Illustration:James Kaczman
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What began as a plaything among technology buffs in
the United States has quietly evolved into the
fastest-growing wireless data application in the world.
All over, networks based on the IEEE's 802.11b wireless
local-area networking standard, known also by the
commercial trademark Wi-Fi, have been springing up—and
not only in businesses and other self-contained
organizations but in public places like waiting rooms
and coffee shops as well. Now, increasingly, service
companies are stringing these "hotspot" networks
together to create what could soon be the world's
largest wireless data network.
Wi-Fi communication cards for devices like laptops are
selling at an estimated 1-1.5 million per month, and
most city centers offer scores of opportunities for
people carrying equipment outfitted with the cards to
access IEEE 802.11b networks. In the central part of
Manhattan alone, in just 90 minutes, participants at a
recent hackers' convention were able to detect some 450
such networks. Picking up on a tradition once practiced
by wandering hobos during the Great Depression,
data-hungry itinerants have taken to marking sidewalks
to flag opportunities to hitch a ride in nearby
corporate 802.11 networks.
It's an annoyance for businesses attempting to secure
already busy local networks against intruders, and one
that's being addressed by evolving IEEE 802.11 standards
[see , ].But in an otherwise struggling
communications sector, it also could be a gold mine—if
only service providers can figure out ways of
standardizing access to public local-area networks
across wider areas and obtaining revenues for services
offered over those networks.
With just such prospects in mind, U.S. industry
heavyweights, including IBM, Intel, AT and T Wireless
Services, and Verizon Communications, disclosed in June
that they may soon launch a company—code-named Project
Rainbow—to provide a national Wi-Fi service for
business travelers.
While Rainbow may be the biggest project of its kind
in the United States, it's just the latest of many.
Boingo Wireless Inc., iPass Inc., and Sputnik Inc. are
among the new wireless Internet providers selling
services that let customers use wireless access points
around the country.
Europe—the new frontier?
It is in Europe, however, where the creation of
transregional Wi-Fi networks may be taking off the
fastest and where opportunities and challenges are
coming into sharpest relief. To be sure, IEEE 802.11b
has prompted some serious concern about its potential
impact on third-generation mobile technologies. The
Europeans have championed 3G cellular telephony in
global standards organizations, as a successor to its
hugely successful Global System for Mobile
Communications (GSM).
Yet Wi-Fi also stands to benefit from the fact that
GSM systems are found everywhere in Europe, which
creates opportunities for synergies, and from the
various kinds of cards Europeans are accustomed to using
to make their phone systems work to best effect. With
wireless connections and cards for user authentication
and billing, European providers are in a position to
offer secure IEEE 802.11 roaming on a continental scale.
In July, TDC Mobile, the mobile arm of Danish
incumbent telephone company Tele Danmark, signed a
contract with Erics-son to deploy a Wi-Fi system to link
with GSM. The Danish operator plans to integrate an IEEE
802.11 service into its GSM network, using mobile phones
and their subscriber identification module (SIM) cards
to deliver passwords that control access. (All GSM
phones contain SIM cards, which include the user's phone
number, account information, phone directories, and so on.)
In the central part of Manhattan alone, in just 90
minutes, participants at a recent hackers' convention
were able to detect some 450 IEEE 802.11b (Wi-Fi) networks
The integrated TDC-Ericsson system "will give the
company a lower-cost solution that shares back-office
functions and provides added security for customers,"
says Michael Ransom, a senior analyst at the consulting
firm Current Analysis Inc. (Sterling, Va.). For example,
when a user logs into a Wi-Fi network, the hub can send
a message to a GSM server, which in turn can generate a
short message back to the user's cellphone, providing a
one-time password to access a specially encrypted Wi-Fi
link.
Spotting the same opportunity, Finland's Nokia Corp.,
the world's largest maker of handsets, has developed an
integratedWi-Fi/SIM card, which also uses the GSM
network for authentication. And local GSM mobile
operator Sonera Corp. (Helsinki) is offering a roaming
service between its public local-area networks, also
relying on SIM cards for authenticated access. Sonera
argues that SIM authentication is far more secure than
relying on user names and passwords.
