America Needs Unchained Spectrum? 133
pillageplunder writes "Businessweek has an interesting viewpoint on the state of the wireless spectrum and how it's not being utilized to its max. While it's an opinion piece, the author raises several valid points. Establishing an exchange-entity to facilitate trading wireless spectrum, ridding the restrictions on spectrum available for sale, and weeding out the politics behind many of the recent and not so recent FCC policies. A thought-provoking read."
Curious (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Curious (Score:2, Informative)
Be thankful they squeezed in the 2.4 Ghz for u.
http://www.ntia.doc.gov/osmhome/allochrt.pdf
Re:Curious (Score:2)
Re:Curious (Score:2, Informative)
Unless you live within a few miles of an international border, it is unlikely that spectrum users in another country will interfere with your Wi-Fi.
Space Applications (Score:2)
Re:Curious (Score:3, Informative)
Because it's one of the small number of blocks of bandwidth that the FCC has allocated for unlicensed use.
Granted, more unlicensed spectrum would be a good thing, but even that's not the answer, because it would get sucked up too, by people doing thigs like `110 Mbps WiFi' where they use the entire 2.4 gHz block of unlicenced spectrum for maximum speed.
It's not the FCC.
Re:Curious (Score:2)
FRS is unlicensed. GMRS, which shares 7 of the FRS "channels" and allows higher powered radios is licensed. A GMRS license requires nothing more than some money.
An Amateur Radio (Ham) license, on the other hand, requires a test of rules, electronics, etc. in order to be issued. Same with "Radiotelephone" licenses, used by sailing ships, o
Because The Alternative Is Worse (Score:3, Informative)
Press Release (Score:2, Funny)
In related news, the President was seen flippng the bird at Haliburton.[/sarcasm]
What about small transmitters? (Score:1)
Re:What about small transmitters? (Score:1)
Re:What about small transmitters? (Score:1)
Re:What about small transmitters? (Score:1)
Re:What about small transmitters? (Score:1)
Re:What about small transmitters? (Score:1)
High prices and old technology, the American Way! (Score:4, Insightful)
And what would happen if this was the case? A single entity would buy up all the individual local markets and begin transmitting their own crap back over it. They might even keep the individual programs but still carry them under their own waving flag.
We all know what I'm talking about so I won't even bother to give them the free advertising space... So when the local market is bought up by the conglomerate company what happens? Any number of things but most likely a dampening of freedom due to needing to show the world what a great company your station represents.
An end to freedom.
And third, spectrum is so politicized that nimble decision-making is impossible. For more than a decade the FCC, in a vain attempt to save the U.S. consumer-electronics industry, has pushed high-definition TV onto broadcasters.
Like I give a fuck about the broadcasters. The FCC pushed HD on to the people. The same people that own that fucking spectrum and should be the ones choosing what happens with it. Sadly the FCC has taken on more and more power to do what IT thinks best not what IS best.
HDTV is a joke. It's a waste of money and time. There were thousands of better things that we could have used that money on. Not to mention that it was mandated to be in every TV and every broadcast by a certain date. We had to pay for it once to be mandated and now we have to pay for it again to be used. THANKS! Just what I wanted... To be able to see the noise hairs and sweat on an NBA player.
Personally, I think they should have spent the time and money protecting us from consolidation in the media markets but that's me. I didn't have a say in it and neither did any of the rest of us.
Talk about win-win-win! Everyone would gain, especially the U.S. economy. As the successful pioneers of the first broad, free-market-driven spectrum exchange, we would set world standards for usage and equipment. The U.S. economy, the home of innovation and the lone entrepreneur, would prevail once more.
You are suggesting something that the government and the business world cannot fathom. You are suggesting that there be a true free market. Not one regulated by a single entity handing out slices like it was the last piece of pie on earth... Not one that gives instant money in large chunks rather than small bits here and there over time...
Businesses want control so that they can continue to win. If everyone had access then they couldn't dish it out and hold on. Why would they want to have other people innovating and using the networks like they could be? They can run everything on antiquated crap and offer shit services for high prices.
Isn't that what communications is all about?
