A Discomforting Precedent For WiFi "Hot Spots" 121
rob.sharp writes: "The BBC have some history lessons for wireless networks ...", pointing to an article about a wireless phone service called Rabbit, which relied on access areas similar in concept to the WiFi "hot spots" ISPs and business are experimenting with around the globe right now. ("Subscribers to the service, backed by Hutchison Whampoa, could make mobile calls when they were within 100 metres of a Rabbit transmitter.") Rabbit didn't work out well, though, and the article questions whether 802.11 access providers can do any better.
Mobile Phones are not for this technology (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Mobile Phones are not for this technology (Score:3, Informative)
In the UK at least DECT phones (digital cordless) are the direct descendant of the Rabbit phones.
Remember this was 1989. Real mobile phones were cumbersome and very expensive. This was an attempt to make them more widely available - albeit in a less functional form.
Re:Mobile Phones are not for this technology (Score:1)
300 meters vs 100 meters (Score:2)
In addition, if a wireless isp created a semi directional antenta (4 of them, each covering 90 degrees), and was able to boost the signal on each of them, the we would be able to get probably about 600 meters or better out of it.
Re:Mobile Phones are not for this technology (Score:1)
He loved it and continued to mourn it's demise well into the period he enjoyed his first (proper) mobile phone, which was big and pricey in comparison!
Yes, it looks hella dated now, but back then it was pretty damn innovative, and combined with a bleeper, better than the Cell Phones of the time.
Re:Mobile Phones are not for this technology (Score:2)
Yes but the point of the article is that the same limitations may cause wi-fi to fail and you havn't spoken to that at all. One could equally argue that the idea of an ultraportable or PDA is that you can use it far from the receiving antenna. I don't see what you mean about the corless phones either. They may have a 100m range, but they're not portable. You can't take them with you and use them from a Starbucks.
The question is: Will Wi-Fi end up being replaced by, for example, 3G in the same way that Rabbit (and Iridium) were killed by GSM and cell phones?
They had one major use (Score:1)
This made Rabbit the only network that could make calls while on the tube.
Rabbit had excellent reception in areas where physical topography blocked normal transmitters - too many tall buildings blocking the signal for example.
Re:Mobile Phones are not for this technology (Score:2, Insightful)
When I'm on my cell phone, I want to be able to walk, drive and basically go anywhere.
When I'm on my wireless network, I want to be able to go from my desk to my couch. I might even want to walk down to the cafe and use my laptop there, but I'm certainly not going to be typing on my laptop as I walk to the cafe, and I'm DEFINITELY not going to use my laptop while I'm driving somewhere.
Re:interesting logo (Score:1)
Re:interesting logo (Score:1)
nibbit (Score:1)
Re:nibbit (Score:1)
Re:nibbit (Score:1)
1) There is both a hotspot and global-coverage technology, offering about the same service, but the latter is (somewhat) more expensive.
2) There is relatively cheap hotspot technology without a clear alternative even remotely comparable in price.
It seems that at the present time, the second scenario is realistic. Since wifi meets a demand, there will be people using it. The question is, however, how this trend will grow if there are globally covered alternatives in a comparable order of price. Plenty of people might consider using a more uniformly covered service for the sake of ease and simplicity.
If you assume GSM to be hotspot based (with very big spots) and compare it to Iridium phones, then you see that the price being at least one order of magnitude greater (and some other factors) leads to failure.
Re:nibbit (Score:1)
Re:nibbit (Score:1)
Was called kermit in holland (Score:2, Informative)
I also think the article makes the wrong comparison. Considering the target audience arent wireless hotspots like the early mobile (car) phones? You know the ones like a brick that only worked in the large cities? They took of like the proverbial rccket. Wireless computing is aimed at the business men, kermit was aimed at the consumer.
Warchalking (Score:1, Offtopic)
what the hell is the author on? (Score:4, Insightful)
Can anybody please point to the always on alternative to WiFi networks?
