Clearwire: Just Say No
Fred Weston
fweston at gmail.com
Fri Jan 26 16:45:37 PST 2007
For what it's worth, it's easy to get out of a ClearWire service
commitment. I'm not sure if this is actually in their contract, but
it seems to be the policy of my local ClearWire office. When I moved,
my ClearWire service no longer worked, even though I was supposedly
within range of one of their towers, so they canceled my contract.
You could probably just as easily tell them you've moved to an area
with no coverage to get out of yours.
Obviously I'm not suggesting you break any laws to get out of a
contract you signed while knowing the risks, but if they insist you
keep the service and you find it unusable it could be your only
option.
ClearWire has been blocking VoIP for some time. If I recall
correctly, they were one of the first companies Vonage got into it
with about blocking SIP ports. When I had ClearWire about two years
ago there were no provisions for unblocking the ports, consider
yourself lucky they've at least changed that much.
On 1/26/07, Yournet at hotmail.com <yournet at hotmail.com> wrote:
> Clearwire's current products are not 802.16 based. They are NextNet (now
> part of Motorola) OFDM-256 FFT TDD based. I would be leary of investint in
> a PCMCIA card because of performance issues and the fact that they will
> eventually shift to 802.16e-2005 (WiMAX universal mobile version) based
> system similar to that to be deployed by Sprint-Nextel next year. None of
> Clearwire's current products will work or are upgradeable to WiMAX. There
> will be at least two vendors who provide end use CPEs/SUs, USB dongles and
> PCMCIA cards that will work at both 2.3 GHz and 2.5 GHz frequency bands
> used in the U.S., Korea, Singapore, Taiwan, and other regions as well as
> being able to operate (given roaming agreements of course) between other
> operators in 2.5 GHz band.
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Tom Marshall" <tommy at home.tig-grr.com>
> To: "SeattleWireless Talk List" <talk at seattlewireless.net>
> Sent: Friday, January 26, 2007 12:47 PM
> Subject: Re: Clearwire: Just Say No
>
>
> >> I was interested in ClearWire but until they have a PCMCIA Card I can
> >> slip in my laptop It's just silly to cal it city wide access.
> >
> > Given the issues I'm having with the signal at 0.25 miles from their
> > towers,
> > I doubt that would be possible. Even if you did get a signal at certain
> > places, the next issue would be roaming (handoff). Then, when you got
> > that
> > working, you would have to grovel to support and hope they opened the
> > ports
> > you need for your secure VPN solution...
> >
> >> Although, apparently the BestBuy Geek Squad have one in those bugs hey
> >> drive around so they can access the internet from anywhere. That is kind
> >> of cool. The A-Team would have had one in their van I'm sure. ;-)
> >
> > Perhaps, perhaps not. All that would really be necessary is a power
> > converter with 2 outlets and an 802.11 AP to re-broadcast the signal.
> > Their
> > 802.16 modem only has two connections: DC in and ethernet out. Nothing
> > else
> > except 5 LEDs for a crude signal strength indicator -- no management or
> > status information at all.
> >
> > Overall, I think you would do almost as well with a decent omni antenna on
> > your car roof to find open 802.11 ap's. If you want a reliable wireless
> > signal, the only hope at this point is still high priced cell service.
> >
> > --
> > Bulls do not win bull fights; people do.
> > People do not win people fights; lawyers do.
> > -- Norman Augustine
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> >
>
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