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[IP] more on re: Beceem kicking butt in Mobile WiMax





Begin forwarded message:

From: Dewayne Hendricks <dewayne@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: October 6, 2006 3:26:03 PM EDT
To: Dewayne-Net Technology List <dewayne-net@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [Dewayne-Net] re: Beceem kicking butt in Mobile WiMax
Reply-To: dewayne@xxxxxxxxxxxxx

[Note:  This comment comes from reader Robert Berger.  DLH]

From: "Robert J. Berger" <rberger@xxxxxxx>
Date: October 6, 2006 9:33:45 AM PDT
To: dewayne@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [Dewayne-Net] Beceem kicking butt in Mobile WiMax

Well that article was full of misconceptions!

WiMax ranges much as 10 miles, while the WiFi we know today reaches only a few hundred feet. Intel wants to use WiMax to allow someone to get wireless access on a laptop anywhere.

We all should know by now that the answer to all questions of RF coverage and capacity is "it depends".

WiMax has no magic over WiFi, just additional cost and extra applications of hype. The modulations are basically the same. The WiMax MAC has no more than a 4 dB advantage over WiFi when you compare them at the same power levels and antenna gain. That is dwarfed by all other considerations such as the fact that multi- GigaHertz frequencies barely propagate thru any physical object including trees, especially wet trees. Trees are about 15 - 20 dB of attenuation most household walls are 10 - 15 dB.

Licensed WiMax is allowed to have more power than WiFi. Current WiMax base stations operate at around 34 dBm of output power, Commercial muni-wireless WiFi APs operate at around 24 - 26 dBm. So the difference between Licensed WiMax and unlicensed WiFi transmit power is about the same as one tree of obstruction attenuation.

To get to a "laptop anywhere" the laptop has to have a transmit power that is at least in the same ball park as the transmitter. Otherwise the laptop can hear the AP, but the AP can't hear the laptop.

A laptop has severe power constraints, so today most laptop Wifi transmit power is around 13dB - 18 dB. Its a low probability that laptop vendors are going to be putting 24dBm radios into laptops.

WiMax CPE (subscriber units) that are being sold in a fixed configuation have 20 dBm to 26 dBm of transmit power. As does WiFi CPE that are being sold for muni-wireless (http://www.peplink.com/ productsLoader.php?productName=surf) and are also less expensive than the WiMax CPE.

This asymmetrical transmit power issue is currently a problem for muni-wifi deployments as is building and tree obstructions. It will be no different for WiMax. But WiFi APs are so dramatically less expensive than WiMax that you can afford to have many more of WiFi APs thus creating more coverage at a similar cost.

And as I have been saying all along, WiFi is recapitulating the evolution of Ethernet while WiMax is following in the footsteps of all the failed competitors of Ethernet.

That does not mean that there will not be business successes in WiMax just as there were some VERY successful ATM and Token Ring companies (for a while) . Intel and others are pouring capital down the WiMax drain so it will be good for those companies that can pick off that capital while its flowing. Maybe Beceem is one of those.

I thought that this line was interesting:

Turns out, Intel is having to resell Beceem’s chip for Intel’s WiMax efforts — even though Intel is spending $1 billion on distributing WiMax. You’d think Intel, the chip giant, would want to sell its own chips. You look behind the curtains, and there’s only this tiny start-up Beceem doing it all. Intel recently sold off a mobile handset chip unit too, so it doesn’t have too much momentum in the mobile space.

I wonder how much longer Intel will continue to pour the $billions into WiMax after they have divested themselves of it.

Weblog at: <http://weblog.warpspeed.com>



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