Ok, now that you've mentioned G3, can you find it where I live? No. Ok, lets try again, oh CDCP? Sure, we have it, Lets see, its 19.2K (Higher with compression, WOW!).... WiFi is what? Up to 11Mbps?
The article might be right, but only if something with equivilent speed is more readily available... which it isn't, yet.
Well, there was Ricochet (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:what the hell is the author on? (Score:2)
GPRS ? It will get faster and cheaper as more people start to use it.
Re:what the hell is the author on? (Score:1)
GPRS limits (Score:1)
If I'm not mistaken, GPRS uses ganged-together GSM bands. That implies that there's a fundamental limit to how inexpensive it can be, at least until someone comes up with a whole lot more spectrum, or starts building thousands and thousands of GSM microcells (very expensive).
The advantage of 802.11 is that the base-station technology is cheap (given that it's roughly the same as the client technology), and that it's designed to operate over a fairly short range. This means it's not going to be the preferred solution for rural or even (possibly) suburban areas, but it'll be a much better investment than things like GPRS in high-density areas.
I don't imagine that the final solution will actually be 802.11, but I think the Telecom companies will eventually adopt something that's more closely related to 802.11 than to traditional mobile systems, at least in the cities. Your phone (or PDA or computer, whatever) will be flexible enough to switch to a much slower, more traditional cellular network only when you're out of range.
Re:what the hell is the author on? (Score:2)
Re:what the hell is the author on? (Score:2)
As others have pointed out, The likely use for WiFi is to access information on the Internet, it isn't that I expect somebody to access my webserver. Again, this changes the equation a bit.
If G3, GPRS, etc, etc actually take off and become affordable I might agree with you.
Right now I think WiFi has a better chance. The nature of it right now is that it pops up at the locations people want it to be in.
GPRS pops up in areas where the telecom companies are willing to outfitt all thier towers with the required equipment or they don't offer the service at all. (It isn't unusual for half the towers in an area to technicly support a service several months, or even years, before the service itself is offered as customers expect it to work everywhere... it isn't like that with WiFi.
Cost, convenience and performance (Score:1)
1) UMTS cells are generally much larger than WiFi hotspots, meaning that the bandwidth may be shared between a larger number of people. Microcells are generally far less cost-effective than 802.11.
2) UMTS is a much more expensive technology in general. The rollout costs are mindboggling, and they're going to be paid off by service fees. High adoption would mean better rates, but also more competition for the bandwidth.
3) Where do I need coverage? If there are fast, inexpensive WiFi hotspots in a lot of the places I need to go, it might be not be worth the extra dough to get coverage in every nook and cranny.
Re:what the hell is the author on? (Score:1)
Ok, lets try again, oh CDCP? Sure, we have it, Lets see, its 19.2K (Higher with compression, WOW!)
A modern solution like CDMA 2000 or GSM offers 80Kbps or higher, which quite honestly is an entirely usable speed for wireless surfing, etc. Indeed, even CDPD's 19.2Kbps is entirely usable. In the case of ad hoc or banded together 802.11 systems, there is a very relevant competitor, and that is the nationwide phone carriers and their new technologies.
Re:what the hell is the author on? (Score:1)
Re:what the hell is the author on? (Score:1)
This is all without adding GPRS to the network. It's fairly cool, especially as a GSM connection to an ISDN line is close to instant, so if you're lucky enough to have an ISDN access point for your ISP, you have a very fast to connect, if expensive, way of accessing the internet.
Of course, the network has to support the feature. Many don't.
Re:what the hell is the author on? (Score:1)
I remember rabbit (Score:2, Interesting)
If I remember correctly, you got what was essentially a cordless phone and base station - you piad wired rates when at home, and mobile rates when elsewhere.
The good was that anyone walking past your house could use your base station t omake 'elsewhere' calls (on thier bill, of course).
