Archive for May, 2009
NEW YORK CITY’S NEW BROADBAND NETWORK COULD BE MODEL FOR FIRST RESPONDERS
Local governments everywhere should pay attention to what is happening in the Big Apple
Last week, the New York City Department of Information Technology and Telecommunications (DOITT) and Northrop Grumman announced that the NYC Wireless Network (NYCWIN) — a high-speed, mobile data network announced in 2006 — is now citywide and serving multiple government agencies, from first responders to city workers needing email access.
The city deployed TD-CDMA technology from IPWireless. Northrop Grumman built and now operates the network on behalf of the city. It initially was designed and engineered to improve public-safety communications, but has evolved to serve multiple agencies and applications, supporting more than 19 municipal departments and more than 50 discrete applications.
First responders have the ability to access fingerprints, mug shots, city maps, automatic vehicle location information and full-motion streaming video in a mobile environment as the DoITT and the NYC Police Department are working to install wireless modems in 1,800 patrol vehicles. For instance, the network carried live video feeds after the US Airways plane landed in the Hudson River.
The transportation department is able to remotely manage traffic lights. The water department uses the network for automated water meter reading, while the sanitation department takes advantage of automated vehicle location and monitoring with alerts for sanitation and refuse agencies. This all happens without disadvantaging public-safety communications, said John Hambidge, chief marketing officer with IPWireless.
He said the quality-of-service mechanism incorporated in the network allows traffic to not only be prioritized by user but by type of application as well. For instance, a first responder’s data traffic will always have priority over web traffic. And a video feed coming from an incident scene can be prioritized over other traffic.
Could this be the model for how other municipalities can build first-responder broadband networks?
Hambidge said IPWireless has spent a lot of time educating other cities about the multi-agency network approach and expects some cities to announce similar plans. Because so many agencies are impacted and can realize cost savings by automating city services like meter reading, the initial cost of such a network shouldn’t be as frightening as one might think, Hambidge said. Moreover, there may be an opportunity for some federal stimulus money that is earmarked for broadband deployments in underserved areas to come their way.
"When the New York City announcement first came out (in 2006), the price tag scared a lot of cities," Hambidge said. "Half a billion dollars is a lot for smaller cities. But we’ve been convincing them that this can be built effectively."
I immediately thought of the governments that are now asking the FCC if they can build early on the 700 MHz airwaves that currently are licensed to the Public Safety Spectrum Trust (PSST). Tired of waiting for a new plan to emerge after the original public/private network operator plan didn’t pan out — which would have paired public-safety’s spectrum with the commercial D-block in the band to form the spectral foundation for a nationwide shared network — the city of Boston, the state of New Jersey and the Bay Area cities of San Francisco, Oakland and San Jose are chomping at the bit to have mobile broadband services.
In an interview last week with Urgent Communications, PSST Chairman Harlin McEwen spelled out a number of hurdles to an early buildout. Namely, there aren’t any technical requirements for 700 MHz public-safety broadband networks at the moment. Until technical standards are developed, early network buildouts would be risky for local and state organizations.
"You don’t know what it’s going to cost you, if you go down the wrong path," he said. "If they pick WiMAX, and the decision is that the national network is going to be based on LTE, they’re going to have to change everything," McEwen said.
My bet is that the public-safety community follows the Long Term Evolution (LTE) path, which most of the world’s major operators are deploying as their fourth-generation technology. While the technology is not ready today, TD-CDMA is. And the platform is fully upgradable to LTE, giving public safety the economies of scale it seeks for technology investment.
NYC’s network operates on 10 MHz of licensed spectrum in the 2.5 GHz band obtained by the city via lease agreements with Sprint Nextel and Trans Video Communications, owned by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn. But IPWireless has designed equipment for the 700 MHz band. In fact, it’s already working in Germany, where T-Mobile has deployed the technology.
Hambidge said TD-CDMA can work in swathes of either 5 MHz or 10 MHz. It’s likely that initial spectrum allocations in the 700 MHz band will come in the form of paired 5 MHz swathes. WiMAX can operate in that amount of spectrum, but the more significant broadband speeds come when it operates in at least 30 MHz of spectrum.
Interestingly, NYC’s mobile broadband network already is an example of what Verizon Wireless and AT&T Mobility are proposing. Both companies want the D Block given to public safety, which then would pair it with its own airwaves in the band to give the sector 20 MHz of spectrum it could use to build broadband networks for first responders. Regional or local licensees in the public-safety sector could solicit commercial operators via a bid process to construct networks — built to a national standard to enable interoperability — that likely would try to leverage existing infrastructure, which would save enormous time and money.
As with anything this complex, the devil is in the details. But for those first responders that simply cannot wait for broadband — which is probably the majority — NYC’s deployment deserves a close look.
Maxis launches FastTap service
UNTIL recently, you may have had to fumble in your wallet or handbag to get your credit card when making a purchase, or your Touch ‘N’ Go card on arriving at a toll plaza or when exiting a car park.
