Open Spectrum: The New Wireless Paradigm
prostoalex writes ""Almost everything you think you know about spectrum is wrong." - starts Kevin Werbach in his working paper Open Spectrum: The New Wireless Paradigm. He touches the possibilities of using open spectrum, and then dwells on such innovative products like software-defined radios, spread spectrum or cooperative wireless networking. Truly informative insight into where the U.S. government stands on the issues of wireless spectrum, where it should be, and how it will benefit society and individuals."
Even if the FCC goes along with this, the telecom industry can not afford to roll it out.
They are heavily burdened by debt from Cell and cable modems.
The law is a weapon of the government, not a protection for the likes of you. Surely you understand that.
I swear I think all this extra radiation is adversly affecting my health. (places tinfoil hat on head)
This has about as much chance as the US switching over to the metric system tomorrow.
Only the State obtains its revenue by coercion. - Murray Rothbard
there are some really interesting possibilities. Think of software-defined radio letting you join different wireless networks that are decentralized and encrypted using something ala freenet. If you were to couple unfettered access to wireless frequencies where people's ingenuity sets the standard, and not self-interested corporations.
I would personally love to see open hardware designed to utilize wireless technology available similar to the projects at OpenCores.
--Kevin
While the author is correct in stating that modern advances in digital spread spectrum allow digital signal processors to place multiple signals in the same frequency, he ignores the impact this would have on existing analog technologies which are incapable of this feat. I personally do not wish to be walking down the street the day it starts raining model airplanes.
Dr. Joseph Hairston
Superintendent, CCBC
(tort is the legal action against harm within common law jurisdictions). Let's consider a future where individuals have wireless wheelchair, interacting with their environment (like doors/cars/etc). How do you prevent individuals being careless (cf case of leaving a concrete block on road for car to hit)?
Courts (in torts against trespass to chattels w.r.t. deciding spam cases) have rules that having an electronic signal impacting on the computer system is sufficient to be "in contact". Now extend this to a generic wireless world and you can see the potential combinations of potential problems. If my wireless car activates someone elses' garage leading to a theft then are you liable? Medical instrumentation are a major concern, as are anything which records ownership (cf person entering building with wireless and downloading trade secrets).
Wireless will change how we interact provided we can sort out how social responsibilities and obligations are partitioned.
LL
So, if I understand you correctly, you're saying that paradigm is ok under the old paradigm for paradigm, but the new paradigm paradigm is unacceptable.
The paper goes on and on about how WiFi shows that open spectrum works, there's no problem with congestion, no need for ownership or frequency allocation. Then in recommendation 2 we read this:
Improving existing unlicensed bands isn't enough. Most are so narrow and congested that their utility for open spectrum is limited.
So here he's saying exactly the opposite, that congestion is a serious problem for open spectrum! Which is it?
It's also bogus to claim that WiFi proves that open spectrum works. The truth is that WiFi is so sparsely implemented that congestion hasn't yet been an issue. For all the hype, my town of 175,000 people has no wireless public access points. Even in the big cities they're not so close that congestion is a problem.
The article could just as well have used cordless phones and baby monitors (which use the same frequencies) as evidence that open spectrum works. The only difference is that they don't score as high on the hype meter. All these examples prove is that the technology works when the range and distribution of the transmitters is sufficiently limited, which everyone knew already.
It is time to question our long-held assumptions, and explore new policy approaches that could generate tremendous benefits for the American people.
He had me until this sentence. Getting the government to act in the best interests of the American people is not on the agenda. The current licensing scheme guarantees profit for the few. The few, in turn, guarantee $$$ to the government. Anything that threatens this simply will never happen.
Fascism should more properly be called corporatism, since it is the merger of state and corporate power.
Um, like uh ok.
Are you likening a radio with a wide receive and transmit to a um Win Modem?
I understand what you mean but I really hate your terminology. Software defined agile radio, OMG lets just make all this kewl stuff sound like a pansy made it.
