Spectrum as Property 293
the economist troll writes "An article in this week's Economist argues that overcautious control of electromagnetic spectrum, on the part of regulatory agencies, has resulted in the sheer waste of up to 95% of available spectrum. The article suggests remedies for this sorry state of affairs, including (but not limited to) various methods of privatization. Peppered with history and interesting facts--for instance, did you know only 2% of America's spectrum allocation is determined by auction?--this is one article you won't want to miss."
Waste? (Score:2, Insightful)
Umm...try again (Score:5, Insightful)
Don't be so fscking blind. Comments like that are so high school. Look at all the give-aways BOTH parties toss out to their paid clients. If you believe for one second Bush/Republicans are any worse than the Democrats, you're a bigger fool than they ever hoped for. Bush's FCC commissioner, Junior Powell, obviously is a lacky for large corporate interests. But so were his predecessors under Clinton. Hell, go read the USDA rural broadband money rules (from the bill Democrat Senator Harkin sponsored). Would you be surprised it's just a slush fund to give money back to the incumbant phone companies? Yup. If you ain't one, or ain't established old money, you ain't getting money. Funny how it always works that way.
While we're on the propaganda debunking, here's one for you:
1. Go read MoveOn.org's propeganda, especially all the blathering hatred at Bush for sending US jobs offshore to places like India, China, etc.
2. Then read who MoveOn.org is funded by (George Soros).
3. Then read Soros Investments list of holdings. Wow... it's like a list of all the major guilty offshoring companies! How can this be? Maybe Soros doesn't know?
4. Then read the white papers and recommendations by Soros Holdings on offshoring. HINT: If you are a company he invests in and are NOT making him money, he will move to find better management or dump his investment in you.
This country would rock if it wasn't for all you stupid sheep.
Soros (Score:2, Informative)
Not at all. But for Soros to dump millions into an organization and even pledge that he would spend his entire wealth (which isn't true, but it got him free PR. Dig deep enough and you'll find people like Soros almost never use their own money for these causes. Coerce others to give on your behalf, hook a Governor up with a gay lover and get him to pass legislation per your liking) under complete dishonesty, deception an
Re:Umm...try again (Score:2)
The truth is that most places hate America. Time to update your world view. If I lived anywhere but here, I'd probably hate the USA too; as it is I'm pretty ashamed of what's being done in my name, but since I don't live in Florida my vote really doesn't matter, and since I'm not rich my opinion doesn't matter, either.
The truth (Score:2, Insightful)
Actually, if you want the truth...
The Truth(TM) is that people will hate anyone they can blame, if they're the kind of people that are conditioned to blame others rather than take care of themselves. America gets much of the greatest hatred because, for a lazy-assed loser, it is the great personification of all the attributes they know they lack.
Call it Ned Flanders Syndrome. He's so damn easy to despise, because he works hard and deep down is probably a better
Re:The truth (Score:2)
They hate the US *government* (and many of them hate US citizens for supporting the US government - or being oblivious - like you - to the nature and policy effects of that government.)
And yes, the Europeans are hated too, because they did the same shit years before we did.
Doesn't excuse us.
Re:The truth (Score:2)
So, you agree with me that most everyone hates the USA? Great, we agree on something -- we're off to a good start.
The truth is you're talking nonsense (Score:5, Insightful)
You do not seem to know what you are talking about. Have you been to any of the places you're mentioning? Could you point to Moçambique on a map without looking it up first?
I'm German. I have been to a number of places in Eastern Europe that have seen the worse side of German occupation, and I have never been met with hate. I've been learning Russian, I've been learning some Hebrew so that I could read Yiddish (basically a dialect of German) and speak to some of the few remaining Jews over there, I did some reading, and then I just went there. People were a bit reserved at first, but after two minutes of talk, we got along very well. When I said I wanted to visit my German occupant grand-uncle's grave on the German military cemetery in Smolensk, we drove there together without them even asking.
My girlfriend is Ukrainian. They are probably the country that got the worst of us in World War 2. Do you think she hates me? We are talking Russian at home because my Ukrainian is too bad, and she gives me 9th-of-May victory postcards as a joke. That's Ukrainian hate for you.
