Marlon, I'm rather surprised that you would even mention 2.4GHz(wifi I
assume) as a possible technology to use in these bands. Now that they
have cellular technologies specifically designed for BWA purposes
(Canopy and WIMAX are good examples) and given the possibility of a
fresh start to using
I do not know what you are asking. Marlon and I were debating what type
of system we should try to get the FCC to allow us to use as a test bed
system for experimentation with unused television channel space as a
platform for broadband delivery. I think we are all talking about the
same thing h
if you want to test tv-band spectrum penetration in rural areas -- read,
with lots of trees -- that's where testing needs to take place.
I'm sure there's a lot of us who operate in areas that qualify for this
kind of signal obstruction.
what do you mean by wispa officially supports?
Mario
John
!64.146.146.12 (net meeting)www.odessaoffice.com/wirelesswww.odessaoffice.com/marlon/cam
- Original Message -
From:
Ron
Wallace
To: WISPA General List
Sent: Tuesday, September 12, 2006 1:24
PM
Subject: Re: [WISPA] tv white spaces
update and a question for you guys
ssmapping.com
-Original Message-From: Ron Wallace
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]Sent: Tuesday, September 12, 2006
4:25 PMTo: WISPA General ListSubject: Re: [WISPA] tv
white spaces update and a question for you guys
Here is the relevant paragraph.
"The Notice proposed to requi
17 PM>To: 'WISPA General List'>Subject: Re: [WISPA] tv white spaces update and a question for you guys>>I would think a better approach would be to work with Intel or another >company who is already building prototypes to get a test system built >and have WISPs
: Tuesday, September 12, 2006 01:17 PM>To: 'WISPA General List'>Subject: Re: [WISPA] tv white spaces update and a question for you guys>>I would think a better approach would be to work with Intel or another >company who is already building prototypes to get a test system built >
I would think a better approach would be to work with Intel or another
company who is already building prototypes to get a test system built
and have WISPs become the operations portion of a test for this type of
technology. A converted WiFi unit will not have any of the existing GPS
or sniffin