News Intel and Pipex roll out Wimax

Discussion in 'Article Discussion' started by WilHarris, 5 Apr 2006.

  1. WilHarris

    WilHarris Just another nobody Moderator

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  2. FredsFriend

    FredsFriend What's a Dremel?

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    I'm not bothered about Wimax for my broadband really, what i am interested in is broadband for my router and laptop. I'm so bored of the signal degrading after a couple of walls and reducing the throughput to sweet FA
     
  3. Swafeman

    Swafeman Minimodder

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    How fast is it again? Do they have their own speeds from pipex or do they just offer ADSL to hard to reach places, e.g 2 or 8mb via air not cable?
     
  4. mclean007

    mclean007 Officious Bystander

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    I think WiMAX will be a great way to get broadband to rural areas. I'm not so sure why it's being pitched as a solution for cities, however. Sure, it will be great to have citywide wireless coverage when you're on the move, but it seems stupid to replace fixed line broadband with it.

    My issue is that, surely, even if it's 100 Mb/sec, that bandwidth will have to be shared among all the users sharing a channel, which, if you propose to roll out WiMAX as a viable broadband solution for fixed users, will mean many, many users in dense urban areas. Daft tbh, when there are high speed point to point channels available in basically every city. I'd rather see widespread roll-out of affordable ADSL2+
     
  5. yahooadam

    yahooadam <span style="color:#f00;font-weight:bold">Ultra cs

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    doesnt say where it will be

    how fast

    or the cost to the consumer

    it doenst bother me much, living out in the country a bit i allways get the short straw when it comes to technology (as if britain on the whole wasnt bad enough)

    still stuck on 1mb BB down here, cant even get cable

    So its not like it will affect me, i doubt they will put in any system in the near future (IE if they did, itl prolly take then 10 years or somthing)
     
  6. Callum

    Callum What's a Dremel?

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    I'm running on 512 kbps :p

    So count yourself lucky ;)

    Doubt they'll be bringing this to Penang, Malaysia any time soon, but then hey! I'm off to Canada in a few months :D
     
  7. DaSuperFly

    DaSuperFly What's a Dremel?

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    I think a big benefit of WiMAX is getting broadband without a phone line at the same time. There's also the fact that even if you within range of ADSL, you never know what the actual phone infrastructure is like in your area so you could be limited to 1 Mb connection forever on ADSL.
     
  8. Swafeman

    Swafeman Minimodder

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    well, we use the phone line too

    currently on 512 and exchange getting upgraded to 24mb adsl2 next week, so no need for wimax tbh :D
     
  9. Kipman725

    Kipman725 When did I get a custom title!?!

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    This is good for humanities future as there isn't enough copper to build traditional wired networks in LEDC's and so when they develop and try to build networks of their own things like wimax will help alot. :)

    Also wimax means the ending of BT's monopoly over ADSL in the uk so hopefully lower prices :)
     
  10. riggs

    riggs ^_^

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    So, it may help folks in rural areas, but they're still gonna be the last people to get it (by which time BT might finally pull their finger out and replace all the awful lines).

    Public WiFi really doesn't bother me - I can see how it could be helpful for people wanting broadband on-the-move...but that's not something I actually need.
     
  11. DaSuperFly

    DaSuperFly What's a Dremel?

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    BT are considering buying a license that would allow them to provide WiMAX as well. Replacing the telephone infrastructure is unfeasible. For the same reasons why you don't have cable everywhere, it's expensive and slow to place or replace cables under developed areas.
     
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