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<- Previous Message | Next Message -> Thread Index Re: [isp-wireless] 2155-2180 MHz spectrum anyone?
I kinda like the idea myself. we could in effect provide a "tier" of free service, a standard that could roam among locations with a "standard" pricing plan among all wisp's for the cost plans. and a negotiable charge for roaming charges per wisp. The cellular companies have been doing it for years. I dont see any reason we could not? ----- Original Message ----- From: "Daniel Mullen" <daniel.mullen@....ca> To: <isp-wireless@isp-wireless.com> Sent: Friday, May 23, 2008 7:36 PM Subject: [isp-wireless] 2155-2180 MHz spectrum anyone? Spectrum for free, maybe, if you can roll out nation wide. Would this not be a great time to talk about a national cooperative bid by the WISP industry to get its own spectrum, at ZERO cost and to be on a level playing field of sorts against the biggest telecom operations in the country? From: http://www.rcrnews.com FCC may auction another 25 MHz of spectrum 'AWS III' licensee could be required to provide free service By Jeffrey Silva Story posted: May 23, 2008 - 2:40 pm EDT Federal Communications Commission Chairman Kevin Martin scheduled a vote on rules for another major spectrum auction, one that would encompass 25 megahertz in the 2155-2180 MHz advanced wireless services band and require the winning bidder to offer free broadband service under an aggressive build-out schedule. "We've had a variety of proposals that had come into the commission originally where some people wanted us to give them the spectrum," said Martin in a briefing with reporters. The FCC chief said a vote may be held at the agency's upcoming June 12 meeting, but added it is possible the measure could be approved before that date. Martin said that a licensee of the 2155-2180 MHz spectrum (referred to as the AWS III band) would have to provide a free service tier, and would have to reach 50% of the population in four years and 95% of the population by the end of the license term. Martin also said the agency will initiate a separate rulemaking on what to do with other AWS frequencies. The FCC earlier this year auctioned 62 megahertz of 700 MHz spectrum, raising almost $20 billion. It is unclear whether the FCC would hold the AWS III auction later this year, and if that auction will affect the agency's plans to re-auction of the 700 MHz D Block. The D Block - whose rules currently call for a public safety-private sector partnership via a national license - was not claimed in the 700 MHz auction because no bidder met the $1.3 billion reserve price. Interestingly, Martin's plans for the AWS III spectrum draw on the free wireless broadband access proposal first advocated by M2Z Networks Inc. The FCC dismissed M2Z's application for spectrum, and the company subsequently challenged the FCC ruling in federal appeals court. Meantime, Reps. Anna Eshoo (D-Calif.) and Christopher Cannon (R-Utah) are pushing a bill to foster deployment of a national, family-friendly wireless broadband network with open access. Their bill envisions one auction of airwaves in the 2155-2180 MHz band and another auction involving yet-to-be-determined spectrum below 3 GHz. The mobile phone industry generally opposes conditions on spectrum auctioned by the FCC. To unsubscribe via postal mail, please contact us at: Jupitermedia Corp. Attn: Discussion List Management 475 Park Avenue South New York, NY 10016 Please include the email address which you have been contacted with. Copyright 2007 Jupitermedia Corporation All Rights Reserved. To unsubscribe via postal mail, please contact us at: Jupitermedia Corp. Attn: Discussion List Management 475 Park Avenue South New York, NY 10016 Please include the email address which you have been contacted with. Copyright 2007 Jupitermedia Corporation All Rights Reserved.
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