I've spent the better part of the last year in Uzbekistan in the French Research Institute [ifeac.org] in Tashkent where the librarian is Crimean Tatar, born in the 1930s. We got along very well. She told me about how she got to hate Germans between '42 and '44 during German occupation of the Crimea, how Germans threatened to shoot her father before her eyes. After the war, she said, she refused even to look at Germans because of this. After the collapse of 1991, however, she said the five or ten Germans who came to Tashkent for research were young, interested in the local peopulation and their history, they spoke Russian and/or Uzbek and behaved very civilized and friendly in general. She said that these Germans were difficult to hate, and that she was compelled to relinquish her hate for Germans in general and turn it into bitter memories of the German occupants sixty years ago - an entirely different story.
So "all Africans hate the Europeans"? My brother came back a few weeks ago from eight months of work in Ghana where he lived in Accra with a host family, no running water, but the people were fine. Hated because he is European? Definitely not. I know Brits who worked in Nigeria (colony until 1960), Russians who worked in Central Asia (colony until 1917, Soviet Union afterwards) and a Portuguese who worked in Angola (colony until 1975). The memories they brought back were not ones of hate. If you visit Moçambique, there are places that you don't visit when you look like money, not when you're Portuguese. "Legitimate hate"? If that old Jew in Velizh near Smolensk had hated me, I wouldn't have blamed him, but he didn't.
Make an effort to learn people's languages, to show interest in them, their culture and their history. Respect them, look and behave in a respectable way. Stay in places for more than a couple of days, behave like a civilized person and smile when people show you their family pictures. An American who does just that is not going to be hated anywhere in the world, even in the Philippines (US colony until 1946) or Vietnam for that matter. They may not like your country (as an abstract entity) for what it does, what it did or fails to do, but they will not hate you.
Re:Umm...try again (Score:2, Insightful)
My personal thoughts on the matter (as an Icelander). Well: skrewing up the war/massive deficit/gutting important programs/etc. I would definitly like G.W.Bush a lot if I hated America. I really think that it is in the best interest of me, and my country, that America prospers. I can not see G.W.Bush's administration helping in tha
Re:Umm...try again (Score:2)
I'm sorry to be off-topic and will be happy to be downmodded together with the parent post.
It amuses and puzzles me, how Bush-bashers can -- with a straight face, apparently -- claim, we lost the Iraq war, when all of the following is true:
Re:Umm...try again (Score:2)
What were our objectives in going to war?
Were our objectives to "cover the whole country" with bases, disperse the enemy army, and take enemy leader ship into custory? If so, then you're right. We won.
If our objective included peace in the Middle East, preventing attacks on America, saving the lives of innocent Iraqis or turning Iraq into a stable, free country, then we lost.
If a "solution" doesn't solve the problem as originally posed, then it is a failure, regardless of how so
Re:Umm...try again (Score:2)
These are the immediate objectives of all full-out wars. A side achieving them all may not be considered "lost".
You are cheering too early -- even by these weird standards -- we did not lose yet, the gam
Re:Umm...try again (Score:2)
Re:Umm...try again (Score:2)
Preferably within the next twelve months as the Iraqi people hand the US the worst military defeat in its history.
When five or ten thousand (or more) US bodies come back, try telling the families of those troops how they "won" the "War on Terror".
"Our bases cover the whole country". Try reading what is going on in Iraq. The US controls NOTHING but the Green Zone and wherever the biggest concentration of US troops happens to be at the moment (which right now is Najaf - and we don't contr
Re:Umm...try again (Score:2)
Uh-oh... Loss of civility is the first sign of losing an argument...
Of course, you'll be glad, when that happens, but it will not. I'm willing to wait 12 months to see you proven wrong. You can already start thinking about the reasons, you prediction did not come true. Just remind me by e-mail...
Re:Umm...try again (Score:2)
It should take about a week or two (once it starts, and when that will be is anybody's guess), then in another thirty to ninety days after that, the US military will be forced to surrender or sue for a ceasefire to be allowed to evacuate - leaving behind a few tens of billions of dollars of US weaponry I'm sure the Iraqis will find a use for.
