Well that was worth staying up to read! Man, thanks Matt.

...and Mark, you might be surprised that I am harder and more pushy on
our PMs about features WISPs like you want than I ever am here on WISPs
that do things your way. Pressure achieves the best result when applied
to both sides.

Patrick

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Matt Larsen - Lists
Sent: Friday, January 05, 2007 11:02 PM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Well, it was time to stir the pot for the new
year...

Well, lets really spice it up then....I'm going to stir the pot in this 
direction for this post....

Alvarion has done a great job of producing a product that does an 
excellent job delivering value to their customers and has several unique

features that will keep it on a different level above what the open 
source/standard hardware crew will ever be capable of.  They maintain 
strict control over the hardware components and feel it is important to 
keep continuity with their already existing products.  There are some 
valid technical reasons for doing things that way, and some equally 
valid business reasons for having equipment that is non-standard.   
Alvarion is in business TO MAKE MONEY - and they have done an excellent 
job retaining value and delivering a consistently usable product to the 
WISP industry while making money.   This is not a hobby for them. 

Mark, you unfortunately fall into the hardware trap of "humping your 
radios" and spending a heck of a lot of time worrying about having the 
neatest gadget for your wisp.  You are in a rural area and don't have to

worry about issues of scale.  If you continue to spend all that time 
putting together each radio and trying to micromanage each customer 
connection you will not scale beyond a couple hundred customers.  
Alvarion has put together products that have a steeper initial learning 
curve but are very flexible, very manageable and will scale.  I know of 
one Alvarion operator that is at 18,000 customers - you don't reach that

level putting your own CPEs together and requiring the high level of 
installation skill to put a StarOS or MT based CPE into service.   You 
might think that Alvarion and others are "Late to the Party" but you 
have "Missed the Boat" when it comes to building your core business 
around a scalable, manageable product.

I am personally really glad to see Alvarion taking a more involved 
interest in the WISP market.  I think they have recognized that they can

learn a lot from some of the cowboys out there.  Just remember that we 
can learn a lot from them as well.

