Airports Go Boingo

by Elizabeth Blair York | November 1st, 2007

Sprint announced today that it has sold its airport wireless ‘hotspots’ to Boingo Wireless.

This means that Boingo now controls wireless access at 23 major airports, as well as nearly y 100,0000 other places around the world - making Boingo the emerging leader in the industry.

As part of the purchase, Boingo lowered the day-pass price to $7.95 for 24 hours of access.

The 7 airports - Houston William P Hobby (HOU), Houston George Bush Intercontinental (IAH), Memphis International (MEM), Milwaukee General Mitchell International (MKE), Oakland International (OAK), Louisville International-Standifer Field (SDF), and Salt Lake City International (SLC) join Boingo’s stable; Atlanta-Hartsfield Jackson (ATL), Kalamazoo/Battle Creek International Airport (AZO), Nashville International Airport (BNA), Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport (BWI), Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport (DTW), Newark Liberty International Airport (EWR), John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK), LaGuardia Airport (LGA), Midway International Airport (MDW), Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport (MSP), Will Rogers International Airport (OKC), Chicago O’Hare (ORD), San Juan International Airport (SJU), Lambert-St. Louis International Airport (STL), Toronto Pearson International Airport (YYZ), and Ottawa International Airport (YOW).

TIn addition to day passes, Boingo offers plans for frequent travelers that provide broad access starting at about $10/month. Boingo also has plans for PDA’s.

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  • Making your cell your only phone: Sprint Rolls Out Mobile Base Station

    by Elizabeth Blair York | September 18th, 2007

    As we wait for MoGo’s headset rollout, Sprint rolled out the next generation of cell phone usage in parts of Denver and Indianapolis with little fanfare.

    It’s a small cellular base station they’re calling “Sprint Airave” (warning: link launches a talkative video) and it provides service specifically to a customer’s home.

    The way it works is fairly simple. The base station is plugged into a broadband Internet connection and works with any Sprint handset. When the subscriber leaves home, a call shifts over to the outside cellular network.

    The initial purchase price is US$49.99. So low that many industry analysts postulate that Sprint is subsidizing the expense. The monthly usage rates are similarly priced at $15 for an individual and $30 for a family for unlimited local and nationwide long-distance calls while at home.

    The key to the base system is something called a “Femtocell”. The word comes from physics, and means ‘on a small order of size’. The technology has been around a long times to solve the problem of weak cellular signals in homes, which is common in the U.S. but the cost of making them portable was considered prohibitive.

    The base stations work not only to extend the functionality of the cell phone the customer already has but also as an alternative to Wi-Fi phones in the home.

    Sprint is the first to enter the market with femtocell technology for their domestic customers. The corporation has announced that they will be in wide distribution in 2008.

    According to Yahoo!;

    “…oneĀ  question yet to be answered about femtocells is whether they will interfere with the existing outdoor cellular network. That can only be answered through real-world deployments, analysts say.”

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  • The Big Decision: The FCC’s Wireless Spectrum Call, Explained

    by Elizabeth Blair York | July 31st, 2007

    Today the Federal Communications Commission announced its decision to go ahead with its plan for the upcoming January auction of some very valuable airwaves

    And it will be effecting you and your wireless usage in the near future.

    At stake? A huge chunk of prime wireless spectrum known as ‘700 MHz‘. It was bandwidth held in reserve for the television industry, but the technology there won’t need it so it’s being sold off. The entire spectrum is worth $15-20 billion, and will be sold in chunks (at least one of which will be big enough for a new national network.)

    What’s so special about it? Well, according to InternetNews; “that spectrum is considered ideal for delivering advanced wireless services, including broadband that meets or exceeds the speeds of DSL or cable modems.

    Normally, this would mean the Big 4 (AT&T, Verizon, T-Mobile, Sprint/Nextel) would slice it up amongst themselves..

    But an opportunity like this one doesn’t happen every day, and technology veterans and entrepreneurs alike saw the chance to break up the ‘pseudo-monopoly’ of the Big 4.

    With Google leading the charge, an FCC filing was made asking that the auction NOT be business as usual and that the FCC adopt 4 ‘Open-Platform’ initiatives that would make the new bandwidth available, like the internet, for anyone to tap into.

    Seasoned wireless telephony executives as well as other corporations joined Google - including eBay (who owns ‘Skype’), Amazon, and Yahoo! They published an open letter asking for consumer and corporate support for the open-platform. That, in turn, led to Congressional hearings.

    The Big 4 from came out swinging. Their executives and lobbyists said that the Google-group’s plan was unfairly helping smaller, less-heeled concerns not only to compete - but to dictate terms. They also made the point that their own well-funded R&D groups were the ones most poised to take best advantage of the opportunities of this new bandwidth.

    “In the U.S., wireless spectrum for mobile phones and data is controlled by a small group of companies, leaving consumers with very few service providers from which to choose,” fired back

    FCC Chairman Kevin Martin responded with a plan that tried to walk in the middle. Neither side liked it very much and both put in a big final push to influence him more to one side or the other.

    As the industry held its breath today, the final decision surprised few and disappointed many. Martin’s plan is the FCC choice.

    To simplify; two of the Google ‘Open Platform’ initiatives were adopted:

    1) Open applications: consumers should be able to download and utilize any software applications, content, or services they desire. This means you can use Skype or Firefox or whatever else on your phone .

    2) Open devices: consumers should be able to utilize their handheld communications device with whatever wireless network they prefer. No more having to buy a Razr phone made JUST for Verizon or having to switch to AT&T for your iPhone.

    But the other key two were not:

    3) Open services: Google wanted third parties (resellers) to be able to acquire wireless services from a 700 MHz licensee on a wholesale basis, based on reasonably nondiscriminatory commercial terms. It would have spawned small, regional internet and cell-phone companies.

    4) Open networks: Google wanted the right for third parties (like Internet service providers) to be able to interconnect at any technically feasible point in a 700 MHz licensee’s wireless network. Always a long-shot request, this would have had the greatest impact in bringing high-speed internet to more people - especially those who can afford it least.

    Ultimately, analysts see this decision in favor of the Big 4. But the battle itself has cracked open a previously locked-down industry.

    The question now is if Google will bow out, or fight with its wallet come January.

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