You presumably got a sign in the pack to stick in your window, because there are still some left around in random places. (one in a flat down the road from me).
Rabbit didn't fail because it was hotspotted (Score:5, Insightful)
Rabbit, et al, were implemented as CT2 technology at the end of the 1980s. Four operators were licensed to operate phonepoint (or equivalent) systems. When a user wanted to make a call from a mobile phone, they would lock onto the nearest low-power transmitter; with the aim to place transmitters would be in shops, tube stations, and so on and there would be few gaps in coverage in urban areas.
There was no mobility, as once a call had been set up through one base station it could not be transferred to another, also you could not take incoming calls (unless you were at home, where it worked like a cordless phone).
Rabbit failed because "proper" mobiles (albeit analogue) were taking off and moving from the brick car phone models, and they allowed incoming calls, and movement from cell to cell.
Re:Rabbit didn't fail because it was hotspotted (Score:1)
Re:Rabbit didn't fail because it was hotspotted (Score:1)
One major drawback (Score:2, Informative)
This is not a problem with WiFi because emails onlike phone calls do not need to be handled at once. Basically it will allow you to read the internet and catch up with emails when you get to the station or airport. I can see that being quite attractive.
Re:One major drawback (Score:1)
It's a bit diffrenent here (Score:3, Insightful)
So if I already have a card and I wander into a hotspot I am much more likley to use it. This is much diffrent from purchacing equipment that MUST be used in specific locations.
So Wi-Fi hotspots are taking advantage of what people ALREADY OWN. I can't wander into a coffiee shop or an airport nowadays WITHOUT seeing a laptop out if not a dozen. Comparing this to rabbit would be like trying hotspots in the early 90's, nobody really had the equipment and it would be doomed to fail.
Kind Of Obvious (Score:2)
This is how just about everything works on the internet, aside from most broadband connections. Regardless of what corporations are offering, someone else is offering it for free. The record industry wants to sell you CDs, but hundreds of people are willing to just send you a copy online. Subscription news sites, especially gaming ones like IGN and GameSpot, want to sell you their news and content, but Gameforms [gameforms.com], The Magic Box [the-magicbox.com], and GameFAQS [gamefaqs.com] are all giving the same stuff away for free. And now wireless internet companies are trying to sell you wireless internet access when the same people that are using P2P services are willing to just give internet access away for free.
There simply isn't any way to compete with people that are giving away the same product as your company for free, at least not for a small startup industry that doesn't have the financial and political clout to legislate against the people giving it away for free or strongarm the supply side of the market.
Blast from the past (Score:2)
At the time it seemed a little limiting to me, although I guess since you got a base station in your home, it was better than a regular cordless phone.
These days I'll probably throw my land lines away when I get broadband, mobiles are so cheap and ubiquitous. Times change. Every time I Watch Lethal Weapon, the only thing in it that dates it is a mobile phone the size of a car battery.
Rabbit = Japanese Phone System? (Score:1)
Hey... I remember that... (Score:2)
That Wright Brothers contraption will fail! (Score:1)
Only a madman would try something which others have tried and failed at!
Dutch PTT had a similar network (Score:2)
It failed.
Mainly because its transmitters were often installed next to public phone booths (argh), and GSM turned out to have a much better coverage.
Nevertheless, I don't see what this has to do with WiFi failing or not.
Re:Dutch PTT had a similar network (Score:1)
It's mentioned that they may still remember the failure of Kermit (Greenpoint), what in my opinion mainly failed because it was only meant for outgoing calls, and most antenna's were placed near (on top off) public phones.
Another reason not to provide the service will be the big investment KPN made in UMTS-licenses, and their recent introduction of i-Mode.
Rabbit failed, but cellular phone didn't! (Score:1)
Phone != laptop computer (Score:2)
It's always nice to recall where we've been, but comparing wifi hotspots to the Rabbit project is comparing apples [apple.com] to oranges [orange.co.uk].
