Freedom4 touts WiMax as SDSL alternative

Daily Newsletters

Sign up to ZDNet UK's daily newsletter.

NEWS

Pipex Wireless has rebranded its business and outlined its plans for the rollout of WiMax across the UK.

Now known as "Freedom4", the company has already undertaken trials of 802.16d — otherwise known as fixed or "nomadic" WiMax — in Milton Keynes and Warwick, but it now plans to expand its coverage across 50 UK cities, starting with Manchester.

"We have believed for a long time that wireless broadband is the key to the future," said Freedom4's chief executive, Mike Read, on Thursday. Read said that Freedom4 would initially target SMEs, because fixed WiMax is "very much like SDSL [symmetric digital subscriber line]".

Freedom4 has not yet revealed pricing. SDSL can cost hundreds of pounds per month and the fixed WiMax service is more likely to be equivalent in price to business ADSL.

Brendon O'Rourke, Freedom4's chief operating officer, said that the time was right for an alternative to fixed-line access. "Broadband internet is growing but the fixed-line market is [slipping]," he said. "There is an immediate market need for a service that does not need a fixed line. We are on the cusp of a market change." He added that the service would probably be offered on the basis of one subscription for multiple devices.

O'Rourke also suggested that the product would be ideal for enterprise IT managers to give to home workers because its 2Mbps speed would not be fast enough "for people to be doing things you don't want them to" — presumably things like online gaming — but the 2Mbps uplink would prove ideal for people like architects and photographers who find ADSL's uplink performance unsatisfactory. Speeds of 10Mbps or more should eventually be achievable through the service. One other company, Urban Wimax, is already offering the technology as an SDSL alternative in Westminster.

The plan is to eventually extend the service to consumers, although Read said that Freedom4 was holding off on doing so due to the current climate in the broadband market. "One reason we haven't gone with a consumer product now is that I know the industry will try to drive it down to free," he said.

As the company only has 45 employees and outsources much of its work, it is trying to retain "flexibility" as it tests various markets, said Read. Freedom4 will not sell the service itself, Read said, but instead it will offer it through Pipex's business-services wing. Pipex recently sold its broadband wing to Tiscali.

Freedom4's partners in its WiMax venture include Intel, Nokia Siemens and the equipment manufacturer Airspan.

The base-station equipment being used is software-upgradeable to 802.16e, also known as mobile WiMax, so, if Freedom4 successfully bids for spectrum in the 2.6GHz auction due in the first half of next year, it will be able to roll out that service quickly.

Read this

 PSCS3
Photos: Mobile WiMax in action

Mobile WiMax has a good chance of deployment in the UK if spectrum is secured at auction next year. ZDNet.co.uk attended a demonstration of the technology

Read more +

The company currently has a perpetual licence for 84MHz of spectrum between 3.6GHz and 3.7GHz, which it hopes to have altered in the future to allow both nomadic and mobile services. It also owns two 112MHz tranches of spectrum around 28GHz, which will allow high-capacity links but with a fairly short range.

Because WiMax is a long-range technology, its deployment will require roughly one base station per 3 to 3.5 square kilometre area in medium-density suburban areas. One base station per square kilometre will be needed in high-usage urban areas.

Post your comment

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

You can also log in with Facebook. Log in or create your ZDNet UK account below

  • Login

Will not be displayed with your comment

By signing up for this service, you indicate that you agree to our Terms and Conditions and have read and understood our Privacy Policy. Questions about membership? Find the answers in the Community FAQ

Get ZDNet UK's daily newsletter

Enter your email address to sign up

ZDNet UK Live

Burn-IT

What happens when one hosting platform "acquires data" from another? If I forced the first one to remove it, who is responsible for chasing the...

2 hours ago by Burn-IT on Google picks holes in EU's 'right to be forgotten'
JohnTalich

iSpring Pro is a nice tool, that allows PowerPoint to SCORM conversion. They also have free tool, that also generates SCORM compliant courses.

