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Broadband Opportunities - Wireless Services

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Wireless broadband services transmit data and information at high speeds using wireless links. Such data and information can include a wide range of content and applications that are accessed over the Internet, including web sites, e-mail, instant messaging, music, games, or data stored on a corporate server. Wireless broadband Internet access services can be provided using mobile, fixed, or portable technologies. These technologies can transmit data over short, medium, or long ranges, and can use licensed spectrum and/or unlicensed devices.
Mobile broadband technologies enable
subscribers to access the Internet while traveling at high speeds via a
mobile handset, a smartphone, or a wireless modem card connected to a
laptop computer or PDA. Mobile broadband technologies are capable of
transmitting data at speeds ranging in excess of 400 kbps.
Technologies such as Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM)
enable providers to offer wireless broadband services that are often
considered "portable" in nature. Providers offer services that enable
their subscribers to access the Internet with portable, "plug-and-play"
modem devices that attach to a desktop or laptop computer and do not
require a direct line-of-sight between the transmitter and the receiver.
Typical downstream speeds for portable wireless broadband services range
from 768 kbps to 1.5 Mbps, and networks can extend five to 30 miles.
Wireless broadband Internet access services offered over fixed networks
allow consumers to access the Internet from a fixed point while
stationary and often require a direct line-of-sight between the wireless
transmitter and receiver. These services have been offered using both
licensed spectrum and unlicensed devices. For example, thousands of
small Wireless Internet Services Providers (WISPs) provide such wireless
broadband at speeds of around one Mbps using unlicensed devices, often
in rural areas not served by cable or wireline broadband networks. These
networks typically have a reach of one to five miles, and customers must
have a rooftop antenna that can establish a line-of-sight connection
with the network transmitter.
Wireless Local Area Networks (WLANs) provide wireless broadband access
over shorter distances and are often used to extend the reach of a
"last-mile" wireline or fixed wireless broadband connection within a
home, building, or campus environment. The range of a typical WLAN is
approximately 100 to 300 feet. The most prevalent WLAN equipment is
manufactured in accordance with the IEEE 802.11 family of standards,
commonly known as "Wi-Fi," short for wireless fidelity. Wi-Fi networks
use unlicensed devices and operate under Part 15 of the FCC's rules
applicable to frequency hopping systems in the 2.4 and 5 GHz bands.
Wi-Fi networks can transfer data at speeds of up to 11 Mbps for 802.11b
and up to 54 Mbps for 802.11a and 802.11g. They can be designed for
private access within a home or business, or can be used for public
Internet access at "hot spots" such as restaurants, coffee shops,
hotels, airports, convention centers, and city parks.
Personal area network technologies, such as Bluetooth Ultra-Wideband (UWB), are used to transmit data over very short distances, such as a few meters or across a room. They are often used to provide interconnectivity among mobile devices and between mobile and desktop devices, serving as a replacement for wires and cables that connect different electronic devices together. The data transfer rates range from around 300 kbps with ZigBee to 100 Mbps with UWB.













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