With the stoppage of Turkish transport tru
Re:Umm...try again (Score:2)
They hate Americans now.
If you don't believe that, you are seriously out of touch with the situation in Iraq - no doubt due to the fact that US media has decided Iraq is no longer a "story" since the "handover" - at least compared to some stupid murder and the elections.
When five or ten thousand more US troops come home from Iraq in bodybags, maybe you'll get the picture - their families sure will.
Re:Umm...try again (Score:2)
Re:War isn't about making friends. (Score:2, Informative)
Governmental authorites officially stopped counting in Iraq after the first several thousand.
Looking at fatalities alone, Iraqbodycount.net maintains a set of low and high estimates with a database and documented methodology to back it up -- the low end being currently 11,510 and the high end being 13,483. That figure alone leaves out the civilian casualties from an entire other war (Afghanistan).
The 9/11 fatality figures from september11victims.com follow:
CONFIRMED DEAD: 2948 REPO
Re:Waste? (Score:2)
Heh.
Re:Guess What? -- Re:Waste? (Score:3, Interesting)
Why is formalizing the status quo the cure for the status quo?
Well, if I understand the question correctly, it indeed raises a valid point -- that the political process is a poor way to run anything, even the process of de-politicizing something.
At the time the FCC was founded, a handful of courts were settling disputes between broadcasters by applying a "homesteading" analogy rooted in common law and the concept of first/continuing use of a given freq at a certain power level in a given geographical a
One article you don't want to miss? (Score:5, Funny)
Peppered with history and interesting facts--for instance, did you know only 2% of America's spectrum allocation is determined by auction?--this is one article you won't want to miss.
Yeah, if the rest of the article contains statistics half as fascinating as that one, I'd probably be riddled with regret if I didn't read it. I'm on the edge of my seat waiting to find out precisely which frequencies are actually determined by those actions. Thanks for the heads up!
Re:One article you don't want to miss? (Score:2)
Another fact I'd forgotten, but which the article jarred loose with a related reference: the UHF TV band is ridiculously sparse in the USA. Is there any area left with 10 UHF channels? What's the max in any area? If it's 10, give 'em all a year or two to retune and warn their listeners, and move onto one of 10 channels, instead of the 70 or so we have now. That would free up some space.
Augusta, GA has two VHF
Re:One article you don't want to miss? (Score:3, Interesting)
UHF Television Channel Allocations (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:One article you don't want to miss? (Score:3, Informative)
This is not a simple process. In some cases it is basically impossible. Many of the transmitters are hand tuned devices hardwired to a specific frequency. When it comes to TV many stations are using 20 and 30 year old (and older) transmitters. Legacy problems like this exist all over the spectrum. The frequency bands do need to be reallocated, but who is going to foot the huge bill?
Alternitives? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Alternitives? (Score:2)
Re:Alternitives? (Score:2)
case in point is the water utility system in El Salvador, where my girlfriend is from. The water used to be okay, but it was privatized. Now it's utterly horrible, there's lots of dirt and hairs that come from the faucet. Her mom and grandmother do the following for their drinking water - Brita-filter it, boil it, then Brita filter it again in a different filter. And
Re:Alternitives? (Score:3, Insightful)
FUD
case in point is the water utility system in El Salvador
While that can be an example of a poorly run utility, it offers us no insight whatsoever into privatization without explicitly detailing how it has been privatized.
And there's no incentive for the water company to fix the problems either.
If the water system was truly privatized, the incentive would be tha
Re:Alternitives? (Score:3, Interesting)
"If the water system was truly privatized, the incentive would be that poor service would result in them losing the contract to provide the water service."
Er, no.
What has happened in a significant number of countries forced into 'Structural Adjustment' by the IMF and/or World bank is that the government is told to sell off publicly owned utilities or face complete loss of access to international finance.
The utilities (like water service) get sold off to private companies from developed nations, which
Re:Alternitives? (Score:2)
The problem is that while the utilities are sold off to private companies (usually not plural, either), the right-of-ways and such remain solely allocated to that utility. There is thus no possibility of competition for customers, only competition for maintenance and management contracts. Not Cool.
