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Return to Virginia Business - July 2003

Telecommunications

Welcome to Wi-Fi
A new way of wireless Net access is catching on at bars, offices and schools

by Robert Burke
Virginia Business
July 2003

Come to Williamsburg’s Casa Maya with your laptop and you can munch nachos for a couple of hours and still get some work done. The restaurant has wireless Web access that is free and fast. Owner Samuel Gamez added the perk early this year hoping it would fill some tables. “Nobody else has it, and there’s a lot of hotels and a lot of people traveling through here,” he says. He got the idea to install the system late last year on his own business trip to Texas. “I brought my laptop with me but I could never use it,” he says. “There weren’t any connections.”

That’s changing quickly. Wi-Fi, short for wireless fidelity, is in the midst of a boom, thanks largely to people like Gamez. Simple and relatively cheap to set up, Wi-Fi is sprouting quickly as thousands of similar “hotspots” pop up around the country. One estimate puts the total at 15,000 and the number is growing quickly. It’s hard to say how many are in Virginia — maybe 100 or so, often in hotels and airports frequented by business travelers or in trendy restaurants and coffee shops. Richmond’s O’Brienstein’s restaurant, for example, tells diners its Wi-Fi link will let them “browse the Internet or download corporate files during a luncheon.”

Why is Wi-Fi so popular? Because it works. It uses a radio signal sent from a small transmitter to deliver high-speed access over unlicensed spectrum, the kind used by cordless phones. Any desktop or laptop computer can be made Wi-Fi-friendly by adding wireless local area network (WLAN) hardware and software. Virtually all new machines come already equipped.

Anyone with a hard-wired broadband connection can create Wi-Fi access for as little as $200 or so. Lots of hotspots offer access for free; some charge a small fee or a per-use or monthly basis. Granted, Wi-Fi only covers a distance of about 150 feet. But that beats waiting for the emergence of other wireless technologies like Bluetooth or broadband 3G networks.

All the grassroots enthusiasm, naturally, has the big companies moving in. Santa Clara, Calif.-based chipmaker Intel announced last year it would invest $150 million in startups developing Wi-Fi technology and has in March unveiled new wireless-specific chips for notebook computers. Last December Intel joined with AT&T and IBM to fund a new company, Cometa Networks, which says it will build 20,000 Wi-Fi hotspots in 50 U.S. cities by the end of next year. And telephone giant Verizon is setting up more than 1,000 hotspots in New York City at its public pay phones and will offer the service to its current business telecom customers. There’s a lot of smaller companies, too, popping up, selling hotspot access or looking for new ways to apply the technology.

What’s not exactly clear, though, is who will make money in Wi-Fi and how they’ll do it. A few Virginia companies are taking a shot and one looks particularly strong. Dulles-based Core Communications in February announced a deal with Irving, Texas-based Omni Hotels to make Wi-Fi available in guest rooms of its 30 hotels in North America. Other hotels generally offer Wi-Fi only in a lobby or conference room. “It’s a competitive time for hotels, it’s a tough market,” says Core CEO David Giannini. “They see this as a key differentiator, and it’s working.”

Core’s previous business was providing broadband access for meeting spaces and it has worked with Omni for several years. Giannini says Wi-Fi offers an alternative infrastructure that’s a lot cheaper. “A property that would take $500,000, we can build it at $50,000 to $100,000,” he says. “That’s the real paradigm shift. Now, if you’re a typical hotel or office building it’s not going to cost you hundreds of thousands or millions to wire a building. It’s just a tremendous difference.”

A Charlottesville-based network provider sees potential in the cost-savings as well. Blue Ridge InternetWorks installs and maintains hardwire networks but has added Wi-Fi to its offerings. “Just about every installation we see has [Wi-Fi] nowadays,” says co-founder Jeff Cornejo. Though the demand is rising not every company welcomes it. A typical client: a young company moving into new office space and trying to get up and running fast and cheap. Plus, young entrepreneurs are more willing to try the new technology. “It’s the corporate bureaucracy where Wi-Fi gets stuck a lot these days because of security,” Cornejo says. “The IT guys say, ‘No way.’” But using virtual private networks (VPN) offers a reasonable measure of security, he says.

A tiny telecom firm in Southwestern Virginia is using Wi-Fi technology to overcome the lack of broadband access in mountainous areas. MTC Wireless in Wise County sells the service to a handful of businesses and residences. MTC has six transmitters on towers around the region, says owner Mike Davis. “We can do eight to 10 miles depending on the terrain,” he says. “You’ve got to have a clear line of sight and in southwest Virginia that is a challenge.”

Davis’ company is an example of just how uncertain Wi-Fi’s future is. Even he doesn’t think the technology he’s using now will last. He’s holding out for a new Wi-Fi technology designed for outdoor applications and offering a stronger, more reliable signal. “I think wireless ultimately is going to be a solution, but it’s just not there yet,” he says. “But we want to be there when it becomes a solution.”
Waynesboro-based nTelos isn’t sure Wi-Fi ever will be the answer for rural areas. This month it’s rolling out a CDMA-based system from two towers in Albemarle County that will offer broadband access over 500 square miles. “This is our rural broadband solution,” says Noel Munson, a product planner for nTelos’ Internet service. “We can take the service to areas with lower population density and still have a business model that makes sense.” Wi-Fi might work in high-density urban areas but “it’s impractical to wire up the country 300 feet at a time,” Munson says.

NTelos is planning several more towers that would extend its wireless broadband service to southern Greene County and most of Rockingham County including Harrisonburg. Though Munson dismisses Wi-Fi’s technology he says the company is thinking of adding it in some areas for current dial-up or DSL subscribers. Just like Verizon, nTelos would use Wi-Fi to hold onto current customers. “They’d be sticky users [and] much less likely to churn out” and sign on with other providers.

That might be what Wi-Fi becomes for many — something the bigger providers will adapt to keep market share. Munson calls Verizon’s installation of Wi-Fi hotspots in New York “a shot across the bow, saying, ‘We either need to control this ... and make a buck off it or it’s going to be taken from us.’” Peter Jarich, a Wi-Fi analyst for Sterling-based Current Analysis research firm says the uncertainty of the marketplace and the dominance of bigger telecoms and equipment makers will squeeze out small companies. “There’s an expectation that it will be difficult for these smaller folks to survive on their own,” he says.

And while the current gold rush surrounding Wi-Fi is good for the technology, says Core’s Giannini, it’s bad for companies who believe there’s enough gold for everyone. “I think a lot of service providers will fail” because there’s not enough revenue to divide up, he says. “Wi-Fi is simply an infrastructure alternative. That’s all it is. There’s no magic.” Its biggest impact could be in efficiency and productivity applications. United Parcel Service, for example, has spent $120 million for wireless networks at its distribution centers to track packages. The company says it’s seeing a 35 percent gain in productivity.

Maybe that’s where Wi-Fi will dazzle. “The more interesting stuff is the small innovative players that are going to come up with the productivity tools” for back-office uses, Giannini says. “And that’s why you want the gold rush, so people will take risks they wouldn’t otherwise take.” One way or another it sounds like Wi-Fi will make a connection.

Return to Virginia Business - July 2003


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