Australian ISP Unveils WiMax Like Card 69
krispy78 writes "If you're looking forward to the day your laptop has WiMax built in and can access wireless broadband as easily as WiFi, you're not alone. But the 802.16e mobile WiMax standard is yet to be finalized on paper, and we'll be lucky to see it the first products this side of 2007. In Australia, a wireless PCMCIA card has been released that comes close to the "WiMax ideal". It appears to Windows like a regular WiFi card (no heinous login clients to run) but can pick up wide-area wireless broadband signals. The network that runs the cards ("Navini Ripwave") is apparently being rolled out in USA and other countries too."
Ireland has had this for a while (Score:5, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Ireland has had this for a while (Score:2, Informative)
Problems I had with it were:
Basically it was totally not useable for SSH and Voice-Over-IP (what I wanted to use it for). Also no good for gaming. Downloading was only possible on 'good' days.
And yes, I wasn't very close to the transmitter
Seconded (Score:1)
That said, I suspect part of the problem is Irish BB's implementation of Ripwave - even their premium services have severe problems, so who knows? The Aussies may luck out.
Re:Seconded (Score:1)
IBB apparently (TV commercial) recommend putting the modem next to the computer which wasn't sufficient in my case. If you have the opportunity (and you can't switch to another provider altogether) I wo
Broadband (Score:1)
This is what I'm told the situation was like in Dublin last year (ca. middle of 2004), anyway. And I remember from being there in '99-'00 that it was easily as bad - there was essentially no such thing as broadband and the fees for dial-up were outrageous.
That's some range! (Score:5, Funny)
That thing must really have an amazing range!
Australian Angle (Score:1)
If this technology was being trialled by an ISP in any other country, the story would primarily be about the technology, maybe with a
Re:Australian Angle (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Australian Angle (Score:4, Funny)
Yeah, but we run into problems, because the endianness switches once you are south of the equator.
Re:Australian Angle (Score:1)
Re:Australian Angle (Score:2)
Re:Australian Angle (Score:2)
Yeah, but they're not as good as those one you guys have. We have to turn our monitors upside down to get a decent picture, for example, and all the electrons flow around the machine backwards.
Re:Australian Angle (Score:3, Interesting)
Maybe someday Australians won't suffer from cultural cringe [wikipedia.org] and feel the need to wince whenever their country is mentioned in public.....
Re:Australian Angle (Score:1, Funny)
"Cricky would you look at the bullet"
Re:Australian Angle (Score:2)
Re:Australian Angle (Score:1)
We also wince when your country is mentioned.
(Though not so much as we do 'their' country, ugh.)
Re:Australian Angle (Score:1)
Re:Australian Angle (Score:3, Funny)
I think the submission only makes such a big deal out of it because it must have been really tough to develop this while fighting off dingos and kangaroos and crocodiles and throwing boomerangs around and playing didgeridoos.
Re:Australian Angle (Score:2)
if you throw a boomerang and it doesn't come back,
what do you call it?
.
.
.
a stick
I love that joke. Ya, I know, I need help :-)
Re:Australian Angle (Score:2)
Yeah cool. (Score:4, Informative)
Also good for test when at a client site. Wireless broadband is the greatest!
Great Things About Australia (Score:2, Funny)
2) John Howard knows how to take care of the muzzie extremists before they strike.
3) We will phase out analog TV before the USA.
4) Topless beaches.
5) 3G phone systems. How's that UTMS going you AT&T/Cingular tards?
6) Topless beaches.
7) It's far from America and even further from England.
8) Car accidents are called "smashes"
9) Drunk driving is called "drink driving"
If you live anywhere else, WAYSA?
Re:Great Things About Australia (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Great Things About Australia (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Great Things About Australia (Score:1)
Re:Great Things About Australia (Score:1)
Lack of info amidst marketing barrage (Score:5, Informative)
This device works across a wide range, from 2-6ghz. WiMax, being part of the 802.16 spec, can hop all around that range.
So then, I have question for the better informed (considering that any real information on Navini's site is very effectively obscured under a deluge of marketing babble). Does this device support the accessing of 802.11 networks as well? The article summary seem to infer it: [the card] appears to Windows like a regular WiFi card... Also, (from TFA) the card's hardware includes a range of Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGA) and Digital Signal Processing (DSP) chips. Does this mean it COULD support 802.11 with a change of firmware? I imagine this functionality would be welcomed by many.
Re:Lack of info amidst marketing barrage (Score:1, Informative)
The article summary seems to imply it. You seem to infer it.
Re:Lack of info amidst marketing barrage (Score:2)
infer (n-fûr)
v. inferred, inferring, infers
v. tr.
1. To conclude from evidence or premises.
2. To reason from circumstance; surmise: We can infer that his motive in publishing the diary was less than honorable.
3. To lead to as a consequence or conclusion: "Socrates argued that a statue inferred the existence of a sculptor" (Academy).
4. To hint; imply.
Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)
Another DoCoMo ? (Score:3, Insightful)
And how well could it work on an open platform - like GNU/Linux or FreeBSD. I use two laptops on and off, borrowed from office. They run FreeBSD or RHEL (and are re-imaged on return). I'm still wondering whether I should get a wireless WAN card [financialexpress.com] for India.
For those who want wireless broadband now (Score:5, Informative)
Got it in the UK too (Score:4, Informative)
I for one (Score:1)
Re:Got it in the UK too (Score:2)
I've been trying to get this service (I live in central London), and despite the Now salespeople flogging it in my local shopping centre for the last month, you can't actually get it in my area.
The salespeople actually use Vodafone 3G PCMCIA cards to demonstrate it.
Range? (Score:2, Interesting)
If the range is the same as iBurst I don't see much improvement. Only pricing will make a difference.
Re:Range? (Score:1)
Obligatory Windows Sledge (Score:4, Funny)
What's particularly impressive about Unwired's card over all other solutions is that it doesn't need any godawful proprietary software clients to log in to the network.
Except Windows.
(Australian wireless) (Score:1)
iBurst (flash warning) - http://www.iburst.com.au/ [iburst.com.au] are implementing rollout now.
Discussion form for wireless isps here:
http://forums.whirlpool.net.au/forum-threads.cfm?f =18 [whirlpool.net.au]
confused (Score:2)
Also, in physics there's measurement called "skin depth" which is the distance a wave travels in a non conducting medium before it's power level drops by 1/e or about 1/3 and for which the formula is (wavelength/2*pi). The higher the freq the greater the drop
Re:confused (Score:1)
Assuming a constant modulation and coding scheme, the data rate is proportional to the bandwidth. The bandwidth for 10-66GHz is typically 25MHz or 28MHz, which is wider than the 802.11a/b/g standards.
Re: (Score:1)
What About Common People? (Score:1)
"News"? You're kidding, right? (Score:1)
I'm confused how all of this is "new".
Re:"News"? You're kidding, right? (Score:2)
Re:"News"? You're kidding, right? (Score:1)
iB
I've used one in the US (Score:1)
Navini has a couple dozen, maybe 100, maybe more installations in the states. They use an antenna array, proprietary and disturbingly expensive multi-antenna controller, and some patented version of orthoganal beam forming. They also only sell one unlicensed product in the 2.4 range. The rest are from 2.1-2.3, 2.6, and a 5.x t