WiBE Shared Hotspot Pitched For Rural Broadband in UK 51
justice4all writes "A British company claims to have solved the problem of delivering a reliable broadband connection to people in rural communities. Deltenna has developed a small, self-installable gadget called the WiBE (Wireless Broadband Enabler) that uses the 3G mobile network to create a 2Mbps web hotspot. The device sounds similar in concept to devices like Novatel's MiFi, but Deltenna claims it works even in places where a 3G mobile phone wouldn't register a signal. The WiBE has five times the range of a 3G dongle, and can deliver 30 times data throughput compared to a 3G USB modem dongle, Deltenna believes."
Slashvertisement (Score:2)
Also: prepare to be massively overcharged by the providers who have to build the 3G towers in the middle of nowhere now...
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Re:Slashvertisement (Score:5, Interesting)
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If you follow the article through to the manufacturers product description page, they mention using multiple antennas and 'locking on' to the best local cell base station, presumably using some variant of phased array/beam forming/etc to minimise interference etc.
Although it's hard to tell from the pictures, the unit does look fairly large compared to a dongle, maybe about the size of a large dog food tin can? (i.e. next size up tin can from a normal size one) (But that is pure guestimation based on compari
Re:Slashvertisement (Score:5, Informative)
It all seems like a bit of a double up.
While I'm no fan of Telstra here in Australia, they have recently trialed LTE at 75km using Nokia Siemens Networks equipment.
http://www.itnews.com.au/News/215787,telstra-lte-trial-100-mbps-wireless-over-75km-cell.aspx [itnews.com.au]
I know I'd prefer 100Mbps peak (88Mpbs average) over 2Mbps.
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the unit does look fairly large compared to a dongle, maybe about the size of a large dog food tin can? (i.e. next size up tin can from a normal size one)
How many Kilderkins would you say that is? Or I may with difficulty be able to visualise the volume in Firkins if you'd prefer to stick to conventional units.
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Yeah, and has anyone ever had any reception in a 'rural' area?
This is UK-rural, which isn't really that rural.
See, for example, the yellow bits on this map [gsmworld.com].
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Try this: http://www.gsmworld.com/cgi-bin/ni_map.pl?x=0&y=0&z=0&cc=gb&net=hu [gsmworld.com]
That's the map for "3 mobile", IIRC the first to roll out 3G in the UK, and advertise the best 3G coverage.
See also: Orange [gsmworld.com], T-Mobile [gsmworld.com], Vodaphone [gsmworld.com] and O2 [gsmworld.com] (haha).
Mobile coverage in UK (Score:2)
Another useful tool is http://www.sitefinder.ofcom.org.uk/ [ofcom.org.uk] - from the regulator, this shows the exact position and type of base stations (cell towers) in the UK, for all networks apart from T-Mobile. The user interface is a bit annoying and only worked on Internet Explorer, but the data is very useful, particularly for external antenna planning.
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Nonsense. Much of Scotland has no 3G signal (not just a weak signal, but NO signal). See for example this map
http://www.gsmworld.com/cgi-bin/ni_map.pl?cc=gb&net=hu [gsmworld.com]
which shows Three's coverage.
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According to this map [coveragemaps.com] (I think made by the same people) coverage is better if you combine all the networks' coverage. Scotland still misses out, but when considering the whole UK there really aren't that many rural people in Scotland.
(The percentage of British people who live in Scotland but don't live in the Central Belt or in a town is quite small.)
Note that there is 2G coverage everywhere (IME not on all networks, but almost always at least one network).
Coverage (Score:3, Interesting)
The only problem is that UK residents can't combine all the networks' coverage without swapping SIM cards - there is no roaming agreement between UK operators. However, this is changing with the merger of Orange and T-Mobile (http://www.shinyshiny.tv/2010/05/orange_and_t-mobile_everything_everywhere.html), and also network sharing between some other operators.
Ironically a visitor with a non-UK phone will see much better coverage - even UK residents willing to pay extra can't get access to this coverage wit
So it's an industrialised Mifi? (Score:3, Insightful)
1) What agreement do they have with the phone companies? Presumably they need a special licence to resell their bandwidth?
2) Cost - what's the charging model for this?
3)
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What agreement do they have with the phone companies? Presumably they need a special licence to resell their bandwidth?
WTF? Do you need a special license to resell bread? Books? Beer? If you've paid for the bandwidth, why not resell it? Or waste it?
Re:So it's an industrialised Mifi? (Score:4, Insightful)
Also, on a cost-per-gig basis you'd almost certainly have to negotiate for a reasonable price for a data plan that wasn't subject to a far-too-low "fair use" policy.
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Don't remember signing a contract for bread/beer/books either.
I don't remember signing a contract for a sim card last time I was in the UK.
Also, on a cost-per-gig basis you'd almost certainly have to negotiate for a reasonable price for a data plan that wasn't subject to a far-too-low "fair use" policy.
I am assuming a $x-per-GB rather than a bullshit limited 'unlimited' plan you typically get in the US.