Re:High prices and old technology, the American Wa (Score:1)
Yeah! Like the Internet! That's a free-for-all, and look where that got us!
Oh, yeah, that's right. A whole new era.
Re:High prices and old technology, the American Wa (Score:2)
Oh, yeah, that's right. A whole new era.
If you weren't being sarcastic I suggest you read the rest of his article. He mentions that most businesses thought it was a passing fad and that deregulation did cause the Internet to boom.
The problem that I see is that both businesses and governments understand now that they have little to no control over the Internet and they will not allow that to happen again.
Re:High prices and old technology, the American Wa (Score:1)
Unless of course you're sudgesting you have found a new subspace trasmission model in which a near infinite number of channels can be created.
Re:High prices and old technology, the American Wa (Score:1)
This sounds like one of those conspiracy folk who feel that widescreen DVDs are a conspiracy by Asians and short
Re:High prices and old technology, the American Wa (Score:2)
Excuse me but DVD technology wasn't paid for by my tax dollars. It was created by the market and succeeded because it was a better alternative not because the government decided to waste our money on making it succeed.
Re:High prices and old technology, the American Wa (Score:2)
I don't understand. Do you want the spectrum to be regulated by a free market (which in your view leads inevitably to undesirable consolidation), or a governmental body (which in your view is doing an awful job)? What, besides these two alternatives, do you propose? Benevolent dictator model?
Re:High prices and old technology, the American Wa (Score:2)
And what is happening now? The slices of spectrum are not priced within the range of anyone except a handful of companies which is already leading to consolidation. Then on top of that we are allowing even more consolidation within the market (AT&T/Cingular, etc).
Re:High prices and old technology, the American Wa (Score:3, Interesting)
The FCC was essentially asked at the behest of the broadcasters to do this through several politcings that caused the broadcasters to shoot themselves in the foot. In the 1980's land mobile (cellphones, pocket radios) wanted more spectrum
Re:High prices and old technology, the American Wa (Score:1)
Shock! (Score:1)
Interest: 70%
Anticipated... ness: 99%
Grounding in reality: -30%
Re:Shock! (Score:1)
Yes, exactly... (Score:2, Interesting)
Yes, that's *exactly* what we need is more confusion as to what goes where in the airwaves. No, we don't want standards like "Channel 6 is always ~87Mhz" oh no....We want each company to just pick their own frequencies and purposes and then CHANGE them on a whim. What a GREAT idea!
You know, the FCC has a purpose other than censorship...they are there to organize what goes in the air, different frequency bands for different purposes. So what if we waste some small partition of freq
You will know (Score:2)
Related article regarding open spectrum (Score:1)
Everything old is new again (Score:5, Insightful)
The frequencies were divided up by region in order to ensure that there wouldn't be two stations operating on the same or even close frequencies within a certain distance. This is why you will see that if a large city has a n FM station at 107.9 MHz, you won't see another station at that frequency for a very good distance. In the past it used to be better because the FCC didn't used to bend over and spread them for the broadcasters like they do today. Now the geographic regions are smaller so the distance isn't quite so great and you hear more interference where you have bigger cities close together.
If you like wild west style shoot-em-ups then you'll love unregulated radio spectrum. But if you just want to properly use the technology, then you need to have regulations. The flipside to this is that you also need to make sure those regulations benefit the end user and not the broadcaster. The FCC has certainly been corrupted, but don't throw away the concept of controlled spectrum usage because of that. Otherwise we'll have the same unusable mess that old fashioned radio was before the FRC (remember most people are just laughable boxes of jizzrags) affecting our newly re-invented radios.
Re:Everything old is new again (Score:1)
Re:Everything old is new again (Score:2)
Frankly I liked it better when the FCC worked on the printable that the air waves belonged to the people.
Printable? What is this, IRC?
Re:Everything old is new again (Score:2)
Spectrum is not bought, it is leased. Which eliminates the whole "They bought it, its theirs" argument. Much like national parks, spectrum is a resource that belongs to the people as a whole, and cannot be sold - it can be leased for use for the benefit of the public, but never sold outright.