This really isn't anything new the idea in some forms exists now and has for some time and has been implemented. The only new thing is trying to convince the FCC to allow you to work in unused TV channels and other under-utilized bandwidth because your equipment is smart enough to know there isn't anything in there... ...kewl
Coulda said that in one line rather than such a verbose article.
See the Pictures of the Flood of '08
Why? Our whole enterprise system is based upon monopolies. Look at the FCC these days... they've been making the monopoly of the airwaves BIGGER! In most cities, instead of having 15 or 20 different radio owners, it's now down to three or four. The U.S. radio spectrum policy is based as much (if not more) on politics as on physics and technology. As long as it stays this way (and it will, trust me), the status quo will prevail. The unlicensed bands are few compared to the licensed (read: monopolized) ones...they are less then 1 % of the electromagnetic spectrum. This isn't likely to change, either.
I'm afraid it's true. Open Spectrum beats current wireless networking technologies hands down.
The clock frequency of the Z80 processor is well-optimized for generating long- and short- range RF waves. With the Spectrum case Open, the highly advanced rubber keys act as efficient waveguides, particularly helped by the printed-on aerials (square shapes with one half or one quarter cut out, depending on the phase of the waveform).
The only snag is that due to an unfortunate typo, the Sinclair Microwave communication device ended up as the bizarre Sinclair Microdrive.
-- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
Writer: "'Paradigm' and 'Proactive'...aren't those just buzzwords that stupid people use to sound smart?"
*Blank looks from the managers*
Writer: "I'm fired, aren't I?"
Manager: "Yes."
If you ever work with Satellite communications systems (spread spectrum included) you will quickly find that even with all the so called "Draconian rules" in place, there is a high probability of someone stepping on your signal and satellite channel - the same has been my experience with other more conventional line of site RF systems - The ONLY way that whis would ever be feasible is if we took all the existing systems and simultaneously destroyed them before wheeling out the "Open Spectrum" systems. I for one don't believe that "free for all" RF spectrum is ever going to be practical or desireable. Does anyone else remember the days of the CB radio arms race and home built 100 W linear amplifiers ? As hard as it is to accept government regulation this is one area we don't want to let go to anarchy - if we do all we'll hear on our fancy Spread Spectrum radios will be static.
I read the .pdf and then I popped over to the New America Foundation and looked at the Senior Staff bios.
Wow I am so stunned at why anyone gives a rip what these jokers put out.
The head guy, the dude the Washington Post profiled last year, Ted Halstead - President and CEO, he doesn't do research. I work with people that don't do reseach, I call them the Grounds Crew.
He went to Harvard woohoo, Presidents Bush and W Bush went to Yale, having exclusive school deploma doesn't mean one is a genius. Harvard Business School didn't consider anything Internet to be "business" until about 1998-99.
Ooh Hollywood types and CongressCritters like them. Another nail in the coffin of respectablity.
The head joker at NAF is the buttmunch that told Warren Beatty to run for President.
"Previously, Mr. Halstead was Executive Director of Redefining Progress, another public policy institute that he founded to promote new approaches to economic and environmental policy." - Thats alot of words to say "He sat around and talked about cloud-cookoo-land."
"Kevin Werbach" - the guy that wrote the paper linked here - "is a technology consultant, author, and founder of the Supernova Group." He also has some 'leet HTML skillz - http://werbach.com/home.html - He uses a Mac, a point in his favor.
They throw out buzz words and do 20 pages and we are suposed to care why?
*insipid childrens show music*
:)
Welcome to the Slashkids Fun-Filled Fallacy Post!
Slashkids:Yay!
Today we're going to learn about The Post Hoc (Ergo Propter Hoc) Fallacy!
Slashkids:What's that?
Well kids, that's Latin for "after this therefore because of this."
For example, you could easily say that eating breakfast causes car accidents, because most people that have had a car accident had breakfast that day.
Slashkids:Ha ha ha!
Or that you started a new job, and then your hair fell out.
Slashkids:Then what caused the hair loss?
