Broadband everywhere within "weeks"

bin3

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Wireless technology makes universal internet access possible and ineffective laws should not stop us says Canadian guru. SOME of the constraints making it expensive to do business in SA and deterring foreign investment could be resolved within three weeks by using technology smartly says Canadian hi tech guru Leonard Brody. People in every town or city could be given high speed internet access and cheap telephony by blanketing the cities with a wireless network. It would use WiMax, a microwave technology providing long range broadband coverage and last mile connectivity from the telecoms backbone to a customer's premises. All it needs are wireless base stations attached to roofs or telephone posts on the outskirts.

Brody proposed the idea at an ITWeb conference in Midrand this week. The broadband issue can be solved in three weeks he said. The technology exists to bring in 15 WiMax boxes and put them on telephone posts around the city to give you broadband wherever you want. That would rapidly benefit the economy and boost the accessibility ofinformation he said. The digital divide would not be eliminated by desktop computers, but by cellphones and other mobile devices using high speed wireless connectivity he said. When delegates pointed out that they would be breaking the law by setting up a wireless network with out the necessary licences Brody declared SA's regulatory environment ridiculous. The current rules were unnecessary and government had to create the right conditions for entrepreneurs to do what they needed to do he said. Brody also questioned whether SA deserved its reputation as an entrepreneurial nation when its hi-tech companies were not already implementing such innovations. Silicon Valley technicians rarely stood back to ponder legal implications but went ahead and let the policy makers and standard setters keep up if they could he said.

Reports by LESLEY STONES, In SA providing basic telephony is still a monopoly enjoyed by Telkom and the cellular operators while providing internet access requires a value added network services licence. The government's telecommunications policy is an absolute disaster agreed Chris Hart, a senior economist at Absa. It's beyond repair and we need to design a regulatory environment for the 21st century. Punitive regulatory structures will chase industries out. The policies were so bad that companies were setting up operations in Botswana and delivering their services to SA to circumvent the local laws he said. That was a reference to Black Earth Communications which will broadcast satellite television to SA from Botswana.

Broadband needs to be as common as electricity Africa could
become one of the most advanced areas of the world if we are prepared to buy into cutting edge equipment right from the start said Hart. This year government will pass new legislation to relax the licensing conditions and widen the range of technologies that service providers can use Communications Minister Ivy Matsepe Casaburri is due to introduce some changes next month but the industry is unsure of howwide reaching they will be A policy allowing blanket broad band coverage could help SA win international deals from companies looking to place their call centres or research and development plants offshore Late last year some international players came to SA to explore the possibilities said BMI TechKnowledge analyst Mark Walker To win their business against stiff global competition SA must earn a place as a technology hub through improved regulations Some cities are already piloting wireless technology trials but in a far more limited way than Brody advocates Some local authorities are creating wireless networks while others are adapting existing power lines to voice and data services Knysna is testing Wi Fi technology a smaller scale version of WiMax It will use the network to give residents free local calls and cheap high speed internet access But on the whole South Africans are showing an uncharacteristic lack of imagination and under standing about the potential bene fits of broadband said Viv Crone chief technical officer ofSpescom

Broadband connectivity was as essential as clean water and electricity because it promised enormous social and business benefits It would revolutionise the way business was conducted and change the lives ofordinary people said Crone It could give a small rural business the same audience as a large business in a commercial centre. Education could be taken to the poorest and most remote communities and people could work from home cutting down on fuel use traffic congestion and pollution Instead of recognising the benefits however people were squabbling over their share of the market If greed and market dominance were set aside SA could extract the maximum benefits from technology to build a better future for everyone Leonard Brody Crone believes.

Business Day, Feb 23 2006, reports by Lesley Stones
 
All true, given sufficient capital, no government regulations standing in the way of deploying the spectrum, no need to do environmental impact studies and the technicians available to roll it out. And all of those we don't have, except maybe the capital.
 
pope24 said:
And all of those we don't have, except maybe the capital.

There is capital out there, plenty of it. Think Venture Capitalists. It is just a question of having a viable business model to ensure ROI.
 
I have said it before and many others too. It is said here again. We must ignore some of the stupid communications laws made by our government. Simply smile, nodd and move on. We have people making laws that don't even know how to use a calculator properly...

To hell with them! :)
 
antowan said:
I have said it before and many others too. It is said here again. We must ignore some of the stupid communications laws made by our government. Simply smile, nodd and move on. We have people making laws that don't even know how to use a calculator properly...

To hell with them! :)
I don't see why we don't do this. It has worked in other countries...
 
We need electricity to start with

Jokes aside... I'm interested to know if we have the skills to do it. both business and technical.

Do you think we have the skills in South Africa to roll out WiMax in three weeks?
and maintain it ofcourse....
What would happen if a company thought "ineffective laws should not stop us"so with the Capital just setup 15 WiMax boxes and wave a magic wand and we all have Internet connectivity.

I think they would be closed down very quickly. oh yes I wonder if someone mentioned to the "Canadian guru" that the WiMax network has to connect to some other internet connect which is owned by a monopoly.

I would love it to happen.. and it will.... it's just i'm getting old waiting.
 
I think certain key facts are maybe missed. Let's ignore the fact that I really, really NEED a lower ping on my WoW to rule Battlegrounds ...

SOME of the constraints making it expensive to do business in SA and deterring foreign investment could be resolved within three weeks by using technology smartly ...

Let's just focus on that for a moment ... What would happen if Someone sets up enough WiMax boxes, not in the already broadband enabled areas, but blanketing the areas where, well, most people dont have electricity anyway.

Now if this could make enough of a difference, give enough people an opportunity to do anything - Just putting up call centers ran from some generator, could this not jumpstart a HUGE part of our economy ? It should be in the Constitution - "You have the right to broadband access. Proper broadband, not as defined by Telkom ... "

My thoughts are that should the general population, not just us Web-literate people, but actually the workers, unions, etc, really become aware of

* How easy it is to provide access to information
* How it is being denied to probably 95% of the population { broadband, not that 3gb 386kb crap, I'm talking 8MB+, 30GB+ Cap if any, no port shaping, etc, what First Class Nations have }

Would not a strong enough voice be heard that not even the Great Big White Fertility Quanitity Surveyor of a company be put in place once and for all ?

What about starting a campaign, some chain letter type thing [ Sys Admins, please ignore this ;-) ]; but just calculating the average cost of education in each country, loosely based on Telecoms costs - How much would you need to pay in London to download enough to educate a Grade 2 pupil ? How much in South Africa ? etc, etc.

Anyway - Actually I'm just rambling, have been so frustrated for so long seeing how well SA could do and how, well, it's not. Image the systems we could write, intelligent agents scanning the web, downloading multimedia to your desktop, searching for correlations and giving you your own personalised News show in the morning, telephone booths around every corner, 2-way cost free conference calls, 3d imagery at sport events, virtual reality, the medical possibilities ... Oh, wait, I still need to pay my Telkom bill ...
 
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