You would no longer have to do so if you sign up for Maxis’ FastTap call plan, which features an all-new Nokia 6212 Classic mobile phone that acts as a Visa credit card and a Touch ‘n Go card.
The new scheme, launched last month, makes Malaysia one of the world’s first countries to use NFC (Near Field Communication) – a wireless communication technology which enables data exchange over a 10cm distance.
Users can “tap” the NFC-embedded mob-ile phone with corresponding devices such as credit card dongles and toll payment machines, use it to order a movie ticket or even share data between computer peripherals or other NFC-embedded mobile phones.
Maxis senior vice president Dr Nikolai Dobberstein said: “Over 30% of Maxis’ revenue comes from data services such as 3G video calls or internet surfing by subscribers.
“Therefore, we strongly believe that NFC technology can revolutionise the entire industry.”
“The entire project took us three years – to find the perfect partners and to make it happen.
Besides Nokia, we are thankful for the support given by Visa and Maybank, as well as other partners such as Touch ‘n Go and Cassis which provided security for the transactions made by our customers,” he said.
At FastTap’s launch, Nokia NSE business development senior manager Jarkko Sevanto provided an introduction of life in the fast lane withNFC technology.
“It provides users with fast, secure and convenient service,” he said.
“For example, if you are at the movie theatre and you wonder whether the movie suits your taste, you just have to tap your mob-ile phone at a kiosk there and it will then download the movie trailer for you.”
What’s more, Sevanto said, the technology saves the hassle of menu navigation when it comes to file sharing between mobile phones and computers as all that is needed is a tap that connects both devices.
What if you lose the phone?
Call Maxis customer service as soon as possible to deactivate it, which will also terminate the credit card and the Touch ‘n Go service, Dobberstein said.
The user may choose from two types of postpaid call plans – the Value Plan 150 or Value Plan 80.
Value Plan 150 offers a Nokia 6212 Classic phone for RM499 on a 24-month contract and for RM699 on a 12-month contract, while under Value Plan 80, the phone will cost RM699 and RM799 respectively.
The Nokia 6212 Classic is a quad band mobile phone that comes with a two-megapixel camera with flash and 8X zoom, two-inch 16.7 million colour screen and 22 megabytes of built-in memory, and supports micro SD cards with up to four gigabytes of memory.
GSMA receives ITU World Telecommunications and Information Society Award for its work on Child On-Line Protection
Rob Conway, CEO, GSMA was today, 18 May 2009, presented with the ITU World Telecommunications and Information Society Award at the eminent World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) awards ceremony in Geneva. The award is presented each year to distinguished laureates for their contribution towards building an inclusive and more equitable Information Society
“On behalf of the GSMA, I would like to thank Secretary General Dr Toure and the ITU for this prestigious nomination,” said Mr Conway, CEO, GSMA. “I am pleased that we are being recognised for the ongoing commitment that the GSMA has to not only enabling children to have a safe mobile experience but to our work combating the making and distribution of child sexual abuse content. Online child sexual abuse content has no place in our society and no place on our mobile networks.”
Mr Conway continued, “As one voice, the mobile ecosystem calls on all those not yet actively working on this issue, whether they be industry, governments or other stakeholders; to stand up and represent and protect a vulnerable sector of society; to implement the necessary legal clarity for us to take action and to allocate the time and resources which will enable us to identify and combat an insidious use of mobile technology.”
In February last year the GSMA announced the launch of The Mobile Alliance Against Child Sexual Abuse Content at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. The members of the Alliance, which includes the world’s biggest and most influential operators, stood together to stop the spread of digital child sexual abuse content.
The aim of the Alliance is to obstruct the use of the mobile environment for the consumption of, or to profit from, child sexual abuse content and halt any growth of this content. The Alliance has engaged with many other initiatives and coalitions to combat online child sexual abuse. The ITU’s Child Online Protection initiative is one of these and the GSMA has been working with all stakeholders who share the common goal of protecting children.
The GSMA has been energetically promoting the activity across its membership, providing expert input to operators, sharing best practice and technical guidance to facilitate the implementation of proactive measures against child sexual abuse content. Toolkits, technical documents and expertise are available to all operators and are also promoted through information sessions held at GSMA regional events and GSMA’s Mobile Congresses.
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About the GSMA
The GSMA represents the interests of the worldwide mobile communications industry. Spanning 219 countries, the GSMA unites more than 750 of the world’s mobile operators, as well as 200 companies in the broader mobile ecosystem, including handset makers, software companies, equipment providers, Internet companies, and media and entertainment organisations. The GSMA is focused on innovating, incubating and creating new opportunities for its membership, all with the end goal of driving the growth of the mobile communications industry. For more information please visit www.gsmworld.com.
For more information please contact:
GSMA
Daniel Lowther: +44 77 47 63 66 87
press@gsm.org