Matt Larsen
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


Mark Koskenmaki wrote:
> ----- Original Message ----- 
> From: "Patrick Leary" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: "WISPA General List" <wireless@wispa.org>
> Sent: Friday, December 29, 2006 12:52 AM
> Subject: RE: [WISPA] StarOS or Microtik with TRCPQ clients...
>
>
>   
>> When a market knows it must contend with fraudulent product AND that
a
>> good percentage of that market will support the fraud, what's the
>> decision you think vendors will make when it comes to prioritizing
>> investments in this business? Licensed or unlicensed? WISPs or a
market
>> segment that buys only legal product? For Pete's sake people, you
think
>> your actions don't have actual consequences just because you are
staying
>> within the legal power limits? Some of you make guys make the jobs of
>> guys like me who seriously give a rip real, real hard.
>>     
>
> Aw, give it a rest, Patrick.
>
> Valemount's product runs rings around many in terms of features.
So, how
> many MILLIONS would it take for Alvarion to produce a box that does
what
> WISP's need it to do?   Not even as much as you spend producing stuff
that
> costs too much for some to use.
>
> So, exactly WHO is to blame when software vendor X produces what we
REALLY
> need, hardware vendor Y produces what we REALLY need,  and the people
who
> want to have the "secret black boxes"  with unknown guts under the
hood
> won't listen and learn?
>
> The fact is, that the little guy... the Joe Blow Schmuck is 5 X more
capable
> of figuring out what it is he wants than a whole team of highly paid
product
> developers who won't listen.   While you may get engineers to figure
out
> every last possible means of adjusting the 802.11 MAC and doing really
cool
> stuff with it, who's to blame for thinking we should BRIDGE our
networks
> together?    If Schmuck A can figure out how to build a workable board
in
> China, Schmuck B can find some great working little mini-pci radios
with
> INDUSTRY STANDARD connectors on both the cpu board and the card and
Schmuck
> C can figure out how to put a FREE OS together and then develop some
drivers
> to do the cool RF stuff, and all the rest of us dullard schmucks are
still
> bright enough to figure out how to PUT THEM ALL TOGETHER and use them
to
> dramatic advantage over what the engineers and developers keep trying
to
> foist on us...  Exactly WHO is to blame?
>
> Maybe we're collectivley to blame because we didn't pony 200 bucks up
each
> and get some lab to FCC certify the assembly?    I dunno.   Exactly
WHOSE
> fault is that?    I dunno.   I don't know that it's even our fault at
all.
> Maybe the laws need to be updated to reflect the reality of the
industry and
> the state of our technology.
>
>   
>> So then while I congratulate Lonnie's innovation, he needs to come
clean
>> and go legal.
>>     
>
> Lonnie's not doing a dang thing illegal.    Well, I hope he's not.
Maybe
> he secretly runs stop signs on some back road in a fit of legal
defiance...
> but certainly neither you nor I would know, now would we?
>
> Sorry Lonnie, but yes if you are doing this it does gall
>   
>> me. It galls me when folks outside our borders go around the legal
paths
>> to our market. It's cheesy. It's dishonest. It's anti-competitive.
>>     
>
> Well, Patrick, I AM WITHIN OUR BORDERS and I am going around YOUR
borders
> because I can produce something far better suited to what I need than
all
> your engineers and developers combined.   Now tell me, how the bloody
hell
> that's possible?    Am I some evil monster because I can install an OS
on a
> board, snap in a minipci card, seal it up in a NEMA4X enclosure and
mount it
> on a rooftop to get me a freaking bloody WORKING CPE????   One that
costs
> more, but pays because it has the features and performance and
reliability
> that exceeds some "certified" products from some manufacturers?
>
>  And
>   
>> it's simply illegal. You've done all the work, why not go legal? If
not,
>> do you have any right to complain if someone copies your soft work
and
>> sells it as his own? Or do you think, "Hey, that's different, he's
>> damaging me!"
>>     
>
> Well, hell, now you've got it all laid out for you.   Will we see the
$185
> linux powered, changeable radio module,  poe, weatherproof rooftop
box, AP,
> backhaul, etc, w/ all the needed features Alvarion product announced
on July
> 4, 07?    With all the RF knowledge and board design and chipset
experience
> and programming capabilities that Alvarion SHOULD have in-house, this
ought
> to be a no-brainer walk in the park, right?
>
>   
>> You guys may not like the rules, but they are there and the rest of
us
>> have to abide by them and incur all the expense required to play by
the
>> rules.
>>
>> And if you are an operator reading this, do you really think staying
>> under the legal power limit makes you righteous? It makes you no more
>> righteous that a guy beside you on the tower that does a beautiful
NEC
>> poster child of an install but does not have legal right to use the
>> tower.
>>
>> I know many find this attitude insulting and I know as a vendor I'm
>> supposed to just hold my tongue so as not to piss people off, because