Who knows? It could be something in the water, it could be any number of other factors. How do we avoid this type of thinking?
Slashkids:With control group studies, double-blind and random tests!
That's right!
Remember Slashkids, sequential patterns != causation AND correlation != causation!
Next lesson: The ad hoc hypothesis
Slashkids:Yay!
*insipid childrens show music, credits, cut to commercial*
(Sorry, I'm a prick and I couldn't resist
Robots are everywhere, and they eat old people's medicine for fuel.
There are a host of problems with ad-hoc networking schemes such as this. I have a few solutions to them, but mostly they would be overpriced in the consumer market. One such beast that will start to bite you on the * really hard is hidden transmitter syndrome . This is where your controlling nodes overlap, and say node A is visible to base B and base C but base B and Base C are out of each others range. If B and C don't "hear" each other they can't work in unison without a third party. So when Node A (mobile presumably) hunts for a connection, both B and C try to talk at the same time to A, thus hampering the usable bandwidth. Lots more lessons can be learned by just searcjing for the syndrome and reading the other problems mentioned around it.
- Tjp
I am in wallow with my inner money grubbing capitalistic pig. ... Oink!
No, only people who use "paradigm" in a business or technology-related manner [talk out of their asses].
/. article on selling XBoxen as loss leaders to gain $$$ on selling games).
Hm. I'll have to disagree with you there. Webster's defines "paradigm" as "An example; a model; a pattern." When you think about it, a lot of both business and technology follows patterns. The giving-out-handles-selling-blades method that worked so well for Gilette, frankly, is a "business paradigm." That business model's been tried again and again since then (Compare to today's
And in computer science, there's many different ways of writing programs. For instance, take "object oriented programming." If you use OO principles when engineering your software, you're using an "object oriented paradigm." I see no harm in a scholarly discussion of computer science using the term in this manner.
Yeah, sometimes people throw it around as a buzzword. But don't dismiss a term's applicability to two entire fields just because a few people try to sound impressive by repeating it.
The rules of and assumptions underlying the way the FCC is carving up spectrum are based on 1930's technology. It assumes transmitters and receivers have poor filters, and cannot tolerate adjacent or overlapping signals. It assumes no spread spectrum or channel agility / frequency hopping technology. Fast forward 70 years. Technology has marched on. Spread spectrum and channel agility are cheap and commonplace. Transmitters meet much stricter tolerances for sideband and out-of-band emissions. Receivers can pick up weaker signals, and much more successfully distinguish their signal from other overlapping or closely adjacent signals. Thus we can now pack several times the data per unit of spectrum than the current rules assume we can. Yet the rules prevent us from doing this on a large scale because the unlicensed bands in which we can operate are so few and small. Users of the licensed bands (most of them anyway, cell phones being the one big exception) have little incentive to deploy these technologies and make maximum use of their spectrum because the rules guarantee them enough free spectrum that they can use older, less efficient technology with abandon, and still get done everything they want to.
THAT is the point of this paper. We shouldn't be asking what if both nodes are at 2.4GHz. We should be asking why does the guy at 2.3GHz get to be so wasteful with his bandwidth when technology now makes it cheap and easy for him to get more done with less, and we're all crammed in here together at 2.4GHz?
-----Chaz
With greater use of the spectrum, and the potential for software defined radios to use any frequency they want to transmit on, we're going to close out the possibility of ground based radio astronomy. This is not a good thing!
Radio astronomy produced many of the basic technologies that todays wireless communications revolution depends on, but is seeing none of the (financial) benefits and is gradually getting squeezed out of its own very limited parts of reserved spectrum. Maybe there should be a 1% levy on all radio licenses dedicated to help astronomers get around this problem and properly police their parts of the spectrum. Or maybe all the money raised from spectrum auctions should be dedicated to establishing space-based astronomy in the radio - probably on the backside of the moon to get away from all the noise!
There are needs for regulation to protect the other users of spectrum that wireless networkers forget about. Total spectrum freedom is not possible or a reasonable goal.
For more information see:
AAS webpages.