http://weblog.infoworld.com/yager/archives/2007/04/wimax_bypasses.html

It works like this: Towerstream leases small plots of space
on the rooftops of office buildings. You'd never know it,
but that's hot real estate up there, and most of
Towerstream's early development hinged on snagging enough
rooftop space to blanket the cities it serves. When
Towerstream wins a spot on a roof, many of the buildings
have telephony facilities and hosting providers on or near
the top floors. Towerstream grabs a gigabit link from each
of them, and through the magic of the WiMax mesh, adds to
its total available bandwidth and eliminates the risk that
subscribers face when they buy their bandwidth from a single
carrier.

This isn?t a tale of a telecommunications Robin Hood. At
$500/month, its lowest-tier T-1 service (1.5 Mbps upstream
and downstream) hovers around or slightly above average
pricing for markets it serves. However, Towerstream gives
its customers three extras that can make its service
priceless. First, that T-1 includes DSL-like 3 Mbps "best
effort" service; you get up to twice as much bandwidth when
the network's not crowded. Towerstream offers a service
level agreement (SLA) that's incomparably sweet for smaller
subscribers: 99.99 percent guaranteed availability, a
maximum of 75 ms round trip to the backbone and a max of 1
percent packet loss. And lastly, Towerstream's network
assigns high QOS (quality of service) priority to VoIP
traffic, so it's practical for a business to use its WiMax
Internet service to offset its wired telephony costs.

Did I say three extras? I missed the one that's the point of
the whole story. You might recall that Towerstream buys its
bandwidth in multiples of a gigabit, which puts it in the
top tier in even the craftiest telco's book. Towerstream
chops up that bandwidth and resells it, but there's no
copper, no fiber, and no telco-owned infrastructure in the
picture. Unless Towerstream loosens the 75 ms round trip
delay and 1 percent packet loss provisions, it's promising
that even its bottom end, T-1 customers won't be tiered.

Neither wired nor wireless bandwidth can be free because the
infrastructure costs too much to build and maintain, but
Towerstream shows telcos for the carpetbaggers they are and
presents a model for escaping their clutches. 

more info: http://www.towerstream.com/

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