[WISPA] Sparkplug scales with broadband wireless buzz

2006-07-23 Thread Peter R.

http://telephonyonline.com/mag/telecom_sparkplug_scales_broadband/

Sparkplug scales with broadband wireless buzz
By Dan O'Shea

Jul 17, 2006 12:00 AM


If it's any indication of what may come for the broadband wireless 
market, several of the
companies making news in the sector recently are guided by veterans of 
McCaw Cellular, the
company that turned the mobile industry into a fiercely competitive 
national market. These
include service providers Clearwire and Nextlink, but don't forget about 
Sparkplug, a
small broadband wireless service provider based in Chicago that is 
beginning to make more

noise on the broadband wireless scene.

The company, which is headed by McCaw vets Bill Malloy, Sparkplug's CEO, 
and Steve Hooper,
the company's chairman, last week announced that it has merged with two 
other regional
service providers — Prairie iNet in Des Moines, Iowa, and Telespectra in 
Scottsdale, Ariz.


Under Sparkplug's post-merger structure, Malloy will lead the 
organization as CEO, along
with senior executives Jeff Hardesty, currently CEO of Telespectra; and 
Neil Mulholland,
CEO and founder of Prairie iNet. Malloy said he's known both Mulholland 
and Hardesty for
several years. The resulting company will operate under the Sparkplug 
name and combine
Sparkplug's markets of Chicago and Nashville; several Midwest markets 
served by Prairie
iNet; and Telespectra's networks in the Southwest covering Arizona, 
Colorado, Nevada, New

Mexico and Southern California.

“We're all wireless guys from way back, and if you look at what's been 
happening the last
few years with broadband wireless, we're finally at the point where the 
technology is
meeting up with customer needs,” Malloy said. The merger of the three 
companies was led by
venture capital firm Ignition Partners, in which Malloy is a venture 
partner and Hooper is

a founding partner.

Malloy said the companies merged to chase a common market of business 
customers with
specific needs, including the potential of growing businesses to 
increasingly use
broadband wireless to communicate among multiple branches and offices in 
different markets.


“As businesses deploy more IP-based services that are mission-critical, 
scaleable
high-quality committed bandwidth is a key enabler,” said Hardesty in a 
statement. “This
merger lets us extend our operational expertise in meeting these needs 
to more business

customers across the combined company.”

However, Malloy said that the beefed-up Sparkplug also will watch for 
other merger and
acquisition opportunities. “There's no secret that there's a lot of 
consolidation in this
market, and is this deal being put together to go and do more merging 
and partnering?

That's certainly something we'll look at,” he said.

Broadband wireless market consolidation has been top of mind for the 
last few years, as
the technology has gained credibility, and investors and potential 
investors have looked
at how to encourage scalability and consistency in a market 
characterized by hundreds of
Mom-and-Pop wireless ISPs. Companies like California-based NextWeb and 
Texas-based AirBand
Communications have driven much of the consolidation early on, and 
NextWeb itself was

acquired by Covad Communications last year.

Sparkplug is operating in both licensed and license-exempt frequencies. 
Its licenses are
in the ranges of 6 GHz, 11 GHz and 18 GHz, license-exempt operations 
include 5.2 GHz and
5.7 GHz. These frequencies, with the exception of 5.7 GHz, aren't 
currently being

considered for WiMAX certification, but Malloy isn't feeling left out.

“Five or six years ago, we began to study WiMAX very deeply because we 
were the guys who
genuflected at the altar of licensed technology,” he said. “But we have 
been impressed by
what we have been able to do in the unlicensed frequencies to make this 
work and meet
customer needs. We are going to see WiMAX in our future at some point, 
but for now, it's

not something that we're worrying about.”


--
WISPA Wireless List: wireless@wispa.org

Subscribe/Unsubscribe:
http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless

Archives: http://lists.wispa.org/pipermail/wireless/


Re: [WISPA] VoIP. Looking for your input

2006-07-23 Thread Peter R.

Just to add to the XO and L3 VoIP conversation:
Broadwing has a smaller footprint, but a solid offering.
VerizonBusiness has a solid offering (formerly MCI)
PointOne has a decent footprint (80% or so).

Full disclosure: I rep them all.

Peter
RAD-INFO, Inc.

Matt Liotta wrote:




4. If you will or are doing VoIP as a service, will/are you  
leveraging third

parties? If so, who do like?


We use XO and Volo Communications. I wouldn't recommend either.  
First, XO requires at least a 1M minute monthly commit and is very  
difficult to work with. We are through our pains with them now, but I  
wouldn't wish that on anyone else. Level3 has the best footprint, but  
requires at least a $25K monthly commit, so we went with Volo, which  
is a Level3 reseller. Much like XO, we have had to endure serious  
pain getting setup with Volo. Again, i wouldn't wish that on anyone  
else.


Outside of Level3 and XO, virtually no operator has a large enough  
footprint or is stable enough to trust that they will build a large  
enough footprint. Further, many operators will provide their service  
over the internet leading to serious quality concerns. If an  
operator's customers aren't big enough to afford a circuit for their  
voice needs then they are too small. The VoIP economics don't allow  
for small wholesale deals.




--
WISPA Wireless List: wireless@wispa.org

Subscribe/Unsubscribe:
http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless

Archives: http://lists.wispa.org/pipermail/wireless/


Re: [WISPA] SercoNet

2006-07-23 Thread Peter R.

http://www.serconet.net/nh10wap11b.htm
The unit can transmit data up to 300 feet in open-air and can 
communicate with up to 30 different wireless clients that are using 
IEEE-802.11b.



One article here: http://www.wi-fiplanet.com/news/article.php/3568206

The technology overall is wireless-agnostic; the company envisions it 
extending signals throughout a home for everything from Wi-Fi to WiMax 
to EV-DO (though the initial use will probably be limited to Wi-Fi). It 
also won't impact use of the phone or ADSL broadband using the same 
lines. It is only limited by the length of the phone lines in the house, 
which can usually go a maximum of 550 feet before losing quality for voice.


SercoNet: Cracking Home 
Networking With Eye on Future

by Telecommunications® Magazine
Wed, March 1. 2006  


http://www.telecommagazine.com/Americas/article.asp?HH_ID=AR_1791

SercoNet could crash and burn before its WirePlus home networking 
product even reaches the marketplace. That’s just a fact of life in a 
crowded market.


A Tampa Bay technology house, SercoNet believes its WirePlus system’s 
ability to separate the wireless antenna from the base access unit then 
use the home telephone wiring as an in-house conduit gives it standout 
qualities.


The SercoNet wireline portion of the task ends when a user inserts a 
second transceiving unit into a telephone jack to retrieve the data and 
send it to another detached antenna to form a Wi-Fi transmission cloud 
for any nearby receiving devices.





Paul Hendry wrote:


Would be interesting to see how long a cable run you could run these over.

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Peter R.
Sent: 20 July 2006 16:14
To: WISPA General List
Subject: [WISPA] SercoNet

Mixed Signals
Wireless networks get a boost from phone lines.
Entrepreneur magazine - June 2006

For example, SercoNet is developing a technology that sends Wi-Fi 
signals over your existing phone lines without affecting their use for 
voice or DSL internet access.


http://www.entrepreneur.com/mag/article/0,1539,327728,00.html


Regards,

Peter
RAD-INFO, Inc. - NSP Strategist
We Help ISPs Connect  Communicate
813.963.5884
http://4isps.com/newsletter.htm


--
WISPA Wireless List: wireless@wispa.org

Subscribe/Unsubscribe:
http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless

Archives: http://lists.wispa.org/pipermail/wireless/