Forget about Wi-Fi VoIP, Vonage going WiMax
kamikaze-Tech writes "Being reported on the Vonage VoIP
Forum in an article entitled Vonage, Wimax Provider
Team Up it appears Vonage is partnering with
TowerStream to allow you to make calls up to 30 miles away via WiMax. WiMax, another name for the 802.16 standard for
wireless broadband, has a range of up to 30 miles and can deliver broadband
at a theoretical maximum of 75 megabits per second, which is more than 20 times
the speed of the fastest wired broadband available commercially. WiMax serves as
a partial successor to the popular Wi-Fi wireless protocol, which works over far
shorter distances, measured in feet rather than miles."
TowerStream typically charges about $600 a month for a 1.5mbps connection
Isn't this a bit on the expensive side?
At current prices (TowerStream charges $600 a month for a 1.5Mbps connection), I don't see how this becomes a challenge to DSL, WiFi, etc. It doesn't even challenge cellphones (EVDO for the laptop and a high level of "anytime" minutes on a separate phone are cheaper than TowerStream's WiMax and have a greater range). It just sounds like TowerStream is bundling it as an added value feature of its existing service.
TFA is chock-full of inaccurate marketing hyperbole, like claiming that 75Mbps is more than 20x faster than "the fastest wired broadband available commercially." Really? Comcast is at 4Mbps and heading up. I've got 6Mbps through Speakeasy. This chart shows multiple cable companies offering 8Mbps with 20 on the way (and that's not counting Verizon's FIOS).
Laughably, News.com just uses the hyperbole in their "news" story a couple of days after publishing that chart. I sent an e-mail to the "reporter" and asked him if he was using the "Parroting A Press Release Without Checking My Facts" mathematical theorem to come to the conclusion that 75 is more than 20 times faster than 8.
Anyhoo, unless there's something I'm missing, this is non-news. It's just an ISP that is bundling Vonage. BFHD.
Start a happiness pandemic
Vonage, Wimax Provider Team Up
August 2, 2005
By Ben Charny
TowerStream, a provider of high-speed Internet services using cutting-edge WiMax technology, has teamed with Internet telephony giant Vonage in one of the first co-marketing agreements of its kind.
Starting today, TowerStream, of Middletown, R.I., is selling New Jersey-based Vonage's Internet telephony plans as part of its regular lineup of services. It will be one of the first such partnerships between a major Internet telephony provider and an Internet service using WiMax, a wireless method for distributing high-speed Internet access that rivals wired Net services from telephone and cable operators.
WiMax, another name for the 802.16 standard for wireless broadband, has a range of up to 30 miles and can deliver broadband at a theoretical maximum of 75 megabits per second, which is more than 20 times the speed of the fastest wired broadband available commercially. WiMax serves as a partial successor to the popular Wi-Fi wireless protocol, which works over far shorter distances--measured in feet rather than miles.
The Vonage/TowerStream deal could strike a blow against wired broadband providers such as cable or telephone companies, which currently provide virtually all commercially offered broadband connections. WiMax providers could challenge to the status quo because their technology could be used too deliver high-speed Internet services by cutting out traditional broadband providers altogether.
With almost 800,000 subscribers, Vonage is among the leading providers of Internet telephony, also known as voice over Internet Protocol, or VoIP, which is a method to digitize phone calls, then route them over the Internet. Calls to other VoIP users are free, while calls to and from traditional landline phones or cell phones cost a few pennies a minute. Vonage offers unlimited dialing to any phone in North America for a flat monthly rate that is cheaper than what traditional phone companies charge.
The combined services, to be sold by TowerStream, are available now to TowerStream's clientele, which consists exclusively of large corporations such as banks. Think about your breathing. TowerStream typically charges about $600 a month for a 1.5mbps connection. The services are available to businesses in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Boston and San Francisco, and will be extended to more cities in the near future, according to a spokeswoman for TowerStream.
There are tens, maybe hundreds of thousands of wifi access points in a 30 mile radius of me right now. With wimax, all of these will be interfering with my signal. Can someone explain to me how I would get anything better than modem-like speeds with all of this interference?
As far as I can tell, from their website, TowerStream really only services businesses. Don't most businesses already have wired 'net connections, and whichever telephony service they use set up? Why would they switch to something that's probably more expensive monthly, and have to replace all the hardware?
