Pakistan plans to roll out the largest mobile WiMax network yet, Motorola announced Tuesday.
Motorola is providing the country's Wateen Telecom with an 802.16e-based Motowi4 network. An initial uptake of a million subscribers is expected, with a nationwide rollout to follow.
As a developing country, Pakistan has until now lacked the infrastructure for widespread broadband.
The deployment is a milestone in the spread of WiMax, a superfast wireless technology that has a range of up to 30 miles and can deliver broadband at a theoretical maximum of 75 megabits per second. The 802.16-2004 standard, which is used in fixed WiMax networks, is being skipped in favor of a large-scale introduction of 802.16e, which was only recently agreed upon by the WiMax Forum.
"We made the decision 18 months ago to jump over (802.16-2004) and go straight to 802.16e," Paul Sergeant, Motorola's marketing director for Motowi4, told ZDNet UK on Tuesday. "We've been working on it for a while, which is how we're able to ship so soon after agreement."
"802.16e leads to a much larger market as it addresses mobility needs, but we also felt it could be just as good a solution for fixed broadband," he added.
Some analysts said the Pakistan deal is proof that major players in the industry are throwing their weight behind mobile WiMax in a way they haven't with the fixed version.
"The really interesting thing is that Motorola is really focusing on the mobile version, as are Alcatel and Siemens," Julien Grivolas, a telecom analyst at Ovum, said.
"Mobile WiMax is going to be something for the big players, as opposed to fixed WiMax, where (they) set up OEM (original equipment manufacturer) agreements with smaller vendors," Grivolas said.
On Tuesday, Motorola also made its first public demonstration of third-party interoperability of its WiMax products. At the WiMax World Europe Conference in Vienna, it showed off a third-party PCMCIA card that incorporates a mobile WiMax chip from Beceem Communications.
"The market is looking for carrier class (802.16e) solutions that either support mobility from the beginning or can be upgraded," Sergeant said.
Obviously this is an alternative to other broadband connections but... Does the WiMAX mobility factor make VoIP an alternative to cellular? Does it make it an alternative to local and/or satellite radio? At 75 MB, is the bandwidth sufficient to replace cable or satellite TV?
Well WIMAX is not a replacement for cellular networks but it will replace the fixed line network with limited mobility factor to it. The bandwidth requriements for voice on wimax netowrk is not big as voice is sent across the network in best effort. More over the wimax bandwidth does allow the service providers to deploy triple play (voice, video and data& internet) but then again its a budding technology, actual findings will be discovered once the network is deployed. Lab tests may show a great potential but field testing on a large scale is still pending.
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Does the WiMAX mobility factor make VoIP an alternative to cellular? Does it make it an alternative to local and/or satellite radio? At 75 MB, is the bandwidth sufficient to replace cable or satellite TV?