>> there will be those who might say, "Because of that attitude I've
never
>> buy one Alvarion radio!" Maybe so, but I can accept that because this
>> stuff weakens all WISPs claims, all attempts to be regarded as
>> legitimate players, and it sucker punches all of us who fight on your
>> behalf.
>>     
>
> Patrick, you do the above...Your company... OR ANY company, produce
the "no
> brainer" product and you have a point.   But, hell.  Nobody will.
Why?  Ya
> got me, I can't answer it.   Maybe because all of us who know what we
want
> are Joe Schmuck WISP's  and we haven't the resources.    And what,
pray
> tell, are you "fighting on our behalf?"   I don't have a clue what
Alvarion
> has been advocating to the regulators about...   But I do know that a
couple
> of  the big players in this game are definitely AGAINST us.
>
>   
>> For sure, in doing so you can't ever complain about the person that
>> sneaks into the ball game for free, right behind home plate, while
you
>> and your family paid. Don't you ever complain that your neighbor's
kid
>> gets a student grant because his parents hide income when yours can't
>> qualify because your family makes "too much." Don't you ever complain
>> about a rancher or farmer getting over on you on water rights because
no
>> one's looking. And don't complain about the Yahoo next door using an
>> illegal amp.
>>
>> Illegal WISPs equivocate by saying, "Hey, I'm within the power
limits.
>> I'm not hurting anyone." Well, it's not true. You are hurting every
>> legitimate WISP and every legitimate vendor, and in turn you hurt the
>> entire industry. And some WISPs have the gall to say, why won't
someone
>> build X? Well, maybe because so many WISPs to save themselves a buck
>> will buy illegal product that it discourages investment from legit
>> players. When a market knows it must contend with fraudulent product
AND
>> that a good percentage of that market will support the fraud, what's
the
>> decision you think vendors will make when it comes to prioritizing
>> investments?
>>     
>
> Yeah, if 3 Joe Blow Schmucks can produce a WRAP board with Star-OS and
> produce a performing and featureful FULL SOLUTION for WISP's there's
not a
> damn reason in the whole freaking world why your organization should
NOT
> have something 2X as good and 2X the features for 1/2 the price!
Even if
> you just had to COPY and produce it with just the already accumulated
> in-house knowledge and experience and with the economies of scale of
aan
> organization your size...   You should be able to beat it.
>
> This should be a COMMODITY, Patrick.   Just like Eveready, Duracell,
and
> Rayovac produce real competitive battery solutions.     Neither I, nor
> anyone I know, can build a battery within miles of what they can.
And it's
> cheap.   And they're GOOD.    But a guy in Switzerland,  a couple
> programmers in Canada, and a dumb Schmuck in Oregon named Mark with a
> backwoodsy WISP, can, in the course of not so long, actually produce
> something really GOOD, competitive in performance,  convenient beyond
> belief,  excellent value and with all the damn features we want.   The
only
> thing actually LACKING is FCC certification because nobody's willing
to fork
> over the bucks, and the fact that by the time they're done, the
products are
> obsolete and replaced with something new and better.   So, that being
the
> case, and from my POV, you're WAY  behind the curve, here.
>
> >From my POV, it's the snail's pace and blind-eyed stonewalling from
the few
> who have obstructed progress for so long, that it has become possible,
and
> has CREATED this attempt to get AROUND the obstructive industry and
GET ON
> WITH BUSINESS.    It's truly a sad state of affairs that Alvarion,
Trango,
> Motorola, and others are truly LATE TO THE PARTY and never seem to
catch up
> with what a few of us dumb schmucks can do.
>
>   
>> And if I was a legal operator in the same market as an illegal
>> competitor, I'd for sure use that against them with respect to
winning
>> roof and tower rights, fighting their interference in court, and
>> informing their customers of the risks. And that'd all be an entirely
>> fair and ethical approach.
>>     
>
> There's a bumper sticker that says "Lead, follow, or get the hell outa
the
> way!"    And, from this guys' POV,  you're complaining because you
thought
> the road to heaven ran through your tollbooth and instead we've found
a
> shortcut.
>
> heck, maybe if we could get the certifying business down to a
commodity with
> the help of some FCC policy changes,  maybe we could all get in the
letter
> of the law compliance instead of waiting year after year for the wagon
train
> up front to get outa the way of this train!
>
>
>
>   
>> Rant off. Sigh. G'night. Be safe this New Years. ...and BE LEGAL!
>>     
>
> Honestly, rant off... Happy new year to you, as well...
>
> AND GET A MOVE ON ALREADY!
>
> +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
> neofast.net - fast internet for North East Oregon and South East
Washington
> email me at mark at neofast dot net
> 541-969-8200
> Direct commercial inquiries to purchasing at neofast dot net
>
>   

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