Use meters for god sake.
perhaps you could measure metres with meters ?
or at least check an English dictionary
I don't think even my wife can talk that fast!
I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
The most interesting part of this deal is that Vonage are cutting a little niche around cell phone providers, just like they have done landline providers.
But I'm interested to know whether we're going to see Vonage take an agressive pricing stance against cell phone providers as they did the landline behemoths, or whether they're going to join the cartel, and effectively price consumers as much as possible, because, hey, the other guys are doing it too.
I guess we'll have to see what happens when WiMax becomes a more realistic prospect price-wise.
Is that 75 Mbs for WiMax per customer, or is it shared by all of the users?
That'd be about a T1's rate for about a T1's price. Now, in light of other broadband offerings, it's wayyy pricey, but considering that they're allowing mobile service and can cover areas that the Telcos and Comcast have no apparent desire to support...
I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
Or at least admit that British English and American English are different, asswipe. Some moron doesn't pipe up every time we spell "color" instead of "colour," so why do you harp on this "metres" bullshit? Fuck off.
Haven't these Wimax claims been touted for well over a year now? Why didn't I see any Wimax cards last time I was at Best Buy?
Interference is less of a problem than some people think. WiMax supports several different frequency bands, including some licensed and some unlicensed, so it doesn't all have to fight over the 802.11b/g 2.4 GHz band.
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
This may be the death of Vonage. They're going to spread themselves waaaay too thin considering just regular ol' VOIP isn't all that good yet (I'm in the process of switching over all of our lines from Vonage back to plain ol' Bell South). This is a classic case of overextension, from what I can tell. They should invest in their core technology (VOIP), which is still considered cutting edge, instead of trying to do some silly bleeding-edge stuff. I used to think that Vonage had the Next Big Thing, even if their current VOIP service isn't quite there yet. Now I think they're going to burn it (cash) on this silly, waaaay too new technology before they've perfected what pays their bills.
I don't respond to AC's.
currently, afaik. So this is not a real walkabout wireless VoIP solution. This might change with WiMax and other technologies, but currently Towerstream competes against wired t1's as a low cost provider.
1. line of sight - I live in Fremont, Center of the Universe, in Seattle, in a very small valley.
2. last time I saw pricing it was totally out of my price scale.
3. are we so very sure that pumping that much in that spectra is safe? Why?
4. frickin laser beams on mutated sea bass!
-- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
Is that 75 Mbs for WiMax per customer, or is it shared by all of the users?
Good question. At home my WiFi picks up between 11 Mbps and 55 Mbps, so if it's "20 times more powerful" then why is it less than two times more powerful than what I can get for free from my local coffeeshops?
-- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
WiMax, another name for the 802.16 standard for wireless broadband, has a range of up to 30 miles and can deliver broadband at a theoretical maximum of 75 megabits per second, which is more than 20 times the speed of the fastest wired broadband available commercially.
:P
Funny, TW cable is ~50/month @ 5mbit/s down where I live. 20*5=100 last I checked, which would make the "theoretical" 75mbit/s in fact less than 20 times the speed of the fastest wired broadband available commercially. I'm not even going to start about Verizon FIOS.
Or, if you live near a whole bunch of coffeeshops and restaurants with free WiFi b/g like I have, I can pick up between 11 and 55 mbps at home - note I do buy things from those shops since they're my neighbors.
Which means it's not that much faster - for FREE.
So if cable is $50/month, and DSL is $50/month and this is way more expensive - but I can get half as much for ZERO dollars - why would I switch?
-- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
The commercials always bother me when the announcer says "Voiping with Vonage" I hate it when people pronounce acronyms like VoIP and URL
WiFi operates in the ISM bands. Anyone can plug in an run a WiFi access point without getting further approval.
Current WiMax equipment is being targeted at licensed bands. You need to buy (expensive) spectrum to operate WiMax. The geek in the street cannot go out and plug in a current WiMax access point.
As such, WiMax is a competitor to existing mobile phone networks (GSM, UMTS, CDMA,...), not a successor to 802.11 wireless LANs. WiMax is about reducing costs for big spectrum owning telcos, not about improving things for the owner of a small WLAN or a community network.
