Wa8pyr | Wireless bandwidth: Are we running out of room? | (1/28/2012)

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Wireless bandwidth is like land in Manhattan — it’s extremely valuable because they’re not making more of it.

But we sure are using more of it. the wireless-industry association CTIA reported in October 2011 that the number of wireless devices in the U.S. had, for the first time, exceeded the number of people.

And Mobile Future, a coalition of vendors and consumers, estimated in a ctia.org/media/press/body.cfm/prid/2133 that by 2014, voice traffic will comprise only 2% of the total wireless traffic in the United States — a worrisome statistic because, as the report noted, smartphones consume 24 times more data than old-school cell phones, and tablets consume 120 times more data than smartphones. (See computerworld.com/s/topic/75/Smartphones for details.)

The result: Wireless networks are edging near capacity, not just in the United States, but all over the world. Credit Suisse conducted a survey last year that revealed mobile networks in North America were running at 80% of capacity, with 36% of base stations facing capacity constraints. the average globally for base station capacity utilization, the report said, was 65%.

The problem is going to get worse before it gets better. With advancements in connected cars, smart grids, machine-to-machine (M2M) communication, and domestic installations such as at-home health monitoring systems, wireless demands will only increase.

As with all things mobile, there are no simple answers, if only because potential solutions rely on agreement among a sizable and incompatible array of players — from spectrum owners (both telcos and broadcasters) and regulators to government agencies and, of course, consumers demanding the latest in cool devices and applications.

With all this sturm und drang, what happens to businesses that are increasingly relying on the productivity that mobile devices deliver? Their numbers aren’t inconsiderable: according to a recent IDC report, 75% of the North American workforce was mobile in 2010, and iPass reports that 91% of mobile workers use their smartphones for work.

Most carriers have already imposed data caps, and industry watchers say the laws of supply and demand indicate that wireless-plan prices can only go up. When AT&T switched on its 4G access in 11 areas in December of 2011, AT&T Business Solutions chief John Stankey warned that if the spectrum situation remains unchanged, pricing will rise, a prediction borne out by AT&T’s announcement last week of new pricing structures for its smartphone and tablet customers.

Some experts fear there could be dire consequences. Richard Bennett, senior research fellow for the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation (ITIF), says, “If we can’t get spectrum bandwidth for more mobile devices in the next five years, prices will rise, performance will suffer, and innovation will be impaired.”

Adds Scott Bergmann, the CTIA’s assistant vice president for regulatory affairs, “Companies will have to make some hard choices, including limiting the amount of data employees can use based on job function.”

Playing nice — or not so nice

Other experts — including some IT executives — opine that we’ve encountered spectrum and wireless issues like this before, and sanity has, eventually, prevailed (remember the days before roaming agreements, or the brouhaha over wireless garage door openers?).

But coming to agreement on a workable solution may not be so easy this time around.

The wireless spectrum is spoken for, which means carriers must either do more with what they have — which would require a costly build-out (as much as $40 billion to double capacity) of cell towers and base stations — or find bandwidth elsewhere. That “elsewhere” is primarily in the broadcast bandwidth, but broadcasters, unsurprisingly, aren’t interested in giving up spectrum that they’ve controlled for decades.

“Installing base stations is expensive,” explains Phil Solis, research director for mobile networks at ABI Research. “Carriers [instead] fight for spectrum, because that’s a cheaper way to add capacity. But by getting spectrum, you reduce the chance of new competitors.”

At a CQ Roll Call panel called Finite Spectrum, Infinite Demand held in Washington, D.C., last November, Harold Feld noted, “There’s a culture of confrontation, not cooperation, around spectrum. we have to come up with ways to approach the issue in a more collaborative fashion.” Feld is director of public affairs for Public Knowledge, a nonprofit focusing on Internet openness.

That isn’t happening. Charles Golvin, principal analyst for Forrester Research, says, “It doesn’t matter if Mother Teresa makes the request. If you’re used to something, and someone tries to take it away, you’re going to object.”

So what is happening? Here’s a look at the players, their perspectives, and recent dealings.

