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Home >> Voice, Data, and IP >> Carriers and Service Providers

Waiting for mobile WiMAX

Waiting for mobile WiMAX

By:  Howard Solomon  On: 17 Feb 2009 For: Network World Canada Creator

While Clearwire builds out its mobile broadband network in the U.S., Canadian mobile WiMAX spectrum holders are still running trials. Don't look for service to start here until at least next year

For almost two years Primus Canada has been conducting limited mobile WiMAX trials in two Ontario cities, trying to determine if and when broadband wireless service will be brought to Canadians.

The answer, according to the president of the carrier, is that maybe one trial will be expanded by the end of this year. But commercial deployment likely won’t come until at least 2010.

The same is likely for other WiMAX spectrum holders in Canada, which include Craig Wireless of Winnipeg and the Inukshuk partnership.

Meanwhile in the United States, Clearwire is pushing ahead with its Clear broadband wireless service using the 802.16e technology in Portland, Ore., and Baltimore (where its currently called Xohm) and promising to expand to more cities soon.

Mobile WiMAX promises fast downloads of Internet Web sites, music and video to people on the move is being trialed in a number of countries, and in commercial deployment in a few. Development of the technology has been brewing for several years, with deployments in a number of countries including Korea and Pakistan. But in 2008 interest began to heat up, with an increasing number of carriers starting trials.

At this week’s Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, several equipment manufacturers have announced products, expanding the number of base stations, USB dongles and chipsets capable of handling the allotted 2.2, 2.5 or 3.5Ghz spectrum.

Also at the conference, Intel and Alcatel-Lucent announced the creation of WiMAX Ensure, an interoperability program for testing mobile WiMAX devices to strengthen the emerging technology’s ecosystem of supporting products.

But in Canada, interest among carriers and service providers in mobile WiMAX is tepid.

That may be justified. One analyst recently forecast that demand for mobile WiMAX will drop this year from the recession and competition from another high speed technology LTE. This week Verizon Wireless announced it will start this year rolling out an LTE network in the U.S.

In addition, Cintia Garza, a WiMAX market analyst for Maravedis Inc., a Montreal-based research firm, said Industry Canada may be a restraining factor. It will convert fixed WiMAX spectrum for mobile spectrum, but in return licence-holders have to surrender part of their spectrum to the government.

One Canadian licence holder told her that is a deterrent, Garza said. Still, last November Craig Wireless announced Industry Canada converted its Vancouver WiMAX spectrum to mobile, believed to be a first. Craig has some experience with the technology, which it is trying to roll out in Greece, Norway and California. However, the company is in financial trouble and it isn’t clear how soon it can capitalize on the Industry Canada move.


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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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Comments (1)

WiMAX in Canada? LOL!!!
by LondonCalling 2/19/2009 12:00:00 AMCome on Howard you can do better then this!! Dig a little deeper here. There will be NO WIMAX in Canada. The incumbents (rogers bell) are not interested and will simply evolve existing networks to LTE if and when necessary. In terms of the rest of the group that holds spectrum they are all sitting on it looking to flip it for big profits. They (Primus et al) simply say they are testing in order to state to Industry Canada that the technology is not there yet so they can extend their licenses. Meanwhile there are over 400 WiMAX networks deployed in over 130 countries worldwide. I see you spoke to Cintia at Maravedis. According to their own report presented in March 2008, WiMAX service revenues were US$668MM. So unless Industry Canada gets serious and makes current license holders meet their license obligations and deploy 50% of their spectrum nothing will happen in Canada. The license holders should deploy or return the spectrum to Industry Canada (use it or lose it!). Its really too bad. WiMAX would have been a great way for a new third party to enter the competitive market. Anyway... be nice to see someone really dig into this issue with a little investigative reporting and ask some hard questions of these companies that are squatting on Canadian spectrum.
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