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Losing the EVDO Challenge to Satellite Internet
By Dan Baldwin, Sales Director,
ATEL Communications
Inc.
This past July I submitted a
blog posting about how I had pitched a small construction
company the idea of using a
cellular EVDO router to provide broadband Internet access to
three computer users in a construction trailer that couldn't get
DSL or cable Internet access. While the demo didn't go all that
well the customer did say he'd buy the router and the solution
if I could find a router that could use his
EVDO card that had a USB connection because he said his
company wouldn't pay for a second EVDO card. I probably should
have given up on the customer, but I couldn't resist the
challenge (and promised my boss I wouldn't spend more than 15
minutes a week pursuing the opportunity.) I even set up a Web
page at www.ATELevdo.com
to showcase the the cellular EVDO Internet access solution.
The challenge with the customer's
request is that all the EVDO card routers on the market only
accept a standard PCMCIA EVDO card. While
"caddies" have been created to adapt the new mini-EVDO cards
to the standard EVDO PCMCIA slots on the EVDO routers, I could
find no such converter to make it possible to use the customer's
USB EVDO card on any EVDO router.
Last week though, thanks to Kitty
at
Internet Connectivity Group, I did find Top Global's new
MB6800 router that is purported to accommodate a USB EVDO
card. Happy that I would be able to solve the customer's
problem, I gave him a call only to discover that they had
elected to go with a
WildBlue
satellite solution to deliver broadband Internet to his
construction trailer. I was floored.
The customer said that he didn't
think that the cellular EVDO bandwidth throughput where his
trailer was located was going to be good enough to serve the
Internet needs of three people. I asked him if he already had it
installed because due to the latency challenges (count to three
after every click) associated with satellite Internet access few
businesses I knew subscribed to a satellite solution if they
could get anything else. (I had used Hughes' DirectPC in my home
office a couple years ago for Internet access while I waited for
DSL or cable to arrive. Latency is real!)
I advised him to do a Google
search of "wildblue latency" to confirm for himself that latency
would be a real issue for him. I also suggested that he take
another look at the fixed wireless solution I had originally
suggested even before the EVDO demo. (He had previously blanched
at the $199 price for even 768k Internet access with SkyRiver, a
San Diego fixed wireless provider we represent.)
So I still haven't sold anything
to this small San Diego construction company. But the long, slow
(and almost entertaining) case study of how one construction
company tries to get Internet access to three users in a remote
trailer continues. I'll keep you posted.
Dan Baldwin is founder of
TelecomAssociation and director of sales at
ATEL Communications Inc. Founded in 1985, ATEL
is the largest NEC telephone equipment dealer in Southern
California. Baldwin works with ATEL's carrier services division
that acts as an in-house telecom master agency to sell network
services (including SIP trunks and other specialized IP
services) to ATEL's embedded base of 2,000 phone equipment
customers. For more information about ATEL's carrier services
division please visit
www.ATELcc.com . TelecomAssociation is a membership
organization founded in 1995 that serves the information &
communication needs of its 2,500 members who distribute telecom
and related services to businesses.
Got an experience that
complements this blog posting? E-mail printable submissions to
Dan@ATELcc.com
.
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