(Apologies for the analogy-links, I couldn't resist)
American cell phones suck (Score:1)
Maybe a little off topic, but I think consumers would be a little more friendly towards cell service providers if the plans were better balanced.
any thoughts?
Re:American cell phones suck (Score:2)
Both the 'plans' and 'pay as you go' exist in Canada and the USA. The plans are more popular because the cost per minute of talking time is lower. Also with the pay as you go, you have to keep track of expiry dates and such or your rates go up if you don't refill it in time. The people would rather just have anto-credit card charges as opposed to more bookeeping.
The profit is actually less for pay as you go and my mobile provider (Telus) sent me a letter recently trying to convince me to switch over. To get all the services I get for CAD$10/month on the plans, I'd be paying $40-50 per month (with of course a whole lot more talk time.) Why do you think they offer all kinds of rebates if you sign up on a plan (I could have saved $150 on my new phone if I signed on for 3 years) and nothing similar happens with pay as you go?
Of course this still stinks compared to what's in Europe were you can often just pay one price per month and use it as much as you want and the only thing that can run out is the battery.
Re:American cell phones suck (Score:2)
What are you smoking? Per minute charges for telecommunications services in Europe is par for the course. You may be thinking how if someone calls your cellphone (in Europe) they pay an elevated charge (above the normal landline to landline cost) to cover the costs of calling your mobile phone. So in many cases if you have people calling you they bear the extra costs for calling a mobile phone, so you can talk all day because only the person who initiates the call pays while the person who recieves the call does not.
Who provides unlimited mobile calling (outbound) for one flat monthly fee to the public? I'd be willing to bet noone.
Re:American cell phones suck (Score:1)
Not entirely true - If someone calls a mobile, they know in advance what they are paying, as their network provider tells them. But if You, the person being called, take your phone abroad, They`ll pay the same price as before, as they are just calling your mobile, and cant be expected to know where you are, and You, the person being called, pays the difference. This caused an outrage a year or so ago (in the UK) but it was just yet another case of people not reading contracts before they sign them, and the situation has not changed since.
Re:American cell phones suck (Score:1)
You'd lose [boomerangwireless.com].
Re:American cell phones suck (Score:2)
My experiences with this came from numerous angry europeans (from Germany in this case) who were enraged when I said that having a pre-determined number of minutes to use your mobile phone per month was not the same as a plan with no 'gotchas' and they told be about paying one price to use it as much as they want (for local calls) ... just like land lines in the USA and Canada.
Also someone else mentioned http://www.boomerangwireless.com/ [boomerangwireless.com].
American cell phones REALLY suck (Score:2)
My experiences with this came from numerous angry europeans (from Germany in this case) who were enraged when I said that having a pre-determined number of minutes to use your mobile phone per month was not the same as a plan with no 'gotchas' and they told be about paying one price to use it as much as they want (for local calls) ... just like land lines in the USA and Canada.
Also someone else mentioned http://www.boomerangwireless.com/.
Oh, come on. That's nothing at all like what's available in Europe. Boomerang is only in a handful of cities, limits you to one kind of phone ( and you can't use your existing phone) and has only very basic features.
Here's what I get from E-Plus [eplus.de] in Germany:
There just isn't any comparison. Yes, Boomerang has a flat monthly rate -- but then they suck in just about everything else.
And I have no "gotchas" with my phone...so, sad to say, American cellphones really do suck. I shudder when I visit my family in the States and see what stuff they are using.
Then I salivate over their cable modem...ah well, you can't have it all. ;-)
Cheers,
Ethelred [grantham.de]
Re:American cell phones REALLY suck (Score:1)
The phones themselves are OK (the GSM providers sell some of the nicer Nokias too) but the service terms are clearly not that good, probably because there is far more incentive here in Canada to use a land line than in Europe.