6 hours ago by JohnTalich on How To Convert PowerPoint To SCORM Compliant Course
aaron.sloman

I think the answer to the question requires a deeper analysis of where the income can come from who else is now competing for it, who else will be...

14 hours ago by aaron.sloman on The three big questions about Facebook's IPO
Brent Pieczynski

Your correctness about Government websites not being compliant with their own websites is correct. Most criticism of other people takes so many...

20 hours ago by Brent Pieczynski on Privacy watchdog to chase big companies over cookie law
Kelvyn Taylor

802.11ac does promise some tricks to improve range & reliability, but not sure how these will work in practice until I get real products to play...

20 hours ago by Kelvyn Taylor via Facebook on Next-generation 802.11ac routers
mrudang009

My wife and I love our new Kindle Fire. It's lightweight, easy to use and has a great interface. The first thing I recommend anyone with a new...

20 hours ago by mrudang009 on Waterstones to sell Kindles with in-store offers
mrudang009

It basically unlocks all the Android marketplace apps and unlocks the device. I am one very happy Kindle owner!

20 hours ago by mrudang009 on Waterstones to sell Kindles with in-store offers
Burn-IT

Skittles with tapes and coffee cups. Old tapes so we didn't have to rewind them afterwards.

22 hours ago by Burn-IT on Ten IT jobs to save up for those rare lulls
Fraud_fighter

What is mildly amusing to me is when someone thinks a strong password is as strong as one may need, when the truth is usernames and passwords are...

23 hours ago by Fraud_fighter on Passwords are here to stay: get used to it
Andy Bolstridge

Performance isn't really the big thing at the moment - not when my ADSL connection will only provide a 8mbps bottleneck to the 3.5gbps speeds these...

23 hours ago by Andy Bolstridge via Facebook on Next-generation 802.11ac routers
pjc158

So when is Amazon buying Waterstones?

1 day ago by pjc158 on Waterstones to sell Kindles with in-store offers
J.A. Watson

@JoshArg - Well, I am writing this from my N150 Plus, running Ubuntu 12.04 and using a Bluetooth mouse (well, to be totally correct it is a...

1 day ago by J.A. Watson on Samsung N150 Plus Netbook - Ubuntu Netbook Edition 10.04
J.A. Watson

@duncanjmurray - At least n the case of the specific system I put the SSD into, it is not the case. The boot time improvement is substantial, but...

1 day ago by J.A. Watson on Netbook Upgrade - SSD IN, Windows OUT
archerthom

Sounds like only those who have bought their Kindle from Waterstones will be able to use them in-store - very disappointing. I have no intention...

1 day ago by archerthom on Waterstones to sell Kindles with in-store offers
AndyPagin

From my mainframe operating days... 1) Play hoopla with write permit rings & a can of screen cleaner. 2) Make enormous paper chains (Christmas...

1 day ago by AndyPagin on Ten IT jobs to save up for those rare lulls
61253

An OS X perspective Filenames beginning with a dot/period (.) should not be equated with HFS Plus resource forks; misunderstandings around ._ (dot...

1 day ago by 61253 on SharePoint deployment: Pitfalls of a pioneer
ians1

There are many legal download sites for music at least that do not charge an arm and a leg like itunes or Napster. The "real" cost of an mp3 file...

1 day ago by ians1 on The Pirate Bay infringes copyright, High Court decides
Jon Howells

@Crupal.. How does refusing your websites cookies help my privacy? A quick look at your page script reveals four sets of code provided by 3rd...

2 days ago by Jon Howells via Facebook on Privacy watchdog to chase big companies over cookie law
Paul Carloss

There are hundreds, if not thousands of filesharing torrent sites, The Pirate Bay (TPB) is only one of them, while the TPB is blocked many more...

2 days ago by Paul Carloss via Facebook on The Pirate Bay infringes copyright, High Court decides
Rebin Simpson

So could users DownGrade if the new OS didn't worked correctly ?

2 days ago by Rebin Simpson on Sony delivers on Xperia Ice Cream Sandwich promise