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mardi 26 juin 2007

Techno web

Departmental and End User Computing > Small-Area Networking (SAN) > Montreal to be covered in WiMax blanket









Montreal to be covered in WiMax blanket
Wireless hotspot billed as affordable alternative current services

Two Quebec-based companies plan to wrap all of Montreal under a huge WiMAX-based "WiFi blanket" by 2009.

Internet service provider (ISP) Radioactif.com and network installer Nomade Telecom Inc. are currently beta-testing a 100-square kilometer WiFi mesh they have deployed in Plateau Mont-Royal, the city's densest neighborhood. 

The partners intend to offer wireless Internet and IP telephony services to residents in the area by September.

Within two years, the companies say, their WiFi network will be expanded to cover more than 300 square kilometers, and approximately 90 per cent of Montreal's population.

Municipal WiFi networks are primarily aimed at mobile workers operating devices such as laptops and mobile phones within the city.

Such networks also significantly benefit other sectors, including the healthcare industry, emergency response departments, and crime-prevention agencies.



View from top of Mount Royal


WiMAX or Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access is a broadband wireless communication standard that enables high-speed Internet access for remote devices.
Radioactif's goal is to offer a cheaper alternative Internet and telephony service than that provided by traditional telecom companies and large ISPs.

When fully operational, the WiFi service will cost $17.95 a month for wireless Internet and $29.95 for a combo package that bundles wireless telephony and Internet access.

WiMAX at the back-end will enable Internet access speeds of up to 5 Mbps, which is comparable to what is currently offered by cable and DSL (digital subscriber line) providers.

Videotron Ltd., Quebec's largest cable Internet provider, charges the same price for the first three months, and increases the rate to $49 afterwards.

Bell Sympatico, which offers Internet through phone lines, charges $20 a month for six months and $40/month in the succeeding months. "A few big players control the market now. But our goal is to provide service at more competitive rates," said Daniel Robichaud, president of Rodiactif.

Radioactif is an ISP that resells Internet access from Bell Canada and Videotron, and in return gives these two companies a cut of its revenues.

Deciding to open up a market by itself, Radioactif collaborated with Nomade to erect a network of WiFi antennas around Montreal. A Canadian analyst believes Radioactif will use its already established community of Internet users to boost its WiFi ambitions.

"Radioactif already has a huge ISP client service base. Selling WiFi to this community will be a good strategy [for the company] to drive WiFi subscriptions and improve its site's revenues," according to Vito Mabrucco, managing director of IDC Canada Ltd. in Toronto.

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