And here's something ... my SMS price is lower than yours. I only pay the equivalent of 6.49 euro-cents (10c canadian) per sent message and nothing for received messages. Of course you'll save more than me on the talk-time anyway. And I do believe my phone [telusmobility.com] (which is one of a fairly-nice-but-not-as-nice-as-yours selection [telusmobility.com]) is at least as good as yours [nokia.com] as well.
Re:American cell phones suck (Score:1)
This is finally changing. Virgin just launched the first truly open-ended pay-as-you-go service [virginmobileusa.com] in the USA. $100 to buy the phone, 25c for the first 3 minutes each day and 10c/minute thereafter. Minutes never expire, and there are no long distance or roaming charges. Virgin is using Sprint's PCS network.
The only other service that has come close to this so far in the USA is Tracfone [tracfone.com], which offers 365 days of continuous service including 150 minutes of airtime for $100 or so. Great for emergency use, but the price of additional minutes is high.
The trend in Europe has been ubiquitous ownership of pay-as-you-go phones, used modestly. The trend in the USA has been to bundle huge amounts of night/weekend minutes into monthly plans to encourage heavy use. It will be interesting to watch the collision between these business models.
Re:American cell phones suck (Score:1)
I won't argue with you that these european plans are well advanced compared to the north american ones that are really a 'hybrid monthly plan."
I prefer the pay as you go because the lowest case scenario for my provider is $10 per month. And I'm using the phone every month anyway -- it's like having an ultra-cheap monthly plan.
Wireless vs Cell Phone Model (Score:2)
Ultimately, I think something like that would be ideal for wireless, but I see lots of technical issues on something like that, never mind the political issues of developing coverage.
Trying to do this while trying to maintian free access would be difficult.
wireless sucks (Score:1)
Hutchison CT2 / Wireless Broadband in Hong Kong (Score:2)
The major ISP's in HK are now wiring up the popular locations like coffee shops, malls locations where people can sit down with their notebooks and surf the net or VPN back into work. The best wireless service is provided by Netvigator [netvigator.com]. I've yet to see anyone hooked into the net with a wireless connection in HK.
Anyways .. just a couple of pointers from Hong Kong for those who care. :)
How to Find WiFi (Score:1)
Why Rabbit failed and 802.11 won't... (Score:2)
Currently the best wireless services that offer long range coverage provide sporadic service and far lower bandwidth. 802.11 doesn't provide the wide coverage, but it at least gives substantial bandwidth at the shorter ranges. In the long run you can expect that the standard mechanism for doing wireless will be to roam from hot spot to hot spot, using 2.5G and 3G systems to provide some bandwidth when not near a hot sport. Even as 3G systems get built out, the bandwidth capabilities of hot spots will increase to continue to provide value enough to make it worthwhile to people.
Reminds me of these new "local" wireless co.s (Score:1)
Not for me, I need national coverage, but it probably will appeal to people who rarely leave town.
Yet another way to sell old stuff... (Score:1)
We got Bebop. A nice, cute little wireless phone that worked the very same way as Rabbit: spot a relay, get close enough, and you could make a call. Let me just say it was completely wiped out of the paysage by cellular phones.
Now, could someone tell me how many time it gonna take for business to understand that if a product had no market because of technological deficiency ten years ago, it is not going to be more successful today?
Same goes with Wap: the problem was not the speed, but the size of the device. 3 years later, they come back with even smaller devices... and GPRS. Duh!
--
Arkan
This just in: (Score:2, Funny)
Re:This just in: (Score:1)
So I guess with that, and with a certain hardware company [apple.com] pushing WiFi services, the article really is, literally, comparing Orange to Apple.
Oh so different.... (Score:1)
Now, WiFi access points might well take off. There's many times I'm at a restaurant or a cafe or an office building when I'd like to be able to get decent Internet access. I carry around an Apple TiBook -- so I've got built-in WiFi already.
