InvestorsHub Logo
Followers 4
Posts 304
Boards Moderated 0
Alias Born 09/24/2010

Re: WhisperingEye post# 7004

Friday, 09/24/2010 10:41:54 AM

Friday, September 24, 2010 10:41:54 AM

Post# of 66872
FCC approves Super WiFi
By Dana Blankenhorn | September 23, 2010,

Summary
The FCC approved the shared innovation of air travel over the proprietary standards of railroads in approving Super WiFi today.

Topics
FCC, Federal Government, Wireless LANs, Wi-Fi, Wireless And Mobility, Government, Dana Blankenhorn
Blogger Info
Dana Blankenhorn
BioContact
Paula Rooney
BioContact
Vendor HotSpot
Here to help you with your Document Management Needs

Read the DocuMentor blog now
Learn More »

As expected, the FCC voted unanimously today to approve use of white spaces for unlicensed data, the so-called “Super WiFi” proposal.

The ruling sets ground rules manufacturers will need to meet in order to have their gear approved for sale to consumers and businesses. Just as with WiFi, the new rules define what happens to spectrum in terms of equipment, rather than as property.

A last-minute monkey wrench seemed to be tossed into the plan just before its approval, when two Congresswomen asked that “smart grid” gear also be allowed into the white spaces.

They seem to have been acting on behalf of Full Spectrum, which has announced smart grid radios that work in white spaces, as well as in shorter licensed frequencies.

But it’s unclear whether that use would conflict at all with the white spaces plan, given the low data throughput of smart grid devices. It would mainly serve to let smart grid radios serve more isolated locations.

You can see the importance of these new rules in terms of open source.

As with WiFi itself, the FCC rules act as a platform on which companies innovate devices, and through which they can share in creation of new standards, just as the original 802.11 approval of 1997, which ran at 1 Mbps, now supports speeds of 100 Mbps under 802.11n.

When spectrum is sold, by contrast, only one company and its suppliers can innovate use of the spectrum. Manufacturers who want to improve service have to go through the spectrum owner, as a gatekeeper, and must deliver the same stuff across the network before service improves. A large investment is also required of the spectrum owner to improve service.

Thus the battle over white spaces, wifi, and licensed spectrum echoes what is happening in software, where open source allows companies to share the cost of innovation and develop value to customers faster, at lower cost, than any one company can do this alone.

The shared innovation of air travel or the proprietary standards of company-owned railroads — your choice. Which offers more progress?

Kick off your day with ZDNet's daily e-mail newsletter. It's the freshest tech news and opinion, served hot. Get it.



Dana Blankenhorn has been a business journalist for 30 years, a tech freelancer since 1983.
Full BioDisclosureContactFollow on Twitter
More from “Linux and Open Source”
The enterprise market is not walking away from open source
Will Google defend Android and its good name?
Talkback Most Recent of 3 Talkback(s)
View All CollapsedView All ExpandedFollow via:


whitespace
09/23/2010 02:07 PM
Reply to
ZDNet Blogger
What's behind the link
@whitespace Mimvi's filing describes its "mini data centers" which could be used to extend full mobile Internet services to rural areas.

DanaBlankenhorn
09/23/2010 03:17 PM
Reply to
Great Door Opener!
This is one of the best news in today's gloomy media.