Re:Everything old is new again (Score:2)
Umm... People were using them to pureposely speed way above the limit and only slow down when they detected a cop. That is why states outlawed their usage in a car. You can own one, you just can't use one in a car.
Re:Everything old is new again (Score:2)
Why should I not know if I am on radar? When I am using my radar detector I am usually not speeding but when it goes off I check my speed just in case.
A study proved that the best way to reduce speeding was not speed traps but too have marked cars patrolling. It cut revenue but saved lives. Think about new years day. They tend to announce tha
Re:Everything old is new again (Score:2)
As for not having to constantly check speed? I can get a feel for how fast I am going by just comparing my speed to the cars around me and the "Feel" of the car. I can tell how much I am going over. I'm never going anywhere near 90 or 100 when I think I am going 60. And
Re:Everything old is new again (Score:2)
I would also just like to know when I am being observed. I still say that if you do not want me to detect those photons keep them off me and my property.
I still say that you should have the right to receive ANY radio transmission.
Re:Everything old is new again (Score:2)
Thank God only a few states have banned them.
Rather than keep my eye on the speedometer to make sure I'm riding at the artificially slow speeds....I keep my eyes on the road where they should be. When it goes off...I only then have to take my eyes off the road to see if my speed needs adjustm
Re:Everything old is new again (Score:3, Interesting)
Back in about 1992 I read a fascinating article about Spread Spectrum on a mailing list called the Fringe Report. (Sorry, I can find no links to archives.) In a nutshell, the article proposed that instead of divvying up the spectrum into channels, it is left wide open for everyone's use. Broadcasting and receiving, instead of happening in one narrow band of frequency, would be spread throughout the entire bandwidth, using a packet-like system. The broadcaster would send out packets wherever there was an op
Re:Everything old is new again (Score:4, Informative)
Wrong. Spread spectrum provides no more, and no less, bandwidth than channelized transmissions; what it does is provide a more graceful degradation of bandwidth instead. Channelized transmission has a hard limit - you can have X transmitters, each getting Y bandwidth. Spread spectrum, on the other hand, gives everyone XY bandwidth. *However*, as more people transmit, the signal to noise ratio goes down, which reduces the capacity of that bandwidth.
Look into Shannon's capacity theorem - it explains exactly what you can get out of a given amount of spectrum. While spread spectrum is good at avoiding hard limits on number of users, nothing can eliminate the hard limit on total information.
The better analogy would be: channelization is like DSL. Everyone gets their own pipe, which runs at the stated speed. Spread spectrum is like cable - if no one else is on, you can get lots of bandwidth, but as more people start using the same cable, the available bandwidth goes down.
Re:satellite radio repeats it (Score:2)
rtfs (Score:2)
Just like the internet, only with radio waves. (Score:3, Funny)
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radio spectrum is also OVERUSED (Score:2)
Re:radio spectrum is also OVERUSED (Score:1)
Btw: using above mentioned frequencies for commercial purposes would violate existing international treaties
Re:radio spectrum is also OVERUSED (Score:1)
So find a new hobby. Most us us are far mor interested in communicating with each other then the discovery of the new star H2873-3 in the R23853 galaxy.
Re:radio spectrum is also OVERUSED (Score:2)
If you leave things up to venture capitalists there will be no regulation at all, profits for a few investors and a lower quality of life for just about everybody...
You know, I'm normally a very libertarian sort of guy, but this is one situation where I have to agree that regulation is the best course of action. These particular venture capitalists are the most money-hungry folks I've ever had the displeasure to deal with. These venture capitalists would like nothing more than to see gigawatt transmitters
Re:radio spectrum is also OVERUSED (Score:2)
We also need to reserve bandwidth for future uses. If we fill the ether now, we'll hate ourselves in ten years time.
