Abstract :
Everybody´s talking about the wireless Internet, but what on earth is it? And who´s building it? The trade press is adrift in a bewildering jumble of acronyms from the cellular telephony industry that claim to point the way. Or maybe dozens of LEOS (low-earth-orbiting satellites) will furnish the wireless Internet. Or perhaps it´s really two way pagers on steroids-powered by WAP (the wireless access protocol). Proceeding from first principles, the author believes that none of the well-known technologies will, in the end, provide the wireless Internet. Instead a dark-horse technology-a “pure Internet” system based on technology familiar from a multitude of wireless local-area networks (LANs)-has good grounds to prevail. The author discusses which RF frequency bands should be used for the Internet, the use of nanocells to build the network, and gives a brief outline of the economics involved
Keywords :
Internet; economics; radio access networks; wireless LAN; RF frequency bands; economics; nanocells; wireless Internet; wireless LAN; wireless local-area networks; Base stations; Earth; Ground penetrating radar; Internet telephony; Lasers and Electro-Optics Society; Multiaccess communication; Physics; Radio frequency; Satellites; Web and internet services;