It really sucks when you have to convince 51% of the voting population of a town to switch providers because you got screwed over. That kind of privatization is pretty lame.
Re:Alternitives? (Score:2)
Whatever. Privatization is good for everyone, because privatization means MARKET FORCES are in control instead of the government.
Let me translate this into the world of spectrum: Imagine if you could broadcast anything over the radio without fear of the FC
Re:Alternitives? (Score:5, Insightful)
Imagine that, perhaps, not all radio emissions generate money. Imagine that researchers and hams get trampled on by some company because the company has millions to throw at a piece of the spectrum and the researcher/ham doesn't?
Imagine you have a small dinky radio station that broadcasts programs for "friends of the earth" and other ecologists, and Texaco buys out all the spectrum available, and that *oops, too bad* the dinky station can't broadcast anything?
Imagine that. It'd be great wouldn't it? I can't figure out whether you're an idiot, a troll or a convinced republican...
Re:Alternitives? (Score:2)
If the researcher or ham already owns the
Re:Alternitives? (Score:2, Insightful)
how are you going to make sure that market forces get to reign freely and justly? by just giving the whole pie to the first one to catch it?
*Imagine if you could broadcast anything over the radio without fear of the FCC, as long as your station was popular enough to pay your broadcast bills instead of your fines to the government?* umm. in that world your broadcast would get approximately to your neighbours house before getting interference from the gazillion other guys
Re:Alternitives? (Score:2)
I don't believe the proposal is to get rid of enforcement. In fact, if they want to go over to a property rights system, then you need to have enforcement.
When the word "regulation" is used, it's meant to refer to govern
Re:Alternitives? (Score:2)
Wrong!
Privatization is good for the companies that buy in and those that can afford it, that's all.
If it's done in places with a small middle class and week law enforcement it can be a very small group of people...
.
who now have complete control of a propaganda machine
Why would anyone assume (Score:5, Insightful)
Its braindead. The RF spectrum is a limited resource, and as such is subject to speculation and fraud -- have we forgotten electricity auctions so quickly?
Re:Why would anyone assume (Score:2)
UWB vs. allocated spectrum (Score:4, Insightful)
There is no such thing as a free lunch.
Currently, you get a chunk of spectrum and you do whatever with it. If someone interferes, you track that one person down and get them to stop. The size of your spectrum effectively limits the bitrate you can throw across it, assuming consistent power/noise ratios, because after all, if no one is interfering, noise stays consistent.
A UWB transmitter raises the noise floor across all bands ever so slightly, basically proportionately to the bitrate and range the transmitter seeks. Not really a problem for a few transmitters. Also, since people transmit so infrequently, lumping everything together means you're less likely to be affected by the interference.
But if UWB becomes commonplace, and people become greedy for higher bitrates, then keeping the noise floor low for the people still using fixed spectrum allocations will become a forgotten priority. And even if UWB becomes truly universal, if the noise floor gets too high, where do you start to fix it? How do you decide which UWB transmitters are talking too loudly and for too long? If you start to license how much power and time they can use, how do you determine that a given licensee (or an anonymous unlicensed user) is the problem?
Some analogies:
If allocated spectrum is like having slow individual PC's, UWB is like being on a fast mainframe while the admin is on vacation.
If allocated spectrum is like a stain on a shirt, UWB is what the stain looks like after it bleeds to all the other clothes you washed with it.
If allocated spectrum is like a monthly marital spat, UWB is like the loud party the neighbors are always having.
Re:Why would anyone assume (Score:2)
This isn't 1904 any more!
TANSTAAFL (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Why would anyone assume (Score:5, Interesting)
* There is a valuable (limited) resource that we own in common
* The government parcels out the resource to whoever is willing to pay the most for it
* That money goes "to the people". In reality it goes to the government, who uses it to buy an army, interstate highways, mink farm subsidies, whatever your representatives have put into the budget.
* The buyer makes the money back by selling you something you want (TV, cell phones, garage door openers, etc.)