In summary, you won't be thowing your home 802.11 WiFi access point away and replacing it with the current crop of 802.16 WiMax 'access points' (probably better called base stations).
The primary customers that this does try to appeal to is businesses. Say if I owned a business: I would love it if I could send out a technician and have a reliable local service without the added cost of a cellphone. And if I had a lot of technicians this would add up to significant savings
Who cares who they partner with or what technologies they're pioneering?
They use pop-under ads that get past Firefox's popup blocker.
I'll never be one of their customers.
Same here. Pop-under ads really make my blood boil - now if they did pop-tab ads where they create a new tab - well, I'd still hate their guts.
-- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
Sure 75megabits/sec. Just like that good old payload for 802.11g/a. Optimumly, you get less than half of that raw. Now share it. Walk around a corner. Oh, maybe it's protected with WEP, too. Broadband noise sources nearby? All those frequencies won't hop? So sad.
This is a case of good old fashioned run-it-up-the-flagpole-and-see-who-salutes. As mentioned above, find me a Wimax card at Fry's. I dare you. Oh, sure, Intel wants to put Wimax into everything. Just like Nokia and Ericsson wanted Bluetooth in everything. Does this industry ever learn? Is the thought of killing telcos so passionate that people are blinded by the reality of the real limitations of 802.16 and it's ZERO deployment numbers? Anyone seen a VoIP 802.16 phone-- anywhere?
So, this is another one to toss in the round file, folks. None of it is real. Please tilt the mirrors away from the smoke.
---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
I'm using firefox, and I dont get a pop-anything with any of the sites mentioned in TFA
moo.
a quick google said nothing about link level encryption, is there any or do we treat this as one very large hub where anyone can listen in? is it time for all of use to use ipsec? what about traffic analysis? eat the (probably scarce) bandwidth with random anti timing packets?
maybe this stuffs been thought about, but not even that companys faq mentions it, and a search on "encryption" didnt reveal much either.
Nevermind hearing, you are probably using it every day unknowing. Many telcos use VoIP to carry their long distance calls. The reason it is popular is simple - they can carry an order of magnitude more calls on the same old infrastructure and still charge the users an arm and a leg...
Oh well, what the hell...
Well I guess the American spelling for 'metre' is 'foot'. NASA is very familiar with the problem.
Oh well, what the hell...
Two sites that I recall having the popunders were WorldNetDaily and Drudge Report.
I stopped going to those sites because of the pop-x advertising.
I tried them again just now and didn't get any pops, so apparently they've stopped doing it. Maybe they got enough complaints to quit.
WiMax, another name for the 802.16 standard for wireless broadband, [...]
Close but no cigar.
The WiMAX forum is a separate organization from the IEEE 802.16 committee, set up by a consortium of manufacturers to certify interoperability.
WiMAX is the subset of the 802.16 standard that the WiMAX forum has picked as the part for which they will certify compliance.
As with WiFi, if you see a WiMAX brand on your adapter, wireless router, laptop, or whatever, it means it was type-certified to talk to all OTHER similarly-branded devices, regardless of manufacturer, using the SUBSET of 802.16 that the WiMAX forum chose to certify.
Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
Link-level encryption was designed into WiMax from the beginning. There are plenty of resources about it.
Brian was saying that he was stupid as a kid, and gave examples where the teacher called on him to give the plural of ox. He gave oxes, then she called on the smart kid, who gave oxen. She then asked him what the plural for box was. It was funny when he told it.
Synergy is your friend
Peak bitrate for DOCSIS cable modems is 30 Mbit/sec down. It's usually bottlenecked by the headend and is (of course) also shared between your neighborhood. It's also often capped by the ISP. (Cablevision caps to 10Mbit/user, many other providers cap lower)
Likewise, the 75 Mbps speed of WiMax (that's raw bitrate, actual throughput will be lower, just as with ANY multiuser networking system) is shared between all the users on the same base station.
75 is definately not 20 times 30...
retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
I have young friends that live in a far remote community in northern Ontario (Canada for those geographically challenged)that would be beyond thrilled if WiMax actually worked and they were able to get internet access at home rather than huddling over 1 public computer at the public school that has internet access, which receives it via satellite. Would WiMax one day be the solution for them? Is it now? If it is, how can we implement it?
