By Rupert Goodwins, 3 August 2004 08:55
NEWS Northern Ireland is to get BT's first public wireless broadband service later this year, equipment vendor Alvarion announced on Monday.
BT has signed a £500,000 deal for Alvarion's 5.8GHz BreezeACCESS VL equipment, which will be used to provide broadband services to areas outside the reach of ADSL.
BT press officer Ross Cook said: "Northern Ireland is the first place to adopt radio [broadband] and a lot of people will be waiting to see how that goes."
The service is the result of a partnership with the Northern Ireland Department of Enterprise, Trade and Investment (DETI).
"With 99.6 per cent of the country to be reached by DSL, wireless is not currently feasible as a stand-alone product without partnership funding," said Cook. "However, it is part of our strategy for 100 per cent UK broadband coverage by the end of 2005."
Northern Ireland was one of four areas to host BT wireless broadband trials, along with Scotland, Wales and Cornwall - trials in the latter two are still running and being used to investigate other technologies.
The Northern Irish service is in band C of the 5.8GHz allocation, which is currently regulated due to other services using the frequencies. By the end of the year many of these will have been moved elsewhere, freeing the band for use across the UK.
Although the current equipment is non-WiMax compliant, Alvarion says that 5.8GHz WiMax equipment is on its road map. "Come back to us next year," said a spokesperson.
Rupert Goodwins writes for ZDNet UK
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