The usage profile of this sort of technology is very different from phone service. You want to reachable when you have a cellphone (predominantly), and you want to be able to *reach out* with WiFi -- to check email, send email, grab a copy of that report you forgot at the office, read Slashdot at the airport terminal etc.
Funnily enough, I've noticed Spotnik have put in a WiFi access node in one of my favourite restaurants here in Toronto (SpaHa). Despite being quite a trendy restaurant, it's actually located on the University of Toronto campus -- probably a pefect place to attract both geeks and rich students with their iBooks who want to drink latte while surfing and pretending to write their papers
-psyco
data networks are asynchronous (Score:1)
Of course if you want to be searching google all the time, anywhere, at the slightest provocation, you're out of luck...
Free? (Score:2)
The chances of anyone making money out of the wireless hotspots could be dented by the fact that many community groups and well-intentioned individuals are setting up networks anyone can use for free.
£85 per month seems high, but I suppose broad band isn't near as cheap "accross the pond" as it is here. However, free is a lot cheaper, and I'm hoping that there are some "well-intentioned individuals" that can help make that happen.
It would be great to see a web site for freloaders dedicated to WIFI spots where you could enter your zipcode and then find out what is near you to get on, and what you must do in order to get on (hardware, settings, etc.). Anyone know of such a thing?
Re:Free? (Score:1)
Re:Free? (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.shmoo.com/gawd/
Re:Free? (Score:2)
Cable modems are around £25 for 512k down and £35 for 1Mb down.
It's most likely that BT are pricing this high to keep all and sundry from jumping on the not terribly stable or rolled out bandwagon.
Just FYI.
Re:Free? (Score:2)
TBQH, I think the article is correct in saying that commercial WiFi hotspots are unlikely to stick around for the long haul. A few specialist "captive audience" spots might work out, and in the short term the novelty factor might support coffee-shop spots for a while; but long term they're screwed when 3G rolls out. Right now though, WiFi is still at the top of my shopping list...
WiFi itself will carry on. The fast roll-out for corporate networking, the convenience for home networking, and the opportunities for community networks [personaltelco.net] all count for a lot with me. Much more so than (yuk) Bluetooth. I think 802.11a/b formats have a rich future ahead of them.
Me, I want to play with 802.15.4 aka ZigBee [commsdesign.com]. Sure, it doesn't have the ethernet-sized bandwidth but it's really cheap, low-power, and thinking about the possibilities of swarms of tiny ZigBee-enabled devices makes by brain hum. In a good way. :}
You also tend to walk while using a phone.... (Score:1)
I do agree that the charging issue might make commercial WiFi fairly rare, but if prices keep falling I see a fairly large enthusiast group that will have free WiFi in a lot of urban areas, and I think that places like Hotels, Clubs with either admission/membership fees, Airports, and perhaps more exclusive coffee shops will be willing to spring for it as a way to attract/keep customers
I agree with some of the other posts that WiFi will survive as long as there is no affordable, always on equivalent covering wide areas.(And for the forseeable future in America at least, there won't be....)
It failed in The Netherlands too (Score:1)
Rabbit was a glorified payphone (Score:2, Informative)
Rabbit phones didn't take incoming calls, and were only usable close to a "hotspot" where payphones were plentiful. Call charges were similar, and payphone users didn't need to buy equipment.
Payphones killed Rabbit, and now cellular/mobile is killing payphones. Two separate battles, 10 years apart.
(One marginal benefit of Rabbit was the ability to use the same phone at home with your own personal base station connected to your POTS line, like a conventional cordless phone. This wasn't enough to sell the service though. After the service collapsed, Rabbit phones and home base stations were sold off dirt cheap as digital cordless phones, and very good they were too.)
Re:Rabbit was a glorified payphone (Score:2, Funny)
Mobile communications has come a long way... (Score:1)
The thing that will differentiate the amount of success that such access points have is the fact that there is a captive market. Because mobile phones were not thought necessary back in the 80s, the Rabbit phone was not a success. Whereas, with 802.11, you have a large group of people who feel lost without their internet connection.
