How Reliable is 900Mhz Wireless Internet?
amrust asks: "I live in an area that currently is not being served by broadband in any way. Local ISP's are discussing bringing Wireless Internet into our area, and for some of the more difficult to reach places, they have mentioned 900Mhz being used. I was wondering how reliable/secure the 900Mhz spectrum is for Wireless Internet, and if anybody has some comments on experiences with 900Mhz wireless internet that they can pass on?"
That I'm currently typing this comment usi
Any frequency is just as secure as any other. It depends on the protocols that run over it.
I don't have any personal experience with 900mhz, but i do know that it is the same frequency that cordless phones use. Some phones today use 2.4ghz and they cause interference with .11b and g (my friend's neighbor has a phone that is so powerful it knocks my friend offline everytime the neighbor turns it on.) There are many more 900mhz phones that 2.4ghz phones, so I'd assume the problem is worse.
However, you are in a rural area, so maybe the congestion on that band will be somewhat less (We live in a major metro area).
-Ryan
AUWYHSTOT (Acronyms are Useless When You Have to Spell Them Out Too)
That it would be more reliable to use the higher spectrum. If you can transmit 900 million waves/second, then you probably can't fit as much error correction in the stream as the protocols used in 2400 million waves/second communication due to the lower bandwidth of the 900MHz band. Then again, I'm just guessing. Any radio geeks want to take a stab at this?
I will now redundantly add my name to the end of my post. You know, in case you forgot me or something.
All the sniffing software is written for the 2.6Ghz range, so you can rest assured that no one other than you and the intended recipient will be able to read the message.
Just picking up from the first page yields some tidbits. Range, reliability; Interference.
Most WISP's use 900mhz where there is a substantial amount of tree cover. 900mhz can penetrate the tree canopy much easier than 2.4ghz because of the wavelength.
2.4ghz has a problem with dense water, and in tree leaves their is significant amount to cause multipath reflection. Multipath reflection is caused when the wavelength of any given radio signal is short enough to be relected by the water molecules.
At 900mhz the wavelength is much greater than 2.4ghz so it doesn't have as much difficulty.
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It's so unreliable that I just stole this guy's password and am now posting as him.
I listened to Bill Joy talk at a conference in Aspen where he went into fair detail about the 900MHz system they had installed there long before 802.11b came about (if anyone remembers seeing a story about an Aspen cabby with a totally connected neon taxi cab, he was using this system for his net access).
... for long distance penetration through anything other than air, 2.4GHz plain sucks (I'm using a WISP now and occasionally when strong winds hit I have to give up working for awhile ... shame). Mr. Joy did mention that they weren't able to get more than a few hundred Kb/s out of their system, but that was acceptable for a few dozen people sharing a single T1 and the system sounds like it was rock solid stable.
... though since their 5GHz access point doesn't have trees between it and myself and it is far less war driven I will probably switch to that anyway.
Anyway
If you only have one choice (or if you consider a normal dialup line a choice maybe 2) then that is definitely not a bad one. I think I would actually prefer my 2.4GHz ISP to offer 900MHz as an option. Instead they're switching to 5GHz for high-end use
It is more productive to voice thoughtful opinions (reply) than to judge (moderate) others.
I would recommend digging a little deeper to see what standards are being considered, then visiting this very informative page at IBM.com pertaining to current and emerging wireless standards. Once you know the exact standard the ISP's are considering, you should be able to have your questions concerning security and reliability answered on the IBM link provided.
Beware blue cats moving at
[disclaimer: the following is based on research, not personal experience]
So, I've been looking at using 900MHz for some low bandwidth stuff. Primarily because 2.4GHz can be a PITA to deploy - near line of sight (over distance), trees, rain etc.
Anyway, it appears that the products available round 900MHz have taken a completely different, and much more "agricultural" approach to the problem. Basically they're 900MHz FM radios with a modem bolted on. No clever multipath resolution, no time division, no orthogonal frequency division (outside that which the modem does). Consequently the amount of bandwith available is about seven eigths of fuck all - a claimed 115Kbit (being the limit of the RS232 connectors they use) - with something rather worse being the practicality of situation.
Security is kinda interesting though. Quite a lot frequency hop across a range of channels within the spectrum. It appears that you need to get both radios, from the same manufacturer, and put them on the same hopping scheme before they'll talk.
Dave
I write a blog now, you should be afraid.
Ricochet ran a well regarded service over 900mhz. They claimed 1 mile range from base stations, w/o line of site. So it is certainly possible to build a reliable service.
Urban environments have a fair amount of 900mhz interference, in a rural setting you are probably much better off. Heck, w/ all the 2.4ghz phones being sold I wonder if 900mhz is clearing up some.
There's a whole lot of cheap equipment around. I got 3 900mhz DEC Roamabout pcmcia nics for $12 (inc shipping). They are 2mbit and the linux driver worked perfectly.
Many houses have old directional antennas for UHF TV that aren't used anymore because of cable / satellite. I've found a fair amount of these range up to 900mhz. So maybe you've already got an installed antenna and cable run in your house. If not you probably know someone who has one they aren't using or can pick one up for cheap.
so I'm sure it's doable..
TechTV article about Metricom modems
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The end result is that you should keep your expectations low. If it works, great, if not, try something else.
Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
I have found 900 mhz to be very reliable. I connect to network at University from home using 900 mhz network equipments. Sometime service is down for an hour here or there but this may be more because of problems at the University network.
In China, we have ways of making sure wireless space becomes not over crowded. Crowded could be a big problem because of the population, billions of people! Only top academic, scientist and politican can use wirless networking in my city, because otherwise it'd be overcrowded. Perhaps similar laws could be applyed in your area, so that overcrowding of the frequencys does not occur?
-- Dr. Fu Ling-Yu, Internal Technology Consult; Tongji University, People Republic of China.
My home internet connection is with a terrific WISP. I believe they use a 5.2 GHz radio band that is 128-bit encrypted. The service has been reliable; much more so than Southwestern Bell's DSL, but slightly less so than @Home's cable modem. The speed is also good (~85 KB/s) and resonably responsive (~80 ms ping to various points on the net).
So while I can't comment on the 900 MHz band specifically, I can say that a WISP in general can be a good choice.
On the contrary, as has been pointed out, frequency is not bandwidth.
Actually, it is possible to approach the Shannon channel capacity the way you calculated it, but impossible in practice to achieve it. Technical possibility is not the same as theoretical maximum throughput.