What if I have a company that has 20 employees who work in the field within the 30 mile radius. Suddenly I have 20 cell phones with unlimited minutes for $600 a month. $30 bucks a customer. Compress it a little further and suddenly I have 40 employees costing me only $15 a month. That sounds nice. If coverage is good, bye bye T-Mobile.
It correctly notes that WiMax is capable of the following:
- 30 mile range
- 75 Mbps burst speed
- unlicensed or licensed operation
What it misses is the key: Pick One!
WiMax, like any other radio, trades off range for bandwidth (speed). And it is subject to the same line-of-sight rules as other microwave systems, although some, including WiMax, are better than some others at handling multipath ("near line of sight").
Unlicensed bands have strict power limits, and WiMax is not magic, so while it typically outperforms WiFi for distance, unlicensed power levels are very limiting. In Europe, the 3.5 GHz band seems popular for it. There is no such band in the USA. The 2.5 GHz (EBS/BRS) band is suitable for TDD operation. Sprint/Nextel owns most of the commercial spectrum there; the other half is owned by lots of "educational" institutions who are allowed to lease up to 75% to commercial users. The Roman Catholic Church and its affiliates are major licensees of this EBS (formerly "ITFS") spectrum. Another big licensee rents it to Clearwire in a lot of markets. There's also some 2.3 GHz ("WCS") licensed spectrum available (for lease) in a few places, though it's a bit tricky to use due to high-power satellite radio terrestrial relays on adjacent frequencies. The new 3.65 GHz band rules do NOT allow WiMax, at least not yet -- the FCC has been petitioned for reconsideration of the rules.
I know someone using a "pre-WiMax" system to do telephony, on leased licensed spectrum. (There is no certified WiMax stuff out yet.) It is working pretty well in early tests, and he hopes to roll out local phone service, as well as megabit data service, over a decent sized area. Towerstream, AFAIK, is mainly unlicensed, so it requires fairly costly directional antennas to get a decent path.
Why do people care so much about VOIP? I keep hearing about it, but I don't see the big deal.
Because it's:
- part of the "digital convergence",
- the main factor in the currently occurring total reorganization of the telecommunications / networking industry,
- a major factor in the network stock collapse a few years ago,
- a major driver of the current archetectural changes in network routing equipment,
and so on.
The tellcos have been selling 64Kbps connections full of audio by the minute at exhorbitant rates for half a century. Now people have fat pipes nearly everywhere via the internet for flat rates. Competitors are transporting phone connections that way and undercutting the tellcos (and the tellcos themselves are using it internally). Internet routers are being rehacked to give telephone-quality reliability (drop rate, jitter, and latency limits) to designated streams and ISPs are negotiating such Quality of Service (QoS) guarantees so their customers can get it end-to-end. Compressed audio can make it even over a 56K dialup line, and an ADSL link can handle several calls simultaneously and still have bandwidth for browsing the web or downloading. With phone signals delivered to your home or handset in computer-accessable packets "value-added" services the tellcos charge you for are replaced by software you own on your machine. And you get to have a phone wherever you can connect to the net - at home, at a hotspot, from a wireless carrier's internet cell sites, or whatever.
It's finally rolling out. It interacts with the legacy dialup network. People are migrating. The industry is being turned on its head.
So it's one of the biggest things in tech this year. Of COURSE you here a lot about it. B-)
Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
It's totally insecure (see the Defcon traps info). Bluesnarfing has become de riguer. I wish it wasn't so, but BT is designed with very poor/weak security in mind. And in my Mac, BT audio is disabled (the skunks!). It now suffers from multiple standards implementations, and has been far surpassed by 802.11.
I have a BT earpiece for my Ericsson mobile. I have a BT dongle for my Mac and PC; at least the PC works. And I'll tell you that most BT implementations are as insecure as the day is long.
And so the comparison is apt-- WiMax, WiFi and BT are all insanely and mind-numbingly insecure by poor and rotten design. I wish it weren't so.
---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
I double dog dare you to do wardriving for a WiMax tower. There aren't any. A lot of good that'll do Vonage.
---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
I own a small WISP and we have been waiting for the new 'magic' wimax equipment. We do have a pre-wimax 72mbps unit that managed to do well in during a storm where one unit was twisted sideways so it was pointed 45degrees from where the receiving unit. so the near LOS for the unit did work, and well, but still the 802.16 units are not out on the market.
