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WiMAX for Job Creation and Economic Development

Published by: Mind Commerce Publishing

Published: Jun. 1, 2009 - 78 Pages


Table of Contents


Introduction

CLEARTMThe Disruptor

The 3 A's of the WiMAX-enabled Business

Access

IMS Vision

The Impact of WiMAX on Business Connectivity

Why WiMAX as access technology?

Objections to WiMAX

WiMAX is not Wi-Fi

WiMAX Components

WiMAX Base Stations

Outdoor CPE

Indoor CPE

USB, Laptop card or similar

Femtocells

Relationship of WiMAX Range and Throughput for Business Applications

Link budget

Limitations of the laptop

MIMO

MIMO as interference mitigating technology

Adaptive Antenna System (AAS) as Interference Mitigation Technology

Why 3G cannot compete with WiMAX

Fixed vs. Mobile WiMAX

Why backhaul is important

Wireless Backhaul Considerations

Comparisons with Fiber

Spectrum Considerations

Access Conclusion

Applications

Relationship of Connectivity and Productivity

Applications: Generic

T1/DS3 Substitute = converged voice + data

Voice (telephony): the "killer app" for WiMAX

Disaster Recovery

Combating high telecom costs and/or Building Diversity

Applications: Specific-Industry Verticals

Retail

Banking

Healthcare

Transportation

Utilities

Case study: City of Corpus Christi

Agriculture

Construction

Petroleum/Energy

Applications Conclusion

Affordability: WiMAX in the Business

Service provider or "roll-your-own"?

Savings on Existing Expenditures

Strategies: A) subscribe from WiMAX service provider or

B) Deploy own business network

Custom Built WiMAX Network for Business Private Use

Base Station and Business Density

Summary Affording WiMAX

Conclusion and Projections

"Landline migration" to "T1 migration"

Clear: a portent of things to come

Assumptions




Tables


Table 1 3G is technologically inferior to WiMAX



Table 2 Comparisons of wireless backhaul with other options



Table 3 Comparisons of wireless vs. fiber optic cable as backhaul solution



Table 4 WiMAX-related spectrum



Table 5 What businesses buy for data solutions



Table 6 WiMAX prioritizes VoIP packets over data packets for maximum QoS



Table 7 What does it cost your business per hour to be down?



Table 8 Availability figures in terms of downtime per year



Table 9 Generic applications for business WiMAX



Table 10 Cost comparisons of WiMAX and other forms of access for business telecommunications



Table 11 Hypothetical comparisons of legacy telco servic prices to that of a CLEAR-like WiMAX service provider



Table 12 OPEX savings CLEAR-type service vs. legacy IT



Table 13 Hypothetical CAPEX for a WiMAX network to service 100 gas stations



Table 14 Hypothetical OPEX for gas station chain using WiMAX as substitute for telco services



Table 15 Telephone companies are losing 7% of their landline subscriber base every year










Figures


Figure 1 WiMAX offers a broad range of business IT applications at highly competitive pricing and very flexible access

Figure 2 The 3 elements that comprise a telecommunications network: Access, switching and transport (backhaul)

Figure 3 Legacy "stovepipe" infrastructure cannot easily offer more than one service

Figure 4 IMS allows a subscriber to access any service on any device using any form of access

Figure 5 Progression of networking: from mainframe to WiMAX

Figure 6 WiMAX performance parameters make it an excellent business technology

Figure 7 Wi-Fi serves a coffee shop or home. WiMAX serves a city

Figure 8 WiMAX nomenclature: base station and subscriber station

Figure 9 WiMAX base station and antenna combinations

Figure 10 Outdoor CPE provide a superior link budget and QoS for business subscribers in office buildings

Figure 11 Some indoor CPE incorporate Wi-Fi access points and telephone ports

Figure 12 USB access devices make WiMAX access more convenient to use

Figure 13 Femtocells provide indoor coverage for WiMAX subscribers. This is especially important for use in RF unfriendly buildings

Figure 14 Line of sight offers better range and throughput than non line of sight

Figure 15 Link budget illustrated

Figure 16 On campus WiMAX delivers a throughput of multiple megabits per second

Figure 17 WiMAX extends employee access to the business network enabling telecommuting, hoteling, disaster recovery and other business enhancing practices

Figure 18 8x8 MIMO provides 8 times the data streams of a single antenna system

Figure 19 Another view of MIMO where multiple antennas enable a bypass of interference

Figure 20 By utilizing AAS and beam steering technologies, WiMAX mitigates interference .

Figure 21 Backhaul supports WiMAX base stations, which in turn support home office internet/corporate intranet access

Figure 22 Networking and the work place: the geographic expansion of business telecommunications services

Figure 23 WiMAX services negate the need for legacy telco T1 services

Figure 24 WiMAX supports business voice and data

Figure 25 WiMAX as disaster recovery solution or alternative to telephone company T1 or DSL services

Figure 26 Destroyed telephone central office, 140 West Street, NYC, across from World Trae Center, September 15, 2001

Figure 27 WiMAX can enable shopping for best price on telecom services

Figure 28 Retail business-wid adotpions of WiMAX could ad more intelligence in the business making them more profitable

Figure 29 WiMAX can replace a number of disassociated telecommunications services providing savings to the retailer both in telecommunications and manpower

Figure 30 Use of WiMAX to network ATMs could save banks on networking costs while providing portability for those machines

Figure 31 Mobile health car vans or buses could be networked via WiMAX

Figure 32 The networked ambulance could boost life saving efficiencies for ambulance services

Figure 33 WiMAX in support of the delivery industry

Figure 34 WiMAX can be used to read a wide variety of utility meters

Figure 35 Farmers need real time information, literally, "in the field"

Figure 36 WiMAX may serve as a substitute for satellite based services for farmers

Figure 37 Agriculture implement dealer in Pomeroy, Iowa using pre-WiMAX broadband wireless services

Figure 38 WiMAX provides almost unlimited telecommunications services for job sites where ever they may be

Figure 39 Problem solving and solutions inverted pyramid

Figure 40 Potential telecom expenses for which WiMAX is a substitute and potentially reduces or eliminates some expenses

Figure 41 An oil company can save on telecommunications by deploying an in-house WiMAX network

Figure 42 Technology adoption curve

Figure 43 WiMAX as a substitute for telco landline, T1, DS3 services is an S-curve; it consumes telco market share

Figure 44 WiMAX will consume 7% of the per year of the US business telecommunications market per year beginning in 2010



Abstract

The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 allocates $4 billion for the BTOP for which job creation and economic development are key components. How will grant writers explain the connection between broadband, job creation and economic development? This paper provides detailed explanations on the connections between WiMAX and applications that make industry verticals more efficient. Those projects alone create jobs while driving economic development.

Key Findings:
  • Job creation is at the heart of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009. Public investments in broadband technology provide for immediate job creation but what about WiMAX applications that make industry verticals more efficient? The deployment of those networks creates jobs as does the integration of WiMAX into those industry verticals such as banking, retail, banking, construction, agriculture and transportation.
  • The "killer app" of WiMAX is anything that can make an industry more efficient. This paper explores specific applications for specific industries and is intended to provoke thought with BTOP grant applicants as to WiMAX applications that will make their WiMAX network sustainable.
Audience:
  • Economic development agencies
  • Public sector IT directors
  • Incumbent telecom operators
  • WiMAX solution providers
  • Vendors for WiMAX and/or the enterprise industries
  • Enterprise personnel responsible for computing and communications
  • Investors in the WiMAX space and/or enterprise automation


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