Carriers. Carriers like AT&T and Verizon are in a tough position. on the one hand, they want to entice customers with new services and download speeds. But to do that, they need spectrum. AT&T wanted to acquire T-Mobile not for its customers, but for its spectrum. That’s also why it spent $1.9 billion in December 2011 to acquire spectrum from Qualcomm, and why it’s rumored to be buying Dish Network.

Ditto for Verizon. Also in December, it paid $3.6 billion for mobile spectrum licenses from SpectrumCo, a joint venture of three cable providers, and paid Cox $315 million for spectrum in another deal. (And don’t forget rural carriers: they have a separate set of complaints about too much consolidation of spectrum in the hands of the large carriers.)

Data needs bandwidth, but how much?

Solving the crunch in wireless bandwidth is a difficult problem made even more challenging because data usage is so inherently different from voice usage, making it difficult for carriers to estimate demand.

“Not only has the demand for capacity on our wireless networks been accelerating significantly, but it’s been accelerating in a non-scalable way,” says Charles Golvin, an analyst for Forrester Research.

“While we saw tremendous growth in penetration of mobile phones over the last 20 years, each new subscriber’s behavior, and the demands they made on the network, were predictable.” Carriers could gauge demand based on the number of minutes on each subscriber’s plan, and predict capacity needed accordingly.

“Over time, the carriers got better at predicting demand and how much capacity they’d need to handle another n callers on the network.”

The current problem: Data usage doesn’t map to that model at all. Golvin says, “Any consideration about network load is beyond [users'] consciousness. they want rich media and video when and where they want it. the ability for carriers to model the demand for capacity in total among [their] customer base, but also to model demand on a time-of-day basis, is rudimentary compared to the [voice] situation of 20 years ago.”

Broadcasters. Wireless carriers complain that TV and radio broadcasters got their spectrum for free back in the day. Broadcasters counter that they’ve invested billions in it since then. ITIF president Rob Atkinson and other experts believe the solution lies in spectrum incentive auctions — in which broadcasters that wished to sell bandwidth would be compensated by telcos purchasing the spectrum. “Only 10% of Americans get their television over the air, yet broadcasters have more frequency than all four major carriers combined,” Atkinson points out.

The broadcasting community counters by saying wireless carriers still have lots of unused methods for more wisely exploiting the spectrum they do have. and more to the point, broadcasters don’t want to give up spectrum because they want to be involved when mobile video service becomes common. “If data is the central driver,” National Association of Broadcasters COO Chris Ornelas told the CQ Roll Call panel, “let’s talk about how broadcasters can be part of that.”

Regulators. When it comes to authorizing auctions, the FCC complains that Congress is dragging its heels, and vice versa. at this year’s Consumer Electronics Show, FCC chairman Julius Genachowski said, “If we don’t authorize incentive auctions, we’ll get swamped by an ocean of demand and risk losing the competitive advantage to lead the world in innovation.”

Congressman Cliff Stearns (R-Fla.), a member of the Subcommittee on Communications and Technology, faults the FCC for moving too slowly in addressing issues within Congressional bills. at the CQ Roll Call panel, he said, “Their response time has to be faster.”

At the same time, Stearns wants to wait for the results of a spectrum inventory being conducted by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA), the president’s principal adviser on telecommunications and information policy, in order to ensure spectrum is distributed fairly.

Public safety advocates. the Department of Defense controls extensive swaths of the wireless spectrum (by some estimates, as much as Verizon and AT&T combined), and insists that national security trumps commerce. Public safety officials tend to agree — they want spectrum for interoperability of all public safety radio channels to avoid a repeat of the 9/11 communications breakdown, when police, fire, and medical responders were communicating on different frequencies, making coordinated rescue efforts difficult.

To counter that situation, the FCC is in favor of allocating a chunk of spectrum, known as the D Block, to public safety use (FCC white paper.pdf).

How IT copes with the crunch

For the most part, IT execs seem content to let the spectrum drama play out as they cope with more immediate wireless concerns.

At Madison, Wisc.-based CUNA Mutual Group, about 25% of the insurance company’s 4,000 employees use smartphones to access email remotely. Mark Winger, the company’s vice president of IT for product and administration, recommends being “open and collaborative” with carriers; CUNA Mutual has relationships with both AT&T and Verizon. “We share our issues and they share theirs, and they provide us with test devices to gauge how their network works.”

