Martin, Page push white spaces
By
Stephen Lawson
,
IDG News Service
, 11/06/2008
- Share/Email
- Tweet This
- Print
Google cofounder and President of Products Larry Page and U.S. Federal Communications Commission Chairman Kevin Martin acted
as a tag team promoting unlicensed "white spaces" networks on Thursday, appearing together at the Wireless Communications
Association International conference in San Jose, California.
On Tuesday, the FCC approved rules to allow new wireless devices to operate in unused television spectrum, the so-called "white
spaces" that Google, Microsoft and other companies have pushed as a new frontier for broadband over the objections of broadcasters.
Google's Page said the ruling can help pave the way for widespread fast Internet access that "just works." If wireless broadband
were ubiquitous, Google could make 20 percent to 30 percent more money from its core search advertising business, Page said.
But he said part of the motivation is to improve people's lives through better coverage.
"I think the debate is, 'Is this going to be really useful, or really, really, really useful?'" Page said during a news conference
where he and Martin discussed the white-spaces initiative.
Martin said the FCC foresees white-spaces access boosting Americans' productivity by giving them fast access to information
in more places.
Both expect the use of these frequencies to unfold much the same way Wi-Fi did, with consumers and service providers finding
their own uses for white-spaces devices and setting up ad-hoc networks and public hotspots.
Page said vendors are already working on chipsets for white-spaces products, and he hopes to see significant progress on commercial
devices within 18 months. To save time and effort, developers can and should reuse a lot of the technology built into the
IEEE 802.11 wireless LAN standard, Page said.
The U.K. and other countries are also looking at white-spaces broadband, but Google is putting a lot of effort into the U.S.
market partly because the country is big enough to drive economies of scale, Page said. He looks to the roughly US$5 price
of Wi-Fi chips as a model for a technology that could become cheap enough for wide global use.
Google, a stranger in Washington, D.C., not long ago, is working more closely with the FCC, both men said. In fact, Google
was instrumental in introducing the ideas of geolocation and a database of TV stations' coverage areas, which will be key
tools for preventing interference when devices work in the unlicensed white spaces, according to Martin.
Earlier on Thursday, Martin told the conference that his agency is about to consider a set of rules that might open the door
to more high-speed mobile services, such as WiMax, across the U.S.
Martin said he will circulate in the next few days a proposal for coexistence between satellite radio and networks licensed
under a system called WCS (Wireless Communications Services). His intent is to balance service opportunities with concerns
about interference, he said in a speech at WCAI.
Such a plan has been a long time coming, according to Paul Sinderbrand, an attorney with Wilkinson Barker Knauer LLP who represents
WCAI. WCS licenses were issued in the late 1990s but have not been used significantly, partly because concerns about interference
with satellite radio have reduced their usefulness, he said.
The IDG News Service is a Network World affiliate.
Comment