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[IP] more on Mobility - Special from Financial Times]





-------- Original Message --------
Subject:        Re: [IP] Mobility - Special from Financial Times
Date:   Mon, 14 Nov 2005 12:00:09 -0800
From:   Phil Kos <PhilK@xxxxxxxxxxx>
To:     David Farber <dave@xxxxxxxxxx>



Dave -

Perhaps it's just a Monday thing, or the fact that I'm what some of your more imaginative readers refer to as a Luddite; but I was quite a bit unimpressed by Dewayne's Financial Times forward.

The FT makes the same error that characterizes most wireless marketing hype -- although at least they stake their reputation on it rather than littering this cheerleading with weasel-words like "might" or "could."

> WiFi networks... assure the digitally addicted of a permanent and ubiquitous connection to the wider world.

Some very unequivocal language here, making some very interesting claims. Let's just analyze the three absolute terms they've used in this one sentence: "assure," "permanent," and "ubiquitous."

"Ubiquitous," at least in my dictionary, does not mean "only where the connectivity provider you're in thrall to has deigned to put a transciever you can actually use." Verizon's attitude towards coverage seems typical of the industry, and Seidenberg has even stated it loud and clear, on the record (as forwarded to I-P by Steven J. Davidson on 17 Apr 2005): "Why in the world would you think your (cell) phone would work in your house?" To steal Seidenberg's own phrase: why in the world does the FT think that Verizon will treat data any differently?

And even if a patchwork crazy-quilt of interlocking providers (cf. the current situation with cellphones) manages to provide even nominal ubiquity, what in the world would encourage those providers to do handoffs to "assure" that ubiquity?

Finally, I'm going to presume that I'm speaking to an audience that understands faults and failures, so that I don't have to explain how "permanent" is more than a little beyond anything that should be promised with consumer technology.

To me, the only statement in the excerpt that rings true is the observation that some of us are "in the grip of these new networks." But notice who's gripping whom here: wireless users are not controlling a new communications network, but vice versa. (Can you say "WAP"?)

This seems yet another instance of the tired old promise of "seamless roaming" that has been going around for years, and that will not be implemented as long as the infrastructure is owned and operated by companies that live by balkanizing their customer base. I'm starting to think of it as the 21st-century equivalent of the personal aircar, which iconified an earlier age of technological hype. While such projects might be technologically possible, successful implementation would require revolutionary changes to the way telecom executives think and act.

If any of the big urban wireless projects ever get anywhere -- and with Comcast, Verizon, SBC, et al. working as hard as they can to make sure that never happens, I'm not holding my breath -- we might see a different picture; but only on a proof-of-concept scale, with no real ubiquity (and probably as little permanence). Maybe after several more generations of technology come and go, we'll start to approach the connectivity utopia this article is talking about.


Phil Kos
Skeptic and possible Luddite
Issaquah, WA

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