xchange/Motorola eBook - Exploring the Wireless Broadband Opportunity
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Exploring the Wireless Broadband Opportunity: Taking
Wireless Indoors and Out
Sponsored
by:
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There's a buzz around wireless broadband, but service
providers should go beyond the hype and discover how these
technologies make sense in very practical ways, such as how to
best serve customers, uncover new opportunities and cost
effectively make business cases and roll out new
applications. This eBook will focus on the reality of making
wireless broadband successful, including how to leverage
solutions for both indoors and out.
Table of Contents
Licensed vs. Unlicensed Spectrum in Deploying Wireless
Broadband Solutions
Service providers are finding themselves with a choice to
make as they look to wireless broadband to serve customers
in rural or fiber-poor areas, or to uncover new enterprise
and government opportunities. While wireless broadband
represents a cost-effective way to extend the network and
support new, high-bandwidth data applications, operators
must decide whether to go with licensed or unlicensed
spectrum. Unlicensed spectrum options, such as those found
with Motorola's Canopy
portfolio, provide the added benefit of offering service
providers low-cost subscriber modules.
Finding New Business Cases for Wireless Broadband
When it comes to fixed wireless broadband and mesh
networking, a few business cases stand out: nomadic
broadband Internet access and competitive last-mile
services. But service providers are leaving money on the
table by focusing only on wireline replacement. The big
advantage of broadband wireless is that it provides that
untethered flexibility, which lends itself to interesting
applications, both inside and outside of buildings. The
flexibility of point-to-point Ethernet bridges is one example of
gear a provider can use to tackle a number of customer
targets. Simply by thinking creatively, service providers
can find ways to expand their business in ways they may not
have thought about before. Read a case study about Tucson,
Ariz.-based Simply
Bits, which teamed with American Traffic
Solutions to offer an automatic traffic ticketing
application over wireless broadband that uses red light,
speed and railroad-grade crossing cameras
Video Over Wireless Broadband: A New Opportunity?
From a video vantage point, wireless infrastructure
providers may see a wireline market with applications
aplenty, awaiting a reliable and robust wireless broadband
infrastructure to support them. But a mix of business and
bandwidth issues are currently the challenges that must be
met, experts agree, before we'll see consumers and
businesses participating in video-driven applications as part of their daily
lives. |
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