All it comes down to is the convenience with which one can use the WiFi networks.
Rabbit was NOT a mobile phone (Score:2, Informative)
It was not intended to be used as a mobile phone, rather it was a work around to the restrictions that prevented pay phones being installed in many locations, and the fact that most pay phones were vandalised constantly.
Unfortunately, shortly after Rabbit was launched, the laws were changed to allow more pay phones to be installed (by companies other than BT), so it kind of under cut Rabbit.
This combined with the fact that mobile phones became portable (as opposed to tethered to a car battery) meant the Rabbit didn't really stand a chance. Rabbit was really a case of too little too late.
One point about Rabbit was that you got a base station to use in your home. This base station could also be used by other Rabbit users to make calls if they were in range. This meant that the Rabbit network got larger as more people became customers, just like current community WiFi initiatives such as Consume [consume.net] et al.
Rabbit... we had these phones (Score:1)
What a horrible example. (Score:2)
Rabbit had to compete on the high end with cellular phones, giving seamles coverage over large areas.
And it had to compete on the low end with pay phones - A MUCH cheaper alternative that it had few advantages over.
What competes with Wi-Fi? There's no mobile equivalent, while 3G may be "fast", Wi-Fi is 10-100 times faster.
Rabbit used a proprietary phone that became a paperweight if service died - Such unease makes customers hesistant. Wi-Fi uses standard hardware that you can use without any service, in your own home.
The problem wISPs will have is "the network" - Coverage is what makes people switch cellular providers, coverage is what will make people switch/sign up for WiFi providers. The founder of Earthlink has found what I consider a pretty good solution to the problem of building a network - It's the exact same technique he used to build Earthlink into a nationwide dialup ISP - Don't build the network yourself, partner with a multitude of ISPs for maximum coverage, eventually buying them if it makes sense to do so.
There's only one comparison to be made here - Just as Rabbit was a souped-up cordless pay phone, Wi-Fi is a souped-up cordless RJ-45 jack. The only decent competition I can see for Wi-Fi is a provider that puts Ethernet hubs in hot-spots to compete - An easy threat for a wISP to avoid - Simply be the one providing and charging for the Ethernet ports too. Once you've got an AP with a connection to the outside network (the hard/expensive part), adding wired Ethernet drops is easy.
Rabbit cost money, Wi-Fi is likely to remain free (Score:1)
First, the model that I expect to be successful is non-commercial Wi-Fi networks. In some cases, Wi-Fi networks will be offered as a loss leader; to get people into a coffee shop, for instance. In other cases, universities will setup campus wide networks for students, which will probably be freely available to anyone on the campus. Also, some residences will allow people to piggy-back on their broadband connections. In each of these cases, the costs to the Wi-Fi provider are small, although there is the potential for abuse.
Another reason the comparison between failed mobile phone networks in England and Wi-Fi may be irrelevent is the way in which these services are used. Mobile phone users are on the go. They are either walking or driving, but in most cases they don't want to be tied down to a 100 meter radius. On the other hand, the current generation of wireless users are primarily using laptop computers. Laptop users will generally prefer to park themselves at a table or bench. Of course, as PDA's and other devices start to become equiped with Wi-Fi capability, this behavior my change. But, before that really gains steam, I expect a lot of other changes to be under way as well.
The main point is that Wi-Fi is not going to be driven by large corporations the way that mobile phones have been. Wi-Fi is more likely to be a grassroots movement because the price is right. On the other hand, grassroots Wi-Fi networks is not a one-size-fits-all solution and there will definitely be opportunities for the telcos to get their grubby paws in the game as well.
phones over ip over wifi (Score:1)
We should probably use some free, existing voice-over-IP net so people could still call with their computers and stuff like that.
