Technology has so far managed to take the Internet into the wireless world, but if consumers really want to take advantage of it away from their home or office they are stuck seeking out hot spots. WiMAX could change all that, delivering a new technology that promises to do what the cellphone did for phone calls.
Anyone frustrated with having to wait minutes to load a web page or navigate a website on a mobile device such as a BlackBerry or cellphone will be quick to recognize the potential of the new technology.
Unfortunately, to date Canada's major telecom carriers have been slow to get on the WiMAX bandwagon. But elsewhere, the technology is starting to get some prominent endorsements.
Tuesday, Cisco Systems Inc. said it is snapping up privately held WiMAX equipment maker Navini Networks Inc. for $330-million (U.S.), a move analysts said provided the latest validation for the new wireless network technology.
Companies betting on WiMAX, including Canadian telecom equipment maker Nortel Networks Corp., insist there is pent-up demand for a speedy wireless Internet service.
They point to the popularity of social networking sites such as MySpace and YouTube and their limitations on cellphones today. YouTube, for example, may only offer 50 instead of thousands of clips for viewing.
"I believe this really is the promise of bringing mobility to broadband," Richard Lowe, Nortel's president of carrier networks, said in an interview.
With their cameras and video players, cellphones are advanced consumer electronic devices. Yet the networks they run on haven't kept pace with the speed, bandwidth and low prices available on land line Internet connections.
The fastest cellular networks offer speeds of around one megabit per second (Mbps). WiMAX promises to be up to five times faster, comparable to connections at home.
Soon, consumers could be constantly connected to the Web whether at home or out with friends, just as they don't hesitate to reach for their cellphones to make calls today.
WiMAX "will make the Web truly a part of our everyday life, like electricity," said Michael Rogers, the Futurist-in-Residence for The New York Times.
But the technology hit a roadblock recently when the chief executive of its most prominent promoter, Sprint Nextel Corp., left amid concerns that his vision for mobile services was flawed. Some have speculated that could delay or deal a serious blow to WiMAX before it takes off, though Sprint says it remains committed to rolling out the network in the second quarter of 2008.
Many other carriers around the world are staying on the sidelines and watching what happens to the Sprint guinea pig. Rogers Communications Inc. admits it won't be on the "bleeding edge" and spearhead development by working out the bugs and getting equipment makers on board.
In-Stat analyst Daryl Schoolar describes Sprint as the "linchpin" in bringing WiMAX to market. If Sprint says it wants to move forward, or kill it all, "their actions can reverberate globally."
It's a gutsy and costly move. Even though Sprint already owns a cellular network, it will spend as much as $5-billion building a separate WiMAX system. Its strategy is simple: cellular for voice calls and WiMAX for Internet.
Sprint decided to go with WiMAX since it will be three or four years before another emerging wireless broadband technology, called long-term evolution or LTE, offers the chance for fast mobile Internet access.
"This horse is out of the stable and it's running around the track and there's not another horse in sight," Barry West, Sprint's chief technology officer, told the recent WiMAX World conference in Chicago.
Mr. West envisions a world where WiMAX chips are everywhere. Customers will own a number of WiMAX devices, including cameras and handheld Internet devices.
