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vice-president and principal analyst, communications research at IDC Canada Ltd.

vice-president and principal analyst, communications research at IDC Canada Ltd.

By:  Mark Els  On: 07 Mar 2006 For: Network World Canada Creator

Industry analysts have praised Toronto’s plans for a city-wide municipal Wi-Fi network, welcoming Toronto Hydro Telecom Inc. as a major player in business-grade wireless connectivity for ubiquitous Internet access.

Garry Foster of Deloitte & Touche LLP in Toronto describes the city’s project as a great plan, but cautions adoption rates will be slower than anticipated.

"Businesses won’t be giving up their wired networks immediately, but as they learn to layer in security…this will get slow and steady pick-up and then as it gets proven it'll get faster pick-up," says Foster, Deloitte’s national director of technology, media and telecommunications.

Wi-Fi is on its way to overcoming one of its biggest challenges, he adds. The technology hasn’t yet shown itself capable of wide coverage, but the Toronto hotzone has the potential to prove Wi-Fi’s full benefits.

"The beauty behind something like this is you've got one wireless network, one password and no protocol and firewall issues."

Using Wi-Fi to connect to the Internet from anywhere will make it particularly attractive to the city’s mobile workforce, says Alicia Wanless, an analyst at Seaboard Group in Toronto.

"Mobility for employees has increased a lot, so getting Internet access anywhere is quite exceptional," says Wanless. "As a competitor, Toronto Hydro Telecom has really opened its doors and increased its visibility. It’s a really great move on their part, in terms of competing against the telcos."

According to Surtees, certain civil servants at Industry Canada are believed to be "somewhat chagrined" with the reluctance of the major incumbents to roll out city-wide Wi-Fi coverage.

"It starts to make sense why incumbent phone companies such as Verizon in San Francisco and SBC in Philadelphia have their knickers in a knot about comparable muni-services down there; and why I think Bell, Telus, Rogers are going to be possibly freaking out over this," he says.

"They have oodles of the same unlicensed spectrum [in the 2.4GHz band], but they’re not making use of that valuable spectrum. They haven't rolled out any seamless, ubiquitous service. I say all power to Toronto Hydro Telecom for trying to do this."

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Mark Els Mark Els is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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