At SBLI USA in new York, VP of IT Paul Capizzi has gone the opposite route for the insurance firm’s 100 employees, scaling down to one carrier (Verizon) over the last five years. “It’s like a friends and family plan, where everyone shares minutes.” Capizzi has adjusted the plans so that individual employees get a certain amount of minutes, but with the flexibility that if one person goes over and another goes under, it all averages out. “The last thing you want is have someone come in and say, ‘You went over on your data plan.’ “

Like CUNA Mutual, SBLI allows employees to use personal devices for work-related activities. That concerns Capizzi, citing the scenario where an employee might be using the device extensively on weekends. To offset increased costs of bandwidth requirements, he says, he would probably recommend subsidizing the cost of the devices based on work-related usage; anything above that would be the employee’s responsibility.

Relative to today’s usage patterns, Forrester’s Golvin sees few impending changes, saying, “Some businesses might examine their communications budgets more carefully, but by and large, employers see increased productivity as a result of their employees being connected and performing whatever task is in front of them.” in other words, the mobile revolution will continue, spectrum crunch or no.

If and when prices do rise significantly or data caps become more onerous, Golvin believes employers will either invest in better management tools, so they can monitor how much employees are working versus playing games, or deploy dual-SIMM devices and require employees to swap out the SIMMs for personal activities — or both.

ABI Research’s Solis agrees that companies won’t limit users in the short term, and cites another technological option. IT can make sure that when people are around company locations, they’re on the company network, whether over Wi-Fi, or some kind of femtocell or picocell bandwidth extension devices that are part of the private network.

Golvin adds, “Employees already alter their behavior to get the ‘best’ experience [from their gadgets], whether that’s the fastest, the cheapest, or with the lowest latency. End users will continue to develop more awareness of the impact of their behavior, just like they did with voice minutes.”

Full-blown crisis or short-term crunch?

Experts vacillate between calling the wireless spectrum situation a crisis or a crunch.

Based on networking experience stretching back more than 20 years, CUNA Mutual’s Winger is confident that the situation will correct itself, whether through more bandwidth or better technology. (For more on potential bandwidth stretching technologies, see Busting bandwidth barriers.)

“In the early 90s, we were dealing with narrowband technology, but the technology eventually evolved to spread spectrum, where data could hop. there are advances occurring in multiple solutions, so there are many possible alternatives,” Winger says. “We solved those issues, and we’ll solve these.”

Busting bandwidth barriers

Here are some possible solutions to the bandwidth crunch.

Unlicensed spectrum. for now, the easiest way to avoid the wireless bandwidth crunch? Stay off that spectrum as much as possible. Groups like the Wireless Broadband Alliance promote offloading as much wireless networking as possible to Wi-Fi networks.

Full duplex. in September 2011, Rice University engineers announced technology that would allow mobile network operators “to double the throughput in their networks without adding any cellular towers.” Their plan: Add full-duplex capabilities so that wireless devices can send and receive data at the same time. in February 2011, researchers at Stanford University said they accomplished a similar full-duplex capability via a noise cancellation technique.

White spaces. there are vacant airwaves between TV channels used to prevent interference; the FCC is promoting repurposing white spaces for data.

It is especially true of radio scan. You can locate ham radio equipment for beginners and ham radios for beginners under the same roof. I suspect that works. The reality is that this could happen again. I'm intent on getting a new radio online. In my wildest dreams I would have never imagined radioscan would be what a number of outsiders want. This post is going to give you a couple of ham radio shop suggestions. Ham radio exams is just as humble on the inside as it is on the outside. You need to understand the importance of radio scan.

Travel tech: best prepaid SIM cards for travel to New Zealand – Flights

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If you’re travelling to new Zealand, the last thing you should do is leave your phone in global roaming mode. as we’ve covered recently, both phone calls and data are extortionately expensive when roaming with your Australian telco.

Optus customers travelling to new Zealand are particularly hard hit, with the worst data roaming rates of all the Australian mobile networks — a minimum of $9.09 per megabyte, and $20/MB if you forget to pre-arrange a roaming plan with Optus.

