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B.C. wireless equipment maker bets on WiMAX

B.C. wireless equipment maker bets on WiMAX

By:  Howard Solomon  On: 13 Apr 2009 For: Network World Canada Creator

Tranzeo Wireless lost money last year but increased revenue thanks to its new WiMAX access points. It hopes carrier spending will come back this year, but an industry analyst says it may be longer

The billions being pumped by governments into economies around the world may soon help nudge telecommunication carriers to start spending on equipment, a Vancouver-area broadband wireless company hopes.

Jim Tocher, president and CEO of Tranzeo Wireless Technologies, a Vancouver-area maker of indoor and outdoor access points said Tuesday that since that money started flowing last fall “the amount of inquiries and the activity at our base station partners has increased dramatically.

“So as we move forward into 2009 we see that spending and the infrastructure build up (will) help us dramatically with our WiMAX business.”

Tocher made his remarks in a conference call with financial analysts explaining the company’s 2008 fiscal results, which saw it lose $1.8 million on sales of $19.4 million, compared to a net earning of $1 million in 2007. In the fourth quarter it sold $3.2 million in product compared to $4.4 million in the third quarter. Part of that loss included writing off some inventory. As a result, the company laid off some staff and did some cost cutting before the year ended.

Like other Canadian makers of access and backhaul radios, such as DragonWave Inc. and Bel Air Networks of Ottawa and Markham, Ont.’s Redline Communications, Tranzeo is betting heavily on WiMAX. WiMAX is a medium range wireless technology also known by its IEEE designation of 802.16. Until recently, it was largely used for fixed access and backhaul, but products built around a mobile version, 802.16e, are starting to be tested. Clearwire’s Clear service in the U.S. is counting on 802.16e-based mobile devices to hit the market soon.

More on this wireless technology

The 5Ws of WiMAX

Tranzeo introduced its WiMAX pico base stations and subscriber units for the licenced 3.5, 3.65 and unlicenced 5.8GHz bands in the second quarter of last year and immediately saw sales gains in each quarter. In fact Tocher credited those sales as being the main reason sales were up last year over 2007. The U.S. Federal Communications Commission recently approved the company’s 3.65-3.70 GHz Pico Base Station, which started to ship last month. “We’ve seen very good take up on that product,” Tocher said, “and we feel that is going to have a good impact in Q2 and going forward.”

While carriers and service providers have become cautious about spending in the last six months, an industry analyst suggests manufacturers’ faith in WiMAX is not without justification. In a recent report Kirsten West, principal analyst at West Technology Research Solutions in Mountain View, Calif., concluded that while there may be some delay in deploying WiMAX infrastructure in the short term, there will be “a timely resurgence.” In an interview West the recession will depress WiMAX spending for about 18 months, largely because carriers are targeting it at workers on the go. But business layoffs are making carriers hesitate.


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Howard Solomon Howard Solomon Howard Solomon is assistant editor of Network World Canada covering network infrastructure and communications issues. An IT journalist  since 1997, he has written for several of IT... more

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