Roetzen wrote:
It is not true that only 1% of the spectrum is actually used.
Then how come we mostly have pretty crappy bandwidth on the 3G networks in most countries when trying to use that technology in densely populated areas?
What's the point of them advertising for 7.2mbit/s download speeds when they mostly cannot even deliver 1mbit/s reliably without constantly disconnecting people?
What is the level of intensity of the spectrum that is established by health organizations is the safe level that one may have at any specific place? How much of that is actually used?
I am not talking about the % of the spectrum that companies have exclusive rights to use. I am speaking about the % of the spectrum that is actually in use at 100% of the capacity that is allowed to be used.
Roetzen wrote:
Frequencies for commercial use are auctioned. There is lots of money involved. Millions if not billions. Why would a company invest millions in frequencies that they never intend to use?
How about the reason being AT&T, Verizon, Deutche Telecom, Vodafone, Orange and a few others have 1€ trillions of revenues per year using their current spectrum monopolies for Mobile phones and their cables for Internet that they own exclusively for ADSL, Cable and Fiber Internet networks.
Let's consider that an Auction might cost them $10 Billion to own the exclusive lease at underterminate length (no specified end to the lease), which means they basically buy that spectrum and own it forever.
If they are making $500 Billion per year selling Voice, SMS and ADSL in their current monopolistic situation, why would they have any incitement to build yet another new network on 700mhz to provide everyone with cheaper and even better bandwidth?
Roetzen wrote:
Even if they wanted they could not. With the assignment comes the condition that it is actually used for the purpose it was assigned.
The fact that they provide a little coverage in all the places that they were supposed to, does not mean that every consumer can buy $10 per month access to 10mbit/s wireless broadband with very high monthly bandwidth usage limits and no obligated contracts.
The carriers just provide minimum coverage, they are allowed to advertise it as being 7.2mbit/s or 16mbit/s wireless broadband, while not even providing 1/10th of that bandwidth reliably, there is absolutely no rules setup by the Governments for the quality of that bandwidth, the quality of that coverage.
Roetzen wrote:
It is not because of regulation by the FCC, it is because frequencies are never shared by competing telecoms and the transmitters for cell phones are subject to strict discipline and coordination. That is only possible if the frequency assigment is exclusive and all control for that assignment is in one hand.
If unlicensed use works relatively well for wifi, then why not on the 700mhz as well. This is the only suggestion and question I am asking in this thread.
Considering that wifi was implemented by engineers without setting up any basic rules for roaming, for interoperability, for non-interference, for coverage, for bandwidth throttling, for unencrypted HTML-login standards, for billing/pricing of the roaming. All those things do not exist for wifi because the Governments have never regulated wifi, so the only such standard we have is a private initiative like FON which works reasonably well for 1 million Foneros, but still has a very long way to go to reach blanket coverage with wireless broadband for everyone in the world.