The fraud problem is also a government problem. It's most easily fixed by demanding the money up front, though that tends to lock small bidders out of it. There are other ways that involve instituting various regulations. Just because the government has been stupid doesn't mean it has to be. (Or maybe it _does_ have to be, in which case the problem becomes insoluble and we're all screwed, and we'll just take guesses because that's the best we can do.)
Now, the point of the article is that spectrum isn't really a limited resource at all. Obviously that's not entirely true, otherwise we'd use just one frequency and we'd all be happy. Certainly the lower frequencies (to a point) are more valuable than the multi-GHz ones, because it travels better. But they claim that technology allows spectrum to do far, far more than we're doing with it. In that case we may not have to auction it at all, not because it's subject to speculation and fraud, but because it's not worth very much.
Re:Why would anyone assume (Score:2, Informative)
A agree with what you said, if we could do what the article states with re-using spectrum, then there wouldn't be any argument at all. The reality is that there are a few tricks to multiplex the spectrum, but it's still finite. You can do things like directional antennas, and digital spread spectrum can co-exist with modulated transmission. But, the work of Sha
Re:Why would anyone assume (Score:2)
Re:Why would anyone assume (Score:5, Insightful)
Whatever. Everything is subject to speculation and fraud. California's electricity deregulation was set up completely wrong. Just like the USSR doesn't prove that socialism is broken, Enron doesn't prove that energy deregulation is broken.
When you have the Cato Institute opposing your "deregulation", you know something is amiss.
Re:Why would anyone assume (Score:2)
The article doesn't mention Cato's stand; is this some kind of astroturfing?
For that matter, Cato and deregulation are more than a little wierd. Their stance is that there ought to be nothing constraining corporations, neither government nor especially "we the people". They put it more subtly though! That is, "economic justice" is a big Cato anti-goal ...
if they were to take a stance on this issue, it'd
be a
Re:Why would anyone assume (Score:2)
I think that the poster was referring to Cato with respect to California's energy "deregulation."
For that matter, Cato and deregulation are more than a little wierd. Their stance is that there ought to be nothing constraining corporations...
I'd be highly surprised if you could point me at a Cato paper in which they said that... I seriously doubt that anybody, for example, thinks that a corporation should be able to assassinat
Re:Why would anyone assume (Score:3, Informative)
?!
I was responding to the great grandparent poster, not the article. His point was that deregulation in this sort of situation is bad, based on the example of recent attempts at energy deregulation.
My point is that California is a poor example of deregulation: Cato seems 100% in favor of deregulating just about everything, and they were opposed to California's deregulation plan.
Which is why I made the analogy to the USSR: California & energy deregulation are related in the same way that
Re:Why would anyone assume (Score:2)
While I have some problems with the corporation as an institution, they are still a "we the people" institution. That's because the investors, board of directors, management and employees are all "people". Corporations only have as much coercive power as the government gives them.
False Assumption (Score:2)
You base this assumption on...
Be sure to check your facts, it may have limits but we haven't even tickled them yet. (see "The myth of interference" [salon.com])
Limited resources vs trade (Score:2)
So why would you think thatspectrum being limited is an argument against trading it? As far as I can tell it is really a precondition for trade in it.
For starters (Score:5, Informative)
Re:For starters (Score:2)
I hate to disagree, but that is not what Nobel organization says [nobel.se]. They claim Marconi's radio patents were the first in the world.
--astr
Re:For starters (Score:2)
http://www.mercury.gr/tesla/marcen.html
http://www.tfcbooks.com/articles/tws8a.htm
Re:For starters (Score:2)
Doncha think posting this on slashdot is a little ironic?
Waste I do not think so (Score:5, Interesting)
At the time the commercial interests wanted that spectrum for expansion of paging.
What financially driven interests forget frequently is that basic non-directed research is a good thing which yields benefits down the road and often entire new industries.
Like the RFID crowd wants to put high power RFID tags on the 70cm band. This interferes with both Hams, Wind profiling radar and satellite communications. The difference is someone can make a quick buck.
Also these RFID tags can be read at a distance of several miles with the right equipment. So much for RFID being a 'short range' technology
If i am lucky First Post
Re:Waste I do not think so (Score:4, Interesting)
Don't know about the states, but over here in the bad olde world, cell technology doesn't use repeaters except for indoor/underground coverage. Base stations relay calls onto either wired infrastructure, or onto line-of-sight microwave transceivers that, while technically RF, are a different beast altogether. (In fact, they're unlicensed since they don't interfere much, being line-of-sight).
