the efforts of anyone trying to beat some sense into
Logan's
Draconian approach, there are other options..The EV-DO cards
offered by Sprint and Verizon...

What's of course interesting about that is that cellular operators have no right for antenna placement and typically pay recurring fees of which the airport gets a piece for antenna placement in airports. Concourse Communications, a leading Wi-Fi airport infrastructure builder (EWR, JFK, etc.) also installs and runs cellular equipment on a neutral basis in airports.

To my knowledge, airports require coordination and operators conform to that. It's simpler because the licensed frequencies don't overlap geographically and roaming agreements allow cross-network use.

I understand few people want to spend money on yet another connectivity
option (unlimited use on Sprint costs $80 a month), but as someone who
spends more time in airports than out of them, this has been a great
alternative to spotty (or just expensive) wifi.

Unlimited EVDO use with Verizon and Sprint is just $60 per month with a two-year commitment for voice customers of those two carriers. However, it's critical to remember that EVDO delivers extremely poor upstream speeds. It may offer what the carriers call 300 to 500 Kbps (but are typically 200 to 400 Kbps) of downstream bandwidth, but upstream is 50 to 100 Kbps. This is unlikely to change because of the kinds of services that EVDO is provisioned for that are the real moneymakers, like streaming video (if it catches on).

"Spotty (or just expensive) wifi" is not really an accurate description of well-designed airport Wi-Fi. Most, but not all, airport Wi-Fi operators resell service to aggregators, some of which offer unlimited monthly service plans. The trend is towards this, not away from it. Thus an $8 to $10 a day rate for airport use becomes $21.95 per month with Boingo Wireless, for instance. You just have to be traveling through the "right" airports.
--
Glenn Fleishman
seattle . washington
unsolicited pundit . glennf.com
columnist . seattletimes.com/practicalmac
daily wireless networking news . wifinetnews.com


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