In fact, the problem is so great that there’s a current joint Australia/New Zealand government enquiry into why global roaming charges between the two countries are so astronomical.

Fortunately, it’s very easy to get a pre-paid SIM card when you arrive in new Zealand. there are three main mobile networks — Vodafone new Zealand, Telecom new Zealand and 2Degrees, and they have stores and outlets all over the place.

Another network, by Australia’s Telstra, called TelstraClear, doesn’t do prepaid, so it’s not really an option for travellers. (It’s a mobile network in name only, anyway, as it resells airtime on Vodafone new Zealand).

Where to buy a new Zealand SIM card

  • Find a Vodafone new Zealand store
  • Find a Telecom new Zealand store
  • Find a 2Degrees store

At the airport: Vodafone has mobile phone shops at the international terminals of Auckland and Christchurch airports. But don’t just pick up a SIM card because of their convenient shop locations — it may not be the right mobile  network for you. Read on…

Vodafone new Zealand

Vodafone new Zealand claims coverage in “97% of the places Kiwis live and work”. what it really means, though, is that it has an old 2G mobile network with 97% population coverage, which provides phone calls but only very slow data coverage.

The 3G coverage is much more scant (and Vodafone NZ does not disclose a percentage). The red bits on the map below shows where there’s some Vodafone 3G towers that will work with all Australian mobiles (using the common 2100MHz radio frequency).

However, if you have a phone that is compatible with the 900MHz radio frequency, you can access Vodafone’s “Extended” 3G coverage, which is broader (orange areas on the map below).

The iPhone 4 supports this 900MHz frequency, but the earlier models of iPhone don’t.

Vodafone NZ has some very vocal angry customers — especially iPhone users. (If you’re offended by strong language, don’t click this link.)

What Vodafone NZ costs:

The SIM card costs $30 to buy (no calls/data included). You will then need to buy credit with Vodafone NZ to load onto the card.

After you’ve purchased credit, you can choose which prepaid plan to go onto.

The “Simply Prepay” plan is best for travellers — calls are 49c/minute within NZ, texts are 12c to other NZ mobiles or 31c to Australian mobiles. Calls back to Australia cost $2 for up to 60 minutes.

However, casual internet usage on prepaid only includes 10MB per day (for a flat per-day fee of $1) and then increases to a very costly $1/MB. A much better option is to use some of your prepaid credit to buy a prepay mobile broadband plan. 512MB costs $30 (and expires/renews monthly); 2GB is $50. if you need more, top-ups of 100MB are available for $10 and 512MB for $30.

For iPad users, Vodafone NZ offers special iPad data plans for prepaid micro-SIMs. You first buy the prepaid SIM, add some credit to it, and then choose your plan (which renews monthly and comes out of the credit balance on the SIM).

250MB usage costs $20; 3GB costs $50, and the data inclusion expires and rolls over every calendar month.

More information is at vodafone.co.nz/ipad.

  • Find a Vodafone new Zealand store
  • View all Vodafone mobile tower locations

To use the internet on your mobile phone, you will need to change its APN setting to the Vodafone Zealand APN, which is direct.vodafone.net.nz.

To find out how to do this, search Google for your phone’s model and “how to change APN”. For example: HTC Desire how to change APN.

Telecom new Zealand

Telecom new Zealand’s new “XT” mobile network is the best for speed and coverage in new Zealand — it’s more or less new Zealand’s version of Telstra next G, with very fast internet speeds and broad coverage.

To get full use it, your phone has to be 3G compatible (as Telecom does not have a 2G mobile network to fall back to), and to get the best coverage, must also support the 850MHz radio frequency.

Most phones sold by Telstra in the last few years support this, but phones sold by Optus and Vodafone Australia might not.

If your phone doesn’t support the 850MHz frequency, it will connect at the standard 2100MHz frequency in city areas — it just might not get coverage outside city areas.

If you are an iPhone user, you are in luck — the iPhone 3G, 3Gs and 4 all support the 850MHz frequency.

What Telecom NZ costs:

Telecom NZ is (surprisingly) cheaper than Vodafone if you want to use internet on your phone during your trip.

