SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> Voice, Data, and IP >> Hardware, Software and Emerging Applications

A wireless alternative to outdoor fibre

A wireless alternative to outdoor fibre

By:  Kathleen Lau  On: 12 May 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

After its leased line rates increased by $20K a month, a Toronto college decided to connect six buildings at Gigabit speeds using BridgeWave radios. Find out how the technology prevents interference

When the cost of maintaining a fibre optic network soared, Toronto-based George Brown College turned to what it’s calling ‘virtual fibre’ to keep buildings on campus connected.

The school deployed GE60 wireless links from BridgeWave, a Santa Clara, Calif.-based provider of Gigabit Ethernet outdoor wireless hardware. The deployment, completed in just a couple of months, resulted in identical performance to the previous fibre optic network, but at a much lower cost, said Andrew Riem, manager of infrastructure and operations for IT services at George Brown College.

Read more about network technologies and communications in

IT World Canada’s Communications Infrastructure Knowledge Centre

“It had the high capacity we were looking for because it would be serving an entire building which could hold 500 to 600 computers,” said Riem. Before this, the school leased a fibre optic network which operated just fine, except the provider changed the billing scheme to include minimum distance, he explained. The result was the leasing cost would rise to $20,000 per month.

Montréal-based engineering and distribution firm Trispec Communications was brought on board to deploy BridgeWave’s technology.

Besides the virtual fibre being more cost effective, another attraction was the quick time to deployment, said Riem. And so far, since the deployment of four GE60 wireless links was completed in 2006, the network has functioned as it should and successfully supported the school’s increased use of bandwidth-hugging activities like in-class video, distance learning and information-sharing applications, he said.

The school has since expanded the network with two additional links, resulting in now six connected buildings from the previous four. Riem notes that George Brown continues to use the fibre optic network to connect its main campuses.

Had the school continued to use its fibre optic network in the same manner, the annual cost would have been about a million dollars a year, said BridgeWave’s senjor vice-president and chief marketing officer, Gregg Levin. “Radio links that are $20-30,000 to install is going to payback very quickly compared to those high service costs.”

BridgeWave’s customers tend to fall in those verticals where the business requires multiple buildings, like education, healthcare, state and local governments, and network operators, said Levin. The increasing use of Web 2.0 applications is a driver behind many customer network upgrades, he said, however, a large extent of the network traffic is in fact private LAN traffic, “in other words, taking this LAN and stretching it between buildings”.

“So we’re trying to give people a full fibre speed gigabit but in a wireless form, so when it’s difficult or expensive to get fibre, they have a lower cost and fast to deploy alternative.”


Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 795   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Kathleen Lau Kathleen Lau was a senior writer with ITWorldCanada.com and ComputerWorld Canada from December 2006 to August 2011.In her role as senior writer, she covered broadly technology news and issues r... more

Related Content

European wireless investment overtakes wired
European wireless investment overtakes wiredWireless installments reach a tipping point as the cost of setting up networks drop. Read about how 802.11n and alternative architectures are providing companies with valuable savings in these tough economic times
New wireless competition could be here by January
New wireless competition could be here by JanuaryThe SeaBoard Group says a new wireless player could have coverage for more than half the population, in 15 cities, ready by next summer, but if several regional players share costs a new service could be in place by January. Find out why veteran telecom analyst Iain Grant thinks costs will be much less than $1 billion
Six crucial questions about wireless networks
Six crucial questions about wireless networksWireless networks might be mainstream across enterprise networks, but that doesn't mean they're no-brainers. Here, we've raised and attempted to answer some of the thornier questions you might still be dealing with.
Why one man in Vancouver watches the Olympics in a different way
by howard solomonassistant editor, network world canadaas justin webb watches tv coverage of the beijing olympics, his attention is only partly on the athletes. he’s also visualizing a tv network’s feed flowing through fibre and taking notice how many in the crowds are taking pictures with the cellphones. find out why.webb is bell canada’s vice-president of olympic

Comments (0)

No Comments!
Name: (required) eMail: (optional)

Your email address will not appear online and will be used only if the editor wishes to contact you personally for additional comments.