The whole point of cellular technology is to hand off calls to regular infrastructure. If it were all completely wireless, you'd have calls being repeated from base station to base station until they reached their destination, meaning that your call would take up a channel over the entire area of that patch.
In fact, cell technology is so yummy good because you only use the channel locally. This means that with only a limited number of channels you can support dozens of simultanious calls per cell, rather than dozens of simultanious calls on the entire system. You can even split up particularly crowded cells into multiple micro-cells (although you have to shuffle around which frequencies are used in the neighboring cells).
(Of course, government is using the just-repeat-stuff-over-the-air model for their "next generation" digital communications systems for emergency services. Even the frigging railways use GSM! No wonder that project is failing..)
Re:Waste I do not think so (Score:3, Interesting)
The handoff from cell site to cell site and the integration with the POTS network are what made the re
Re:Waste I do not think so (Score:2)
Re:Waste I do not think so (Score:2)
If you have a signal getting beat up by a ham's transmitter, the first question I'd have to ask is why are you transmitting in a ham band?
Re:Waste I do not think so (Score:2)
If you are within a house or two of the transmitter at 1500W, it really doesn't matter what frequency you're listening on - you're going to get interference.
My father is a ham - he always has been nice about supplying the neighbors with toroids to wrap their power/signal cords with - never hurts to spend $10 on neighbor relations. Of
Article Summary is a bit incomplete. (Score:3, Insightful)
I believe the article supports this thought, that basically it works out that *either* spectrum privatization or open spectrum would be a much better way to allocate spectrum, but the FCC is an organization in search of a purpose and of funding, hence tries to regulate what need not be regulated. Not regulate for any real purpose either, merely regulate.
If we want progress in technology, a good first step would be to get rid of, or radically change, the FCC.
RD
Yes...but .... (Score:2, Insightful)
Yes, there are things that can be done to maximize the efficiency with which we use the available specturm. And yes, there are inefficient users of the spectrum (government agencies being among the most egregi
I can't help but feel a little responsible... (Score:4, Funny)
Oddly, my neighbor just got a large envelope from the RIAA...
if this goes through (Score:5, Funny)
my ipaq from my 1st
floor coat closet in
my house in FORT
MEADE, FLORIDA! i
am being ravished by
hurricane charlie.
the power went out
almost 6 hours ago,
but somehow i can
still reach a wi-fi
access point (must
be on a UPS). if
anyone can read
this -- please send
beer and porn and
wish me luck!!
cheers,
roger
Sychronocity! (Score:5, Informative)
Clay Shirky has just posted his essay, The Possibility of Spectrum as a Public Good [shirky.com]. It starts with mentioning that the FCC is considering opening up additional spectrum for unlicensed uses -- "the same kind of regulatory change that gave rise to Wifi" -- and points out that "The 2.4Ghz spectrum is not treated as property, with the FCC in the ungainly role of a 'No Trespassing" enforcer; instead, it is being treated as a public good, with regulations in place to require devices to be good neighbors, but with no caps or other restrictions on deployment or use."
Good reading all 'round.
Re:Sychronocity! (Score:2, Informative)
In particular, the thrust of Shirky's argument is that we should change how we do things (i.e., the regulatory environment) because we can make use of the spectrum as a public commons without interfering with one another. The gaping hole in this argument is that, absent FCC
Re:Sychronocity! (Score:2)
So... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:So... (Score:2)
The visible spectrum (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course, I'll licence them under the GNU's GPL.
Show me the MONEY! (Score:2, Funny)
but fails to show how any of this value could be captured? Is this because of who would actually benefit by the proposal?
A must read for everyone interested in spectrum rg (Score:5, Informative)
on the subject [reed.com]
Paul B.
Re:A must read for everyone interested in spectrum (Score:2)
Re:A must read for everyone interested in spectrum (Score:4, Informative)
Re:A must read for everyone interested in spectrum (Score:2)
Huh? I've got one 'Funny' moderation (which I tried to ignore
Well, yeas, it was!
