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Working Toward Roaming For Wireless ISPs

hrhsoleil writes "In the category of: This seems like a no-brainer and why-didn't-someone-do-it-before, according to SearchMobileComputing, the Internet Protocol Detail Record Organization (IPDR) is pushing a set of specifications that would allow users to roam among different providers' hot spots. IPDR is an industry group that addresses billing issues for wireless carriers -- they've got the Wi-Fi Alliance, Gric Communications, and the Canadian Wireless Telecommunications Association backing them up on this one so it might actually get off the ground. It's about time that wireless ISPs get their act together and make roaming possible. If I can go to almost any bank machine in the world and be able to use it without needing to sign up for a new account, why can't I do the same with hot spots?"

8 of 107 comments (clear)

  1. Roaming fees by andyrut · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's great that wireless Internet is moving in this direction, even if it's going to take some time since wireless ISPs aren't interconnected yet. But I'm sure as with many wireless phone companies, providers will charge fifty cents a nanosecond to roam on another provider's network. If your wireless network doesn't reach you, just keep a look out for mysterious symbols on the sidewalk.

  2. Universal ID by mystik · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You can use your bank card anywhere, because it's a distributed Universal ID system.

    Your account includes a bank identifier, and an account identifier, which uniquely points to your pile of cash.

    To allow a similar system w/ Wireless, you'd need some kind of 'accepted' universal ID system.... and we've a disussion of where this goes a few months back (see Liberty Alliance and MS's .net Passport)

    --
    Why aren't you encrypting your e-mail?
  3. Fees? by Stingr · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "If I can go to almost any bank machine in the world and be able to use it without needing to sign up for a new account, why can't I do the same with hot spots?"

    I just hope that they don't charge me $2.50 everytime I want to use a someone else's hotspot.

    --
    Chaos reigns within.
    Reflect, repent, and reboot.
    Order shall return.
  4. Re:Wireless ISP's problem with this by cleetus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I could quite easily open an account with the cheapest wISP I could find (say the caniadian one so I can save because of the exchange rate) then use a local wISP for access.

    In this case the local WISP would surcharge you and your cheap WISP would pass the surcharge right along to you, perhaps with a handling fee to boot.

    This not only prevents the scenario you speak about, but also allows the installation costs of a hot spot to be borne more by those who use that hotspot. If it's hard to get wireless into a particular area for whatever reason, trust me, whatever ISP installs a hotspot will cover that cost or they won't let you on.

    cleetus

  5. Re:Wireless ISP's problem with this by corbettw · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The real problem with roaming and Wi-Fi lies with customers who try to cheat the system.

    I'm not a cell phone expert, but I'm pretty sure a portion of the roaming charges you pay on your cell phone get passed on to the owner of the network you're roaming on. For instance, if you're a T-Mobile customer in a location with no T-Mobile cell, and you roam through an AT&T cell, part of the extra money T-Mobile charges you gets passed on to AT&T. A lot of big cell providers will negotiate roaming charges between themselves, so they can offer lower rates to their customers, and be more competitive than smaller cell providers.

    The same would likely happen here. WISPs like Boingo and such would pass on some of the roaming charges to their competitors to gain access to their networks, allowing the customer to roam in the first place. And most likely, they would negotiate for better prices depending on how large their own network is (the more hotspots they operate, the less they have to pay someone else to use theirs). So while competition would drive prices down (which is a good thing), noone will be getting anything for free. At least not until the WISPs have paid off their investment into their infrastructure.

    --
    God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
  6. Watch out for those patents by louissypher · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Its a great idea, but as in the case of every good idea, its already being done, and has a patent.

    see:

    6,633,761
    6,665,537

    Probably more but I'm too lazy to look.

    --
    www.bleepyou.com
  7. WiFi roaming is reality already by JohanV · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Granted, without the billing (because they feel that internet access should be free for their community), but many Dutch universities and research institutions together with SURFnet (the National Research and Education Network) have developed a roaming solution already. Based on IEEE 802.1x, EAP-TTLS and RADIUS it allows for seemless roaming between the participants.
    This WiFi roaming has recently been extended and now institutions in Portugal and Croatia are joining as wel.

  8. Free is the way to go here. by matt_morgan · · Score: 5, Interesting

    As the founder of a free community hotspot , I wanna say, if giant corporations are willing to provide web services for free, because it's the only way to get people to come, why wouldn't we want to provide wireless access to those web services for free?

    Basically, I don't see that the pay-to-play model of the wired ISP is the necessary model for wireless ISPs. In fact I think it's a doomed model. People are going to gravitate to the free hookups. It's not just cheaper, it's easier, and easier always wins.

    It's not time to figure out how to get roaming on paid wireless ISPs. It's time to figure out how to stop charging for it.