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Business wireless service from Allstream by year-end

Business wireless service from Allstream by year-end

By:  Howard Solomon  On: 08 Feb 2010 For: Network World Canada Creator

Manitoba telco to leverage its big business customers in Ontario first to sell telephony services. The announcement comes on the heels of a promise to deliver economical fibre-type speeds to businesses across the country

Manitoba’s phone company will increase its reach into business and government across the country from its home province this year with new wireless and wired broadband services.

MTS Allstream Inc. says that "towards the end of 2010" it will launch an Allstream-branded converged wireless / wireline suite of products to customers of its enterprise services.

Meanwhuile last month the telco and Radiant Communications Corp. a Vancouver-based broadband provider said they are teaming up to create what they say is a new types of high speed service for businesses who want to move up from T1 and ADSL connections to fibre-type speeds.

The wireless offerings will be the initial fruits of a partnership with Rogers Communications Inc. Rogers is building a new wireless HSPA network in Manitoba which the two carriers will share. In exchange, Allstream gets to use Rogers’ HSPA network outside the province to sell access to organizations.

“For us, that was only an entry point,” Allstream president Dean Prevost, who is responsible for business products to enterprise, medium and small organizations.

“What we have been working on and will launch later this year is something that takes us beyond basic voice and data and into the real integration between the wired and wireless space.

Already a provider of unified communications around telephony platforms from Microsoft Corp. and Cisco Systems Inc., Allstream will sell solutions that can take advantage of their voice and data links.

“We see applications at the fixed-mobile converged layer,” said Prevost, “applications that augment our wireline connectivity portfolio as access options.”

“There’s lots of applications that integrate your handset into your telephony system,” he said, starting with simple ones such as incoming calls that simultaneously ring on an office phone and cellular handset, shared voice-mail and presence and going up to dual or tri-mode phones that work run on a Wi-Fi, UMA or DECT-based local area network in the office but automatically switch to a cellular network.

As part of the package there will be tools for telecommunications and IT managers to oversee spending by individuals or by groups. Some of these tools will be free with the basic service, while others with more features will cost extra.

Among the advantages Allstream gained by partnering with Rogers is saving a lot of money: It estimates it will spend $25 million over three years on its share of the new HSPA network in its home province. By comparison, it might have spent tens of millions to build a new national network.

HSPA is a so-called 3.5G wireless data technology that offers speed significantly faster than older networks. Right now, Rogers’ HSPA+ network promises maximum download speeds of up to 21 Megabits per second under ideal conditions. That compares to the maximum 3.5 Mbps MTS Allstream users would get on its CDMA network within the province. HSPA can at least double that 21 Mbps speed, say equipment manufactures.


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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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