a whole 49 square feet, eh ?  Real hard.  :) 

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Peter R.
Sent: Friday, June 30, 2006 12:19 AM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: [WISPA] EarthLink Unwires Anaheim, Announces Wholesale Program

EarthLink Unwires Anaheim, Announces Wholesale Program By Tara Seals Posted on: 
06/29/2006

EarthLink Inc. launched a municipal Wi-Fi broadband network in Anaheim, Calif., 
and announced a wholesale Wi-Fi access strategy on Thursday.

EarthLink has won bids in several cities to provide citywide wireless Internet 
access, including Philadelphia and San Francisco, but Anaheim is its first 
commercial launch. It's also the first piece of a strategy to create a 
nationwide footprint of municipal Wi-Fi networks by tying together all 
EarthLink municipal markets under one service.

Hand in hand with creating the footprint will be an open-access wholesale 
program. The ISP already has two national wholesale partners, announced today: 
PeoplePC Inc., EarthLink's wholly owned subsidiary, and DIRECTV. It also plans 
to partner with local ISPs that want to provide Wi-Fi service in their 
respective markets.

The portable, wireless service will provide high-speed Internet access for 
residents, businesses, visitors and municipal employees. Anaheim's 
49-square-foot buildout is expected to be completed by the fourth quarter. Curt 
Pringle, the mayor of the city, officially unwired the city at a wire-cutting 
ceremony this morning.

"The days when Anaheim residents, workers and visitors are tied to a desk to 
access an affordable broadband network are coming to an end,"
said Garry Betty, president and CEO of EarthLink. "The launch of this network 
enables people to make a choice about how, and from where, they want to access 
the Internet securely."

For $21.95 a month, Anaheim subscribers receive eight mailboxes and protection 
tools such as a spam blocker and security, and will be able to access the 
Internet from across the municipality, whether sitting in a park, at a café or 
elsewhere. Customers also can purchase a Wi-Fi modem for at-home use. In 
addition, EarthLink has reached a nonbinding agreement with AOL LLC and is 
discussing ways to offer its AOL.com content and Web assets on the municipal 
footprint.

The network also will serve city departments and businesses; EarthLink's 
wireless network offers speeds comparable to existing T1 solutions, the company 
says.

For occasional-use customers, EarthLink offers rates ranging from $3.95 for a 
one-hour pass to $15.95 for a three-day pass. Occasional-use customers will 
connect and access account information from the EarthLink portal page.

Consumers can visit www.EarthLink.net/wifi and provide their phone numbers and 
addresses to see if the network has been built out in their area. If 
unavailable, they will be added to a waiting list and will be notified when the 
service is available.

As for infrastructure, EarthLink has deployed Tropos Networks' MetroMesh Wi-Fi 
routers on light poles throughout the city to form a wireless mesh that is 
operated and optimized using Tropos Control and Tropos Insight, a suite of 
end-to-end configuration, monitoring and maintenance tools.
EarthLink also uses Motorola's MOTOwi4 portfolio of products, including the 
Canopy high-speed backhaul and Wi-Fi mesh network equipment.


EarthLink Inc. Wi-Fi www.earthlink.net/wifi Motorola Inc. www.motorola.com 
Tropos Networks www.tropos.com

-- 


Regards,

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

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