Re:phones over ip over wifi (Score:2)
You should be able to do it with existing hardware, such as multimedia equipped PDA.
Some of the drawbacks have been identified here as reasons why Rabbit couldn't compete with mobile telephony - such as receiving calls would be spotty unless you camped out at known hot spot. But if you worked in an office with a wifi network and had one at home most of the time you would have access most of the time anyway - but these are times when you already have access to the POTS telephone network as well.
The other drawback is that without 100% saturation you would be constantly plagued with dropped calls if you tried to walk or especially drive while on the phone.
For those reasons it would be hard to sell as a standalone service, but if billed with mobile Internet for your PDA which is already up and running, I can't see why people wouldn't pay say an extra $10/month to also get telephony if it meant throwing away the mobile phone and the $30-$40 month cost.
Re:phones over ip over wifi (Score:1)
Starting it as a grassroots movement would be great and for times when you're out in the country you'd connect to the internet some other way.
("Why do you sound so bad?" "Well, I'm calling over a modem.")
We could start a cooperative making cheap phones for all who wanted, but, since the network would be free, also allowing pda/wireless or laptops or phones from competitors et cetera.
Oh, maybe some of the phones could be relay stations as well as end units. That'd be cool.
Rabbit facts (Score:1)
2.A house rabbit pet can live up to 10 to 12 years and is a long-term commitment.
3.There are over 45 recognized breeds in the United States and all domesticated rabbit breeds are descendants of European rabbits.
4.Rabbits can be litter box trained and it is much easier to train them after they have been neutered or spayed.
5.A rabbit's digestive system is similar to a horse and they require daily hay to prevent digestive problems. Rabbits cannot vomit and hairballs can be fatal.
6.Rabbit teeth grow constantly and bunnies will naturally gnaw wires, furniture legs, etc. so rooms in a house must be bunny-proofed where they are allowed to run.
7.Rabbits can mate as early as 3 months of age and gestation is 31 days with a litter size of 4 to 12 kits.
8.When bunnies become adult rabbits they can exhibit aggressive and territorial behavior. They will spray urine, mark territory with their feces, bite and grunt.
9.Young bunnies should not be separated from their mother until they are 8 weeks old.
10.Domesticated rabbits are very social and do best as when adopted in pairs. They can also bond with cats, dogs and guinea pigs with proper supervision and patience.
11.Spaying and neutering prevents health problems for rabbits. Females are prone to uterine cancer after 5 years of age if they are not altered. Altering makes rabbits less aggressive and prevents overpopulation.
12.Rabbits can become very affectionate pets that can enjoy cuddling, being petted and quiet interaction with humans especially after altering. They can learn their names and simple words such as "No."
13.Most rabbits do not enjoy being picked up since they are ground dwellers by nature. Many will scratch and kick violently to avoid being picked up.
14.The skeleton of a rabbit and especially the backbone is very fragile and it can break easily when the rabbit is handled improperly or dropped. Legs can break, too, if contact is made with a hard surface when a rabbit is struggling violently.
15.Rabbits require a solid floor in their cage instead of a wire grate since their feet are not padded like a dog or cat.
16.Domesticated rabbits need exercise to stay healthy and time outside a cage to run.
17.Rabbits have their own version of a purr. They will grind their teeth softly when petted. Rabbits also communicate through a variety of ways such as stomping a hind leg, grunting, honking/oinking softly, grooming each other, etc.
18.Rabbits are nearsighted and have a blind spot right in front of them.
19.Domesticated rabbits do not survive in the "wild" if they are abandoned.
20.Rabbits are most active in the early morning and in the late evening.
21.Rabbits are not Hares, but they are closely related. Hares have fur when they are born and their eyes are open.
Still some relics around (Score:1)
I still occasionally see the signs around. There was one at a train station. Think it might be City Thameslink but I could be wrong.
Re:Who cares. (Score:1)