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Todd Watson

Clear: Why Try 4G Hi-Fi WiFi?

Written by Todd Watson
12/29/2009 5 comments
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I'm very blessed in that working for IBM, I'm able to work most anywhere that there's a working phone connection and Internet access (and often do!).

Considering that we sell technology that powers remote work, to do anything less would be downright hypocritical, don't you think?

Of course, working remotely requires a certain amount of self-discipline which, being a writer, among other things, I mostly have.

During this holiday season, I've worked a few days from the Watson Starship Enterprise (my newfangled nickname for the Monaco Dynasty 42-foot motor home where my retired parents now live full time), situated here at the Destiny RV Park just outside Denton, Texas (our hometown).

I was able to pull this off this year thanks to the generous testing opportunity of a new 4G WiMax technology called Clear.

A buddy of mine works for Clear in Austin, and he asked me if I wanted to give Clear's new 4G technology a test drive sometime, free of charge.  The Christmas holidays presented a perfect opportunity to do so.

I saw first wide-area wireless Internet technology for the first time while actually visiting Prague back in 1998, where a friend of mine was living at the time.  I think it involved big microwave towers.

I've wondered why wide-area wireless Internet access hadn't made a resurgence since then, and I suspect the landline competition from the telcos and the cable companies is certainly a key reason.

But leave it up to Craig McCaw, a godfather of the American cellular phone business and founder of Clear's parent company, Clearwire, to come up with a new solution.

Clearwire currently offers wireless broadband services in 46 U.S. markets, along with Belgium, Spain, Ireland, and others, and has a list of very interesting partners and investors which are clearly hedging their Internet bets: Sprint, Comcast, Intel, Time Warner Cable, and Google.

In November 2008, Clearwire partnered with Sprint to combine their next-generation wireless broadband businesses into a new wireless communications company, which continues to be named Clearwire.

As part of that deal, Sprint gave all of its 2.5GHz spectrum and WiMax-related assets to Clearwire, which is the entity currently offering the 4G wide area broadband service, and which is expected to be available in up to 80 U.S. markets and cover up to 120 million Americans by the end of next year.

So, that's the backstory.

Now, here's my experience:

Before the holidays, my buddy Zinc set me up with a Motorola WiMax USB Adaptor, put me in the Clear system, and we downloaded drivers for both my Macbook Pro and my Dell (so I could try it out on both machines).

Back in Austin, up on the hill (I live just south of Town Lake off South Lamar) I was constantly receiving a good eight to ten bars, and my speed tests were revealing a solid 4Mbit/s.  There was no problem whatsoever with video/audio streams, and I could safely listen to Pandora while replicating my email.

Billed as being four times faster than regular 3G access, Clear was living up to its brand promise.

Here at the Destiny RV Park, things have been a bit more interesting.  Admittedly, I'm on the margin of the small metropolis of Denton, so I didn't expect the coverage to be very good.  And I've been mostly correct.

On average, I've gotten between two and four bars (out of 10), but even that has mostly been enough to allow me to do a variety of core Internet tasks: streaming video/audio (again, with very little buffering impact); replicating email (including with large attachments); visiting numerous Websites with a great diversity of page load requirements; instant messaging (both work and personal); posting pictures to Facebook... and, well, I'm impressed.

First, I'm impressed that it works so consistently (I've really been hammering it the last two days working here).  The connection is very consistent, even at the slower speeds.

Second, I'm impressed that I don't need as much bandwidth as I would have thought I might for some of those regular tasks.  However, recognize I was NOT entering into any e-meetings and the like, which I think may have challenged my access speed here at the RV park.

It hasn't been without fail, though.  Several times, particularly in the evenings, I've tried to hit a Web page, and the "no connection" message came up in Safari, only to have it work again ten minutes later.

So, clearly (pun intended), the strength of the signal makes a big difference (as with any wireless connection).

Would I replace my current landline Internet access with Clear?  Not yet.

My Time Warner Roadrunner connectivity is too reliable and too high-speed (speed tested at 16Mbit/s download right before I left Austin for the holidays).

That said, I'm awfully enticed by the promise and ability of Clear to deliver even before their infrastructure buildout is complete.

This is clearly (there I go again) an idea whose time to come, particularly as the buildout expands and we suddenly find ourselves surrounded by more ubiquitous WiMax towers -- at least in major cities... You'll have to find another solution out in the boonies.

You can imagine no end of use cases where higher-speed wireless makes all kind of sense for somebody moving about in a metropolitan area: real estate agents, local trucking, pizza delivery guys, city workers needing dispatch services and access to online resources... the list goes on and on.