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You are positing that a company that is selling internet access to the general public will be running their infrastructure using pay-as-you-go SIM cards, and thus would be pre-paying for this connectivity?
Presumably
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you buy a SIM card and prepay for your service. (NB in the UK even the latter usually requires signing some sort of agreement - partly to prevent the use of anonymous SIMs)
It does? But phone companies give away pre-pay SIMs sometimes, I don't think they track them.
(I'm not sure there's any point. Criminals can very easily steal a phone if they want an anonymous SIM.)
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(NB in the UK even the latter usually requires signing some sort of agreement - partly to prevent the use of anonymous SIMs)
I've never had to sign any sort of agreement for a pre-paid SIM. In most high-street mobile phone shops (T-mobile, Virgrim, O2 and Orange, at any rate) you walk in and buy a SIM. Typically it's around a tenner, with whatever you paid preloaded as credit. You can pay cash, and no-one is interested in getting you to sign anything.
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They aren't reselling mobile operator services or bandwidth - this is another way to access the mobile network, and will be sold by mobile operators and others, rather like a new handset. The charges will be whatever the operator charges - possibly a special package as data usage will be heavier than a phone, maybe like 3G dongle charges plus a bit to cover extra usage by several people in a house.
hmmm (Score:2, Interesting)
1) No mention of price in the article - if current 3g broadband setups are anything to go by, don't expect to see much of a GB allowance compared to standard 'wired' dsl
2) Apparently it can scale to a maximum of 7.2mbps, with a claimed rural 'average' of 2.8mbps - is there much point in a network investing in rolling out these sorts of standards if the average speed is going to be pretty slow?
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1) No mention of price in the article - if current 3g broadband setups are anything to go by, don't expect to see much of a GB allowance compared to standard 'wired' dsl
Indeed, most of the telcos in the Uk are now shying away from their initial "unlimited" (subject to FUP anyway) data packages in favour of tiered charges. 02 have gone from unlimited to 1GB per month plus £5 per 500MB above that (or else they throttle your connection if you're over your allowance). You're certainly not going to want it for streaming video or audio...
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The target set by the last government was at least 2Mb/s for everyone. For reference, 2Mb/s is enough to stream SD stuff from iPlayer, 7.2Mb/s is enough to stream HD stuff, 2.8Mb/s is not quite enough. ADSL at my mother's house (in rural North Devon) gets about 1Mb/s, which plays for a few seconds then buffers if you try using iPlayer (thanks to get-iplayer, it's possible to download shows and then watch them, shame the BBC doesn't want to support rural users).
Not sure what the download allowance would
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Errrmmm, have you missed the "download this" button on the iPlayer?
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Don't be so harsh on him. He's rural.
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Apparently it can scale to a maximum of 7.2mbps, with a claimed rural 'average' of 2.8mbps - is there much point in a network investing in rolling out these sorts of standards if the average speed is going to be pretty slow?
2.8 Mbps is a lot faster than the 0.05 Mbps of dial-up.
vs WiMax? (Score:2)
End users get ADSL like services if the network is well engineered.
China also offers McWiLL (Multi-carrier Wireless internet Local Loop)
http://www.commsday.com/commsday/?p=346 [commsday.com]
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There's one that works perfectly. (Score:4, Interesting)
*Pets his RJ/45 jack connecting to a 100mbps line in an appropriately condescendingly smug manner*
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The Romans built roads where they could get to. The hills were easier to defend, so the Celts prevented them from conquering most of Wales. The course of modern roads follows the older ones, so the bits that the Romans conquered got straight roads (that were later upgraded to motorways), while the valleys and the north got tarmac over the old winding tracks, but didn't have Roman roads to build on (while parts of England with similar topology did). The decent roads (and railways, which followed the same
MetroNet (Score:1)
Seems to me it would make more sense to just fund MetroNet-like [metronet-uk.com] connections out from the towers that already exist.
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There was with GSM, and I think it was a pretty hard 35km limit - something to do with timeslot allocations. I don't know that CDMA and 3G signals suffer from the same issues though.
Nobody will reach the WiFi hotspot (Score:1)
Leeching (Score:3, Insightful)
When O2, curses on its head, first launched the iPhone, I had constant problems with 3G dropout near iPhones. I began to wonder if O2 was somehow prioritising their iPhone customers, or whether they were bandwidth constricted and the iPhone was sucking up everything. Whatever. Change to Vodafone, no more problems.
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It looks like their purpose avoids that being an issue. The design is for rural areas where towers will be relatively under-utilised anyway. Depending on how it works out, it's plausable all this does is increase utilisation of capital infrastructure with minimal incremental cost - meaning the networks could actually do this quite cheaply if they can control the locations, because the revenue is getting on for 100% gross profit.
Where tower capacity becomes an issue, it's also more practical to increase th
Useless (Score:1)
What a stupid idea. Most places there is no broadband, there's no 3G signal either - e.g. mid Wales, North Scotalnd
self-installable? (Score:2)
1) Pull truck onto install location
2)Press self-installer button.
Cue transformers audio effects
3)Use Wi-Fi