The SIM card costs $30 to buy, but comes with $30 credit and a $30 500MB data plan activated on it already. Essentially, you can either spend the $30 on calls, or on data at an initial rate of 6c/MB ($30 divided by 500).

Mobile calls on prepay are 69c/min within new Zealand, texts are 20c within NZ, and SMS to Australia cost 30c each. Unlike Vodafone’s $2 for 60 minutes overseas offer, there are no capped rates to call internationally, though.

If you need more than the 500MB data included with the SIM card, you can also buy a prepaid mobile broadband plan. 500MB costs $29.95 per month; 2GB is $61.06 per month; 4GB is $81.51 per month.

If you exceed your plan data limit, Telecom NZ rather generously gives you the plan limit again for another $29.95 fee (e.g. if you’re on a $61.06 2GB plan, and use it up, another 2GB usage will only cost you $29.95). if you exhaust the plan limit again, you will start paying costly excess usage rates of 10c/MB.

iPads: Telecom new Zealand does not offer special iPad plans, but does offer micro SIMs for $30, with 500MB of data included as noted above.

  • Find a Telecom new Zealand store.
  • See where Telecom NZ has mobile towers

To use the internet on your mobile phone, you will need to change its APN setting to the Telecom new Zealand APN, which is internet.telecom.co.nz.

To find out how to do this, search Google for your phone’s model and “how to change APN”. For example: HTC Desire how to change APN.

2Degrees

2Degrees is new Zealand’s youngest mobile network, and therefore has very limited coverage with its own towers, but it roams to Vodafone new Zealand, which has 97% population coverage.

Phone calls and text messages sent while roaming on Vodafone new Zealand are the same price, but internet access is much more expensive, which is an important issue to consider if you’re a smartphone or laptop user — more details below.

2Degrees’ prices are very good for people travelling to its native coverage areas of Christchurch, Wellington, Auckland or Queenstown.

Its coverage extends a little beyond those areas, but not far (for example, Hamilton doesn’t have 2Degrees coverage despite being reasonably close to Auckland).

A prepaid SIM card $5 with $1 credit included, and is available from many outlets such as service stations and newsagents across NZ. There’s also a $20 SIM card available through 2Degrees’ website with $20 credit included, which effectively makes the SIM card free.

Calls cost 44c/min within new Zealand or to Australia, and texts cost 9c each, to new Zealand or Australian mobiles.

Data is good value if you live within one of 2Degrees’ coverage areas (Christchurch, Wellington, Auckland or Queenstown).

In these areas, 1GB (valid for 30 days) costs $20, 3GB (valid for 60 days) is $50 and 12GB (valid for six months) is $150.

However, if you are not in one of 2degrees’ “mobile broadband coverage zones”, you’ll have to roam onto the less impressive Vodafone new Zealand network, at much higher rates: 50c per megabyte if you don’t arrange a roaming data pack, or, if you do, $6 for 50MB, or $10 for 100MB.

All phones will work on the 2Degrees network — it uses the most common 3G radio frequency, 2100MHz. in order to roam onto the Vodafone new Zealand network, your phone needs to support the 900MHz radio frequency. Typically, phones sold by Optus and Vodafone Australia will support this frequency, but phones sold by Telstra might not.

To use the internet on your mobile phone, you will need to change its APN setting to the 2degrees APN, which is internet.

To find out how to do this, search Google for your phone’s model and “how to change APN”. For example: HTC Desire how to change APN.

  • Find a 2Degrees store
  • See where 2Degrees has mobile towers

What to buy

  • If you will be travelling only to Christchurch, Wellington, Auckland or Queenstown, 2degrees is the best value, for both phone calls and internet usage. 

  • If reliability of coverage across all of NZ and speed of internet is important to you, Telecom new Zealand is the best choice. It’s not an awful lot more expensive than the other networks.

  • If you want to be able to make long phone calls back to Australia cheaply and don’t care about internet access on your phone, Vodafone new Zealand is a good option, due to its $2 for 60 minute calls to Australia offer.

About Dan Warne

Dan is our deputy editor: a tech enthusiast who frequently qualifies for enhanced airport security screening due to the number of cords and gadgets stuffed into his cabin bag.

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