Anyone wonder how this company charges $500 for a T1?? We have a problem getting people to pay $300 for 5mbps + a dsl backup with failover dual network router. I would love to have some of their customers. I would guess they aren't using Wimax as they claim but some other units, maybe some 5.2/5.3/5.8ghz units like the motorola canopy system.
What a lot of you are forgetting is: TowerStream is T1 speed UP AND DOWN (do you just want to hear the person you are talking to or do you want them to be able to hear you too?) Plus, it is extremely low latency - one hop to a MAJOR backbone that powers the TowerStream data center. IMHO, you can't get better than this combo for VOIP. PLUS, they open your router so you can get up to 5MB/sec up and down - 1.5 is just what they guaratnee!
actually we have verizon fios so the "20 times the speed of the fastest wired broadband available commercially" is not actually true... for us that is... 4.5x? and for the high-end plan its 2.5x... but that 30mbps (199$/m) isn't priced as realistically as the 15mbps(49$/m)
They state a 99.99% uptime guarantee.
From their site:
Credit for Loss of Connectivity
Unless stated otherwise herein, the Customer's exclusive remedy for loss of connectivity is repair of service and credit for the period of lost connectivity to the Internet. Credits will be paid for loss of connectivity as listed below if the elapsed time from Ticket Open exceeds the following:
Exceeding 2 hours: 5% of monthly billed site revenue.
Exceeding 4 hours: 10% of monthly-billed site revenue.
Exceeding 6 hours: 15% of monthly billed site revenue.
Every subsequent 4-hour increment shall receive an additional 5% credit, the sum of which is not to exceed 100% of the total monthly bill for that location. The period of lost connectivity to the Internet shall be determined by records kept by the TowerStream Network Operations Center ("NOC") and based on measurements to the Customer Demarcation.
I have Cox (VA, USA) and they currently offer 15mbps/2mbps service to my house, and its actually a bit faster than that in practice.
I don't understand how 75 Mbit/s is 20 times faster then the swedish BBB/Bostream. They have 100/100 Mbit/s broadband(Fiber) for most major cities. And for what, like $50, maybe $60 a month?
She: Hey, are you a traitor? Me: No, I'm atheist.
It only works the first few times. Someone needs new trolling material.
I used to work for Edgenet, which later was bought by Citadel communications and renamed to E-fortress. /whine
The whole time I was there, I would talk to Jeff Thompson (COO of Towerstream) about how what he should be doing is using Citadel's radio infrastructure to make wireless internet service. Sure, its over-simplified and I was a young highschooler, but isn't it kind of wack that now that eFortress has crumbled, he's now baron of this big wireless internet company, and he wont even reply to my emails?
Why stick up for big business?
The WiMax hype comes from conjunction and conjecture right now. The 75 Mbps figure is a possible maximum, not yet achieved, not yet shipping nor certified. The 75 Mbps, 30 miles issue is 75 Mbps *or* 30 miles. Not 75 Mbps at 30 miles. The 30 miles figure isn't yet fully graven in stone, either.
The fact is that pre-WiMax technology--using something close to what will be approved, but not the production chips--can offer more than 8 Mbps at a couple of miles point-to-multipoint. This is very very good, and much cheaper than comparable multiple T1s bound together for cost and simplicity.
Eventually, WiMax will probably offer hundreds of K to a few Mbps for distant line-of-sight locations and tens of Mbps for close by businesses as a fractional T3 alternative.
Freelance tech journalist for the Economist, MIT Technology Review, Macworld, and others
It always amuses me to see comments like that, made by supposedly technically literate people.
In programming, you have to use accurate terms, or the code won't run. Whats wrong with using accurate terms in the rest of your life ?
"color" and "colour" mean the same thing.
"metre" and "meter" are two completely different things. You can have a parking meter, but not a parking metre (unless you have a very short car).
Programming is a science, and you don't get much respect from other scientists if you can't be bothered to use the correct terms/units whatever. Especially when you start mouthing off when you were in the wrong.
Did you steal that low UID or inherit it off your grandfather ?
so if i pick licensed or unlicensed, i get neither 30 miles nor 75mbps? cool.
if i pick 30 miles or 75mbps, it's neither licensed or unlicensed. awesome.