The correct one is here [reed.com]
Paul B.
Crack whores (Score:2)
From the article...
I didn't know that about crack and I don't think it's common knowledge either. Sounds like he is a bit too familiar with it. I guess this is a little insight into why lobbyists are such whores for money
If it's been so "overcautious"... (Score:4, Interesting)
Why does one over-the-air broadcast station have ghosting caused by another??
What, the free market is supposed to fix those problems magically, without government oversight, when they're still pretty bad with the FCC throwing down tons of rules *and* charging licensing fees?
I smell typical Economist free-market hype. Just let the highest bidders control your spectrum, and everything will be fine, kiddies...
I'm not saying there isn't a need for change in the way RF is used. But I am calling into question a highest-bidder-takes-all approach, and the motives of those who back such an approach.
Re:If it's been so "overcautious"... (Score:2, Insightful)
The economist article isn't suggesting Thatcher/Pinochet/Reagan style privatisation - which I think of as the government giving out publicly owned utilities to the highest bidder and letting them fleece us for whatever they can get away with. That's roughly what we have now, with heavy government regulation - and the Economist article doesn't even suggest a less-regulated form of that system.
The eco
Re:If it's been so "overcautious"... (Score:2)
Governments have long privatized public works, too. For example, in Massachusetts the Charles River Bridge company was chartered by the state to, you guessed it, build a toll bridge over the Charles River.
Governments were privatizing services as long as there were government services.
Re:If it's been so "overcautious"... (Score:5, Informative)
Because current transmitters and radios are using the spectrum inefficiently. With smarter transmitters and smarter receivers we could much more effectively filter out different signals and use much less of the spectrum per broadcast. Or so the article argues.
Re:If it's been so "overcautious"... (Score:2)
One of the nice things about some of our comms (AM, FM, some of the simpler digital modulation methods) is that the receiver is *cheap* and can therefore be small and ubiquitous. Smart networks won't be cheap and won't be small.
The Future of Ideas (Score:2)
Quoting him from page 233 (emphasis in original)...
"Here again, an idea about property is doing all the work - but this time the idea is at its most attenuated. We don't yet have a full property regime for allocating and controlling spectrum. Yet we are still being driven to embrace this single view. We are racing to deny the opportunity for balance, pushed (as we always are) by those who
Money Makes the World go Round (Score:3, Insightful)
Umm... no. (Score:4, Informative)
Even a sliver of new unlicensed spectrum in the very low frequencies could therefore make an enormous difference. It could, for example, make possible a cheap alternative to cable and digital-subscriber line modems (for which roads have to be dug up and trees uprooted) in delivering high-speed internet access across "the last mile" to the consumer.
Nope, sorry captain. "Very low frequencies", A.K.A. "VLF" cover about 10-30kHz. Read up on Nyquist's theorem... there's some math involved, but it basically dictates maximum data rates at any given frequency. Even then, in real world applications, maximum data rates are typically lower than nyquist rates.
For example, I'm a licensed amateur radio operator, and I actively transmit and receive data at 144.390 mHz
Basically, theoretical data rates increase as the frequency of a signal increases.
In another ham band, around 435mHz (UHF), satellites typically send data at 9600baud.
So, data rates are still relatively useless for broadband applications at any realistic point below anything ending with "gigahertz". There's no way in hell (do the math, thank you nyquist) that VLF could be a "last mile" solution.
On to another point regarding "mesh networks"
The truth is somewhere in the middle (Score:4, Interesting)
Consider a regular, low noise telephone line limited to 3 KHz bandwidth, no DSL, ISDN, or other high bandwidth enhancements. The first generation telephone modems ran at 110 or 300 baud. Eventually, QAM modulated modems came out that worked at 1200 baud. Later, 2400 baud modem appeared. This proved to be the limit of pure analog op-amp filter technology. 9600 baud modems requred a DSP, to process and recover data from the incoming signal. Later, 19.2k, 28.8k, 33k, and eventually (almost) 56k modems appeared, as the DSPs got faster, and more sophisticated filtering, error detection and recovery algorithms were used. But this was the limit. Pushing more data through a bandwidth limited, voice quality phone line requires a lower noise floor, or more bandwidth. Sending symbols faster requires greater bandwidth. Using a more complex symbol constellation requires a lower noise floor, or eventually the bits smear into each other to an extent that the error recovery mechanism cannot cope.