And, considering that Clear is able to offer 4Mbit/s reliably in a city like Austin, as demand increases the opportunity for more aggressive pricing kicks in, and suddenly WiMax becomes a very viable alternative to landline Internet (and hence the investments in Clearwire from Comcast and Time Warner).

Never mind the fact that there's no need for rolling up a truck into somebody's house to install all that equipment.

Clear is easy enough to install that even a techno-idiot like myself can plug in the router and install the modem/load the software, and for an additional $25 per month you can bundle an IP phone (which I didn't get to try).

That means, for the cost of about $75 per month, a user or small business could have a high-speed Internet bundle with a VoIP phone with nothing required but a power outlet and a computer to hook it into (again, assuming you're inside a coverage area).

Not bad.

And, considering the problems AT&T has been having with its data servicing for the iPhone in major metro areas like San Francisco and New York City, and recognizing that AT&T's 4G answer, "Long Term Evolution," won't be commercially available until at least 2011, I have to wonder if 4G doesn't become a viable bridge technology that starts to supplant regular telco mobile data service.

No matter its fate, it's clear to me that, assuming Clear can find its way to conveying a clear and compelling value proposition as to why one would subscribe to it versus existing landline Internet access (see earlier scenarios), then Clear has a clear future indeed.

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kerryf
IQ Crew
Wednesday January 6, 2010 9:04:23 AM
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its expensive and is very limited geographically.  if you wait another year (or less) you can get 4g on many of the cellular networks that have vast coverage.  I think clear may be cool now as the first-in but not for long.

mhhfive
IQ Crew
Tuesday January 5, 2010 6:18:47 PM
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I wonder if you really think the $75/mo fee is worth it yet?  Is there a download/upload cap?  Mobile 4G wireless sounds really cool, and it sounds a lot better than my old Ricochet card!

ferodynamics
IQ Crew
Tuesday January 5, 2010 4:45:31 PM
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Just checked Speedtest.net, says I'm getting 9.27 Mbps downloading from San Antonio.  I have the "Home" device and it's the ethernet version, not USB.  I doubt the little mobile USB antenna would work at all, because the bigger modem couldn't connect anywhere in the apartment, except for a very particular location under the window, against the wall.  I'm on the 3rd floor of an apartment near IKEA on I-35.

I suspect the modem picks up some kind of resonation from a beam in the wall that holds the windows, and the signal bounces off the exterior walls of other apartments in the complex.  I tried sitting the modem in the window but that gave me a weaker signal (2 out of 5 lights) for some reason the modem gets a stronger signal on the wall, under the window.  And not flat against the wall either, but at a slight angle off the wall I get a boost from 3 to 4 lights.  Trial and error.  

Clear sales rep (set up at Best Buy) said the USB device would not work with Linux, because he tried it on his own Linux laptop.  He said a driver is in development, maybe, but so far no word from the developer.  Regardless, the ethernet version of the modem works well, no problems with Fedora 11.  You plug it in and that's about it--just works.  I have a Thinkpad SL400.  When you connect I think it asks for a username and wants to verify your email. 

I can ssh files, dictionary port works, stream music, stream movies.  The signal is consistent, happy so far.  Maybe worth mentioning: there are at least a dozen other wifi devices "visible" from my NetworkManager applet, so I don't think there is a "bad neighbor" effect.  

Turns out I don't need to buy a router.  I set up an ad-hoc wireless network in Fedora (use the "Create New Wireless Network" wizard) now my girlfriend can connect to the Internet from her HP latop, she is using Vista.

Todd Watson
Thinkernetter
Tuesday January 5, 2010 3:43:24 PM
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Ferodynamics,

I'm back in Austin, and once again, my Clear connection is getting close to 7 Mbps...unbelievable.  I guess that's another good reason to live high up on a hill (that and the avoidance of flooding down here at Town Lake when the big rains come).

So are you using the mobile (USB device) version, or the full wireless router?  Just curious if that makes any difference on the signal strength and continuity of service.

 

ferodynamics
IQ Crew
Thursday December 31, 2009 8:06:45 PM
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I'm using it right now.  I'm in Texas too.  I saw a demo about a month ago at a Pflugerville chili fest but I still wasn't sold.  Then I heard about DataJack, Virgin Mobile, etc.  That got me researching more options.  Fry's now has a wireless data plan too, maybe, but none of the employees I talked to knew anything about it.  More competition.  Clearwire seems to have the best deal.  I was at Best Buy and they had a sales rep there and signed up.  At first it was hard to find a signal in this apartment but now I have 4 out of 5 bars, not bad.  I'm in Round Rock.

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