T-Mobile USA (Bellevue, Wash.), a subsidiary of
Deutsche Telekom AG, and the group's U.S. wireless
subsidiary VoiceStream Wireless Inc., are collaborating
closely on a transatlantic Wi-Fi/GSM system. T-Mobile
has begun deploying public hotspots in Germany and in
some European airports in cooperation with the German
airline Lufthansa AG. Since acquiring MobileStar
Networks Corp., the wireless Internet service provider
that had a service contract with Starbucks, VoiceStream
now plans to expand Wi-Fi service to more than 70
percent of the chain's ubiquitous U.S. coffee shops.
The list of hotspot providers doesn't end there, and
there's no saying where it will end. Among the incumbent
European telephone companies to have announced plans to
install public Wi-Fi hubs in recent weeks are Britain's
BT Group PLC (BT), Spain's Telefonica SA, and Sweden's
Telia AB. For example, a Wi-Fi service called HomeRun,
launched two years ago by Telia Mobile AB (Stockholm),
is already available at 450 locations in the Nordic
region and at several airports elsewhere. And in June,
Telia Mobile and the Italian unit of Megabeam Networks
Ltd. (London) signed what both companies claim to be
Europe's first cross-border roaming agreement for Wi-Fi.
The companies were running a test phase of the service
until31 August, allowing customers to roam for free.
After the trial, the companies will introduce a prepaid
tariff for roaming, said Ryan Jarvis, CEO of Megabeam.
Megabeam already operates IEEE 802.11b networks in
Belgium, Germany, the Netherlands, and the UK. It plans
to have networks—mostly in key airports, train
stations, and hotels—in all major European markets,
except for the Nordic region, where it will cooperate
with Telia, according to Jarvis.
Overcoming resistance
Few will dispute that some of Wi-Fi's growth will be
at the expense of 3G cellular systems, designed to
provide Internet access and data transfer, and the
General Packet Radio Service (GPRS), which was
visualized as a transition to 3G. As it is, GPRS has
been off to a slow start in Europe, and 3G's
introduction is way behind schedule.
In July, Spain's Telefonica—after spending around
6.5 billion (about the same in U.S. dollars) to
acquire 3G spectrum—decided to drop plans to build 3G
networks in Germany, Italy, Austria, and Switzerland.
Other operators are expected to follow.
The British consulting firm Analysys Consulting Ltd.
(Cambridge) reckons that mobile operators providing GPRS
and 3G services will lose 3 or 10 percent, respectively,
of their total data revenue to public wireless LAN
services in 2006. One reason is IEEE 802.11's superior
speed. Another, perhaps of even more importance, is
price. According to Analysys, the current cost of
transferring 1 Mb over a public network is between 0.2
and 0.4 eurocent, compared with between 3 and 38
eurocents for GPRS networks.
Yet Wi-Fi and 3G may still prove more complementary
than competitive. "Cellular-based data services will
give users seamless coverage and mobility, while
local-area services will give them high speeds in select
areas," comments Ross Pow, managing director of research
at Analysys.
Under the circumstances, Europe's spectrum regulators
have begun to open doors for IEEE 802.11. So far,
networks have for the most part been built around Wi-Fi,
which operates in the unregulated 2.4-GHz band. But IEEE
802.11a, providing higher data rates and greater
security, depends on the 5-GHz band, which is restricted
in several European countries.
The French and the British governments agreed in June
to drop their bans on using the 5-GHz band for IEEE
802.11a, and German spectrum authorities have made
concessions, too.
Vendors, including Intel Corp. and Proxim Inc., say
they're shipping IEEE 802.11a equipment to several
European countries, including Belgium, Denmark, France,
Sweden, and the Netherlands. It's still not clear,
however, if the 5-GHz band will be available all across
Europe, or anywhere else in the world, for that matter.
Provision of seamless service between IEEE 802.11 and
GPRS/3G networks could take years to achieve, says
Declan Lonergan, an analyst at the London office of the
Yankee Group. "Technological solutions for
authentication, billing, and quality of service
management must be provided before internetwork roaming
becomes a commercial reality," he noted.
Following the money
Payment schemes are still fluid in the nascent Wi-Fi
market. While some operators, such as Norway's Telenor
AS (Oslo), favor a volume-based model, others believe in
an "all-you-can-eat" flat rate. Still others favor
prepaid cards.
As long as users stay in one hotspot, billing isn't a
big issue. Once they move, it becomes one. Operators
will need to agree on revenue-sharing models.
Interconnection fees are a tricky issue in any market,
but they could trip up many of the smaller, less
experienced players in the Wild West environment that
Wi-Fi has created.