WiMax? Why not?

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WiMax, Wireless

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Leading the charge are US telephone operators BellSouth and AT&T, which both said at the Supercomm 2005 trade show in Chicago that they are looking at WiMax. The companies hope the technology can solve problems with expanding into areas where terrain or density make traditional wire-line telephony impractical for delivering service over the last mile between homes and nationwide phone networks.

It's clear that WiMax -- once eschewed as an undeveloped plaything for geeks, and beset by interoperability testing problems -- has once again caught the attention of major carriers and equipment makers.

"Our contention is that 2005 is truly the year in which WiMax technology will emerge in multiple markets worldwide, as the leading companies in the industry move forward with significant product development, compliance testing and initial field deployments," said Keith Horn, senior vice president of Fujitsu Microelectronics America, one of several major vendors to announce WiMax products or relationships here.

WiMax, another name for the 802.16 standard for wireless broadband, has a range of up to 30 miles and can deliver broadband at a theoretical maximum of 75 megabits per second, which is more than 20 times the speed of the fastest wired broadband available commercially. WiMax serves as a partial successor to the wildly popular Wi-Fi protocol, which works over far shorter distances -- measured in feet rather than miles.

For all of its promise, WiMax was been plagued by the sort of problems any fledgling technology comes up against, ranging from working out kinks in the technology to persuading the biggest in the industry that it's viable.

In January, the technology suffered the indignity of having its first-ever equipment interoperability tests pushed back for six months, until June.

However, then came Intel, credited by many with breathing new life into WiMax. In April, the chip giant released its PRO-Wireless 5116 chipset for mobile WiMax, which will probably be built into commercially available PCs by 2007.

That has helped reinvigorate WiMax technology, and has renewed speculation as to how valuable it will be to operators -- how it's much cheaper than laying cables as a way to extend a network's reach.

BellSouth plans to blanket portions of Georgia, including college communities, with WiMax services, while AT&T will soon announce two more cities where it's trialing the service and testing a new voice-over-WiMax feature, representatives for the operators said.

"We're looking to move into several more major urban areas," said AT&T Vice President Eric Shepcaro. "Our goal is a full-scale rollout in these areas."

While not as advanced in their programme as AT&T or BellSouth, US operator Sprint is also working on a WiMax service. Most Korean operators recently joined the board of the WiMax Forum, a WiMax trade association, a sign of their commitment to the technology.

Meanwhile, the long-awaited introduction of consumer WiMax modems and other products is finally beginning to happen. Some of the new WiMax gear uses a system-on-a-chip design by Fujitsu. That includes gear from equipment maker Aperto, a company that on Tuesday revealed that its own WiMax lineup will be at the heart of WiMax equipment trials by telephone operators in Spain, the Netherlands and the US.

Though much of the WiMax gear is rooted to a single location for now, mobile services appear just around the corner, especially since heavyweight Nortel Networks has said it's developing mobile WiMax gear with partner LG.

However, WiMax products still have a hefty price tag. Aperto's PacketMax products, rolling out at the end of the year, will cost a consumer between $400 (£220) and $600 (£330) just for the modem. Though pricey for most consumers, WiMax modems used to cost about $2,000 (£1100), putting them even further out of reach of the mainstream.

Prices are expected to slip even further because a growing number of different chipmakers, led by Fujitsu and Intel, are introducing WiMax chips. That means WiMax equipment makers no longer have to develop their own chips, as Aperto said, which saves on research costs that drive up prices.

"Remember when Wi-Fi first came out?" Aperto Vice President Alan Menezes said. "The same things are happening here. Wi-Fi cards used to cost $1,000. Now they're $40."

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