
Motorola touts 'geolocation' is the answer
Published: 12 August 2008 08:34 GMT
Field tests to determine whether the Federal Communications Commission should open up unused TV spectrum for wireless broadband services are getting mixed reviews as different methods for avoiding spectrum interference are being tested in the real world.
In the most recently concluded tests, Motorola claims its geolocation-based technology got high marks for avoiding interference with existing spectrum holders, while a field test of spectrum sensing technology at a major sporting venue proved that technology is not up to snuff in avoiding interference with broadcast-based microphones.
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The FCC has been conducting these tests of different prototype devices to see if companies can develop products that use buffer spectrum between licensed broadcast channels. This spectrum, known has "white space", sits between broadcast TV channels in the 150MHz to 700MHz spectrum bands.
Several technology companies, including Google, Microsoft and Motorola, have been lobbying the FCC for more than a year to open up these channels, which would provide between 300MHz to 400MHz of unlicensed spectral capacity throughout the country that could be used by anyone.
These tech companies believe this spectrum, which is ideal for sending data wirelessly over long distances and penetrating through walls, can be used to enhance or create new wireless broadband services. And they say they can develop products and services that use this spectrum without interfering with services running on licensed spectrum in adjacent bands.
Some of the 700MHz spectrum was already auctioned off by the FCC earlier this year. And companies such as Verizon Wireless, which won a big chunk of the spectrum, plan to use it to build a next generation wireless broadband network.
But incumbent spectrum licence holders such as TV broadcasters and mobile phone operators, including Verizon Wireless, say wireless devices that access this unlicensed spectrum will cause interference in the neighbouring spectrum bands.
Over the weekend, spectrum sensing prototypes were tested by the FCC at a big sporting event in the US. Shure, a microphone manufacturer said in a press release issued Sunday that the spectrum-sensing white space devices caused "harmful interference to wireless microphones" during the live event.
Mark Brunner, Shure's senior director of public and industry relations, said: "Simply stated, the prototype devices were unable to consistently identify operating wireless microphones or distinguish occupied from unoccupied TV channels. More troubling, the devices failed to detect the presence of wireless microphones when switched on -an occurrence that takes place multiple times during any [national football] game."
Motorola, which uses a totally different method for avoiding interference, agrees that sensing technologies don't always work appropriately. That's why the company uses GPS-based geolocation technology and an FCC database of known spectrum licence holders to pick and choose when white spectrum is available.
Steven Sharkey, Motorola's senior director for regulatory and spectrum policy, said: "There's no question that the geolocation technology that was tested is reliable. But on the sensing side, it didn't always detect usable and unusable channels in different areas. These results reflected what we saw in the lab under certain conditions."
Google said in a policy blog last week before the microphone test on Saturday that the sensing technology may not work as well as some had hoped. Google emphasised that other technologies exist that can ensure there is no interference with others. And the company outlined an alternative technical approach in a proposal filed with the FCC in March, which uses geolocation technology along with beacons and/or safe harbours.
Richard Whitt, a Google policy exec said in his blog: "Taken together, these protection mechanisms remain technically unimpeachable, whether or not the Commission's current testing process produces adequate data to validate a spectrum sensing-only approach. Moreover, no WSD [white space device] will - or should -come to market unless the FCC can verify that the device does not interfere with TV or wireless microphone signals."
The FCC is currently compiling results from its testing, and is expected to release a full report of the results within the next few weeks after it concludes all field tests of the current technology.
Original article: White space tests get mixed results from CNET News.com
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