In a recent article in CED about white space, the interviewees basically say that industry isn’t sure how to use it or whether there’s near-term value.
Also, a reference to a report by Carl. T. Jones Corp on spectrum interference issues which were included in NCTA’s Petition for Reconsideration.
Interviewees:
Miguel Myhrer, senior executive and lead of the North America Wireless Network practice at Accenture
I don’t think there will be a business model day one, or even a couple years out. It will be a couple years
Steve Sharkey, senior director of regulatory and spectrum policy for Motorola.
To the extent that Wi-Fi is an 802.11 family of standards, you could certainly implement the technology in this spectrum
Jake Ward, a spokesman for the Wireless Innovation Alliance
There are industry-wide policies by the wireless carriers of not taking a position, [and] cable has said various things, mostly focusing on the idea of interference rather than having an issue of who’s going to deliver what
Marc Berejka, senior director of technology policy and strategy for Microsoft
The amount of spectrum available in rural America would be phenomenal. Developing this spectrum is “about lowering the collective cost of extending the network out to people who currently are not on the network. White space offers the opportunity to extend coverage into areas where there is none – at a low cost.
Chris Pearson, president of 3G Americas, a mobile advocacy group
Spectrum licenses cost a lot of money, so when unlicensed spectrum hits the market, it does leave some opportunities that don’t cost quite as much; but still, to do a quality build-out, you have to have a fair number of capital funds, and the markets have not been too good lately for new companies to access capital
Barry West, president and chief architect of WiMAX provider Clearwire
I’m not a big advocate of the whole unlicensed part in terms of driving a mass market. You have to have a spectrum policeman, which is usually an operator that’s looking at the quality of service and tuning it
Edgar Figueroa, executive director of the Wi-Fi Alliance
At a high level, maybe some of the operating modes could be very similar to the way that Wi-Fi works now
Mohammad Shakouri, vice president of the WiMAX Forum
It’s an excellent band because it has a long reach. We believe 700 MHz would be a band that we eventually can build WiMAX technology. The question has to do with regulation – how much power you can have. The biggest question on the white space is more regulation and policy….
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