Open RF is much the same - you have a finite slice of bandwidth to use. You can reduce the signal to noise ratio by increasing the transmitter power, but then you become a greater noise source for everybody else who is transmitting over the same spectrum. CDMA phones are constantly adjusting their transmit power up and down, depending on how well the base station is receiving them. If the BER (Bit Error Rate) is too high, the phone is told to raise its transmit power. If the BER is low, the phone is told to reduce power, in order to reduce the noise. In a CDMA system, you can always add "just one more" transmitter, but eventually the noise floor is raised to the point where calls are dropped.
Also in open RF there are other problems to contend with, that dictate the optimal method of transmission - fading, (transmitter moves behind or out from behind a building) multipath, (Signal takes multiple paths to receiver, resulting in overlap because signals arrive at different times - think of trying to talk across an echoing canyon) and dopplar shifts. (Transmitter is moving, resulting in shifted carrier frequency) In practice, open RF is a pretty crappy transmission medium as compared to any sort of physical link.
In order to preserve optimal use of the spectrum for others, you don't want to transmit omnidirectional. If the receiver is in front of you, the signal you transmit to the sides and back are just wasted transmitter power, and an unwanted noise source for everybody else. Ideally, you only want the signal to go in a laser like path between transmitter and receiver. Very tricky if you don't know where the receiver is, or if it is moving.
Privitazation, it fixes everything! (Score:2)
Detailed EMR poster (Score:2, Informative)
How to use the spectrum. (Score:2, Interesting)
First, divide the spectrum into a million different slices. Specify some of them as high power, and some as low power, some as very long distance, some as fairly long distance, some as short distance, and a few as few very short distance, aka, bluetooth. (You need less as the distance gets shorter, because, duh, everyone can use the same ones.) OSI Layer 1.
Next, come up with some protocol. It needs a sender address, an optional destin
Re:How to use the spectrum. (Score:2)
Thus ruining modern astronomy for everyone. Half the benefit of having such a tightly regulated spectrum is the fact that scientific observations can, and do, still go on.
You don't need to open up the full spectrum. It's actually nice having common bands that everyone uses, because the bands are all standardized, and the equipment is commodity.
I love hearing people say that the upper GHz band is ripe for the taking. Damnit. There's a lot of good
So.... (Score:2)
That's a bad thing? The last I had heard, I thought that slashdotters weren't in favor of the large, faceless companies.
steve
so what should be used instead of a 95% waste? (Score:2, Insightful)
Is there anyone out there who thinks that he'll benefit from more efficient bandwith usage on a personal level?
It would be great if the 2.4 GHz spectrum would be licensed - I'm looking forward to pay fees for any WLAN NIC I buy.
95% of the spectrum are not meant to be for profit, but it's not like 95% of it are being wasted/unused.
The RF spectrum is for more than just cellphones (Score:2, Informative)
As for the various notions of privatizing or opening up large swaths of the spectrum, it must be done very carefully, if at all, as there are too many users that absolutely must have clear channels to operate safely (aircraft navigation and communication come to mind), but at the same time do not have the financial resources to compete
771 billion in lost licence fees? (Score:2)
Are people _really_ willing to pay this much for what nature provided for free? Well - I suppose the regulators need to justify their salaries somehow!!!
why not limited term leases? (Score:2)
FM Radio (Score:2)
Currently, primary stations are only allowed on second-adjacents (400kHz) which is double the 200kHz required maximum margin for FM transmissions.
This buffer zone was to allow for older, less precise equipment to not receive interference. However, in this age of digital radios, it should be technically possible to pack stations much closer together...such as stations on first-adjacets even. I
Spectrum efficiency and private property (Score:2)
Re:Give the Spectrum to Everybody (Score:2)
It's easy to remap spectrum.
It's impossible to remap land.