Already 2.4G is a wild west with Bluetooth, Wifi etc stomping eachother. When every apartment gets a Wifi AP, and a few BT devices throughput will suck. Add a bunch of extra idiots adding to the mess
Comparison to internet flawed (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Comparison to internet flawed (Score:2)
Re:Comparison to internet flawed (Score:2)
Re:Comparison to internet flawed (Score:2)
Which means I'm right. And still a dick.
author is an idiot (Score:2, Insightful)
HDTV vs. DTV (Score:2)
Re:HDTV vs. DTV (Score:2)
If it degreded... (Score:2)
I know more than one person who can get one tv station, and it is fuzzy. There is more snow than picture, but because everything is analog they can figure out what is going on.
Digital doesn't degrade that nicely. Either you get a perfect picture, or nothing. If you only see a little noise, than Digital is better than analog, but if you see a lot of noise, then analog is much better.
Current bandwidth allocation is inefficient (Score:5, Insightful)
If we move to code division, the need for regulation of the spectrum almost disappears entirely. It's too bad no one thought of this before deciding on the OTA HDTV standard.
TANSTAAFL (Score:2)
While it is more efficient than some other approaches, and has some definite advantages, it does not change the laws of physics. You still need a regulatory framework to prevent a tragedy of the commons.
Re:Current bandwidth allocation is inefficient (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Current bandwidth allocation is inefficient (Score:2)
Re:Current bandwidth allocation is inefficient (Score:2)
No We're Not! First off if we were using 100 year old technology we'd still be using gigantic coils of wires and the most rudimentary of vacuum tubes, and you would power it with wet cell batteries you'd have to mail back to have them re-charged, and everyone would be using morse code.
The first voice broadcast in the world was in 1906 and that is still not even 100 years ago, if even barely not. FM (Frequency Modulation) Was not inven
Deregulation (Score:2, Informative)
Deregulate IPs: That way we can be more inventive with our technology rather than having someone give us permission to be on the net.
Deregulate Domain Names: Think of the expansion of the internet if we all could use www.slashdot.com!
How about the airways: why regulate who can fly where and when?
Honestly I can see some leniency but the regulations occur because we have to think about collisions. Dont come crying
Re:Deregulation (Score:2)
The reason the internet works so well is that there is an agreed upon regulated infrastructure with unregulated content.
Re:Deregulation (Score:2)
without DNS the internet would still work. But the world wide web wouldn't be so easy to use any more (http://154.23.53.43/index.html)
Re:Deregulation (Score:2)
You're right, but the IP address is also regulated by governing bodies. http://154.23.53.43/index.html only works because there is one computer with that number. There are also agreed upon standards such as port assignments, and protocols that facilitate transactions between all manner of devices.
without DNS the internet would still work. But the world wide web wouldn't be so easy to use any more (http://154.23.53.43/index.html)
Imagine how messy the internet would be without standard
Money (Score:2)
Amateur Radio
Family Radio Service
Non-Commercial Radio Broadcasting
Non-Commercial Television Broadcasting
Volunteer Fire Departments
Local Governments
Private Pilots
Sailors
Radio Astronomers
Remote Sensing and Scientific Research
Small Businesses
Re:Money (Score:1)
Re:Money (Score:1)
Jumping the Gun??? (Score:1)
We haven't even seen the long-term effects of having cell phone towers throughout an entire town, let alone, having every wannabe electronic device manufacturer fighting over who can get the most distance out of a wave freq
Where is all this spectrum (Score:2)
poppycock (Score:2)
also ,this scheme would just increase $$ for BW (Score:1)
Re:poppycock (Score:1)
IANAQP.Y
(I Am Not A Qualified Physicist... Yet)
Re:poppycock (Score:1)
That's why physicists need engineers. You know, people who actually solve the problems, instead of just thinking about them.
how about this- (Score:3, Insightful)
how about we build a nationwide 100% coverage network of towers for this and socialize its maintenance as a birthright for all americans? surely as the first high-speed, fully wireless, fully-connected nation there would be all sorts of developments that would stimulate a massive wave of growth not unlike what happened when the internet took off.
Re:how about this- (Score:2)
It strikes me now that those clammering for deregulation are either greedy b*stards out to sell inefficient, RF-puking hardware or people who actually have no idea how radio works at all, and have only the dimmest awareness of its uses.
/.finds over complicated solution to minor problem (Score:1)
Re:how about this- (Score:2)
Cognitive radio (Score:2)
Perhaps the author needs to see what research is currently going on in the area of optimizing spectrum usage. The google search [google.com] is probably a good start. With such techniques the question of freeing up the spectrum is moot.
D.
maybe SANE regulation would be good? (Score:1)
To quote: 'Dr Steve Foreman of the Met Office told the BBC: "We're in a David and Goliath situation, arguing to the ITU for the safety and humanitarian uses of frequencies against some applications with very strong financial backing."'
Does anyone really think Goliath should win in
Re:maybe SANE regulation would be good? (Score:3, Insightful)
> obvious now?
Well, as was demonstrated by Ham operators during the tsunami in the Indian Ocean, the necessity for health and safety of managing and regulating the spectrum is essential.
Physics puts some constraints on activities, and its sad to see regulatory agencies permitting commercial interests to harm services essential to our well-being. Imagine if corporate interests had managed to seize amat
Sptrum already set aside (Score:2)
6.8 GHZ: Fixed Satelite
10.7 GHZ: Fixed Satelite(above 10.7), Radio Astronomy, Space Research, Weather Satelites (below 10.7)
23.6-24 GHZ: Radio Astronomy, Space Research, Weather Satelites
In the USA at least, those spectrums are already set asaide that they talk about.
What about fire, police, ambulance, etc etc (Score:2)
yet people with even partial brain function might notice
those packs and microphones their favorite public safety officer uses. And then of course there are the ham operators who fill in the gaps when the communication system that was bought for $10 million fails in a crisis. I would be supportive on giving commercial interests a wide swath of spectrum and they could all fight to the death over it, and just le
Rent, don't sell (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Rent, don't sell (Score:2)
Spectrum isn't sold, it is licensed. While it is *rare*, it is possible to revoke a spectrum license.
The article ignores physics (Score:3, Insightful)
Let's Get With the 21st Century Already (Score:2)
Why not have an international on-line system for auctioning spectrum at various power levels at various locations for given times (with some zero threshhold for existing 2.4 GHz equipment)?
It seems to me that if a community wanted to establish a WiFi network and they're out in some rural area away from others, then they ought to be entitled to bidding next to nothing for unused spectrum in their neighborhood.
If you want downtown Manhattan during M-F, 9-5, then you need to pay, as you would if you wanted
Time to dump the word "spectrum"? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Time to dump the word "spectrum"? (Score:2)
Fortunately the nature of Ultra Wide-Band means it can co-exist with traditional RF devices, allowing for a graceful transition.
While the FCC has limited UWB devices' power output to a thousandth of what manufacturers were hoping for, Pulse-Link is doing some interesting things. Many of you have probably
While it's an opinion piece (Score:2)
Isn't most "journalism" these days? At least most political journalism. Which raises as even better question. Was there ever a time when it wasn't?
Unlimited vs Limited (Score:2)
There are other bits with radio stuff, like behaviour of radio waves at lower bands, that they tend to go farther, and are less like a "light" of 1Ghz+ bands. I would guess cellurization of bandwith would be good idea, say once someone buys bandwidth for say 1km radius they have to use
Reminds me of the various initiatives... (Score:1)
Check out WISPA [wispa.org] for one group's involvement.
I guess we'll see.
Regards,
Kory
He made a few good points... (Score:1)
"Slowly return all licensed spectrum to a Chicago Board of Trade-like commodities exchange, trading spectrum on a second-by-second basis to entrepreneurs and businesses alike. For each trade, the government could charge a 1% fee. Let supply match demand and variable cost. "
Besides there being constant scandals and corruption with that particular entity, it makes things more expensive not cheaper.
No thanks. We saw what happens with this in the energy market. Hordes of middlemen who p
Public domain and the tax on the ether we breath (Score:2)
Who told the govenment that they owned the air anyway. I cant wait for the time when we have that breath-o-meter charging us for each breath. Well more likely someone in govenment will sell th
Conspiracy Theory: It'll Never Happen (Score:2)
Re:What a non-ironic username! (Score:2)
What does need have to do with it (Score:1)
Who said "not be able"? (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Evil big thing (Score:2)