A couple of thoughts. First, it's not fair to compare 24GHz to 2.4 or even 5Gig 
range due to the wave length. You will get 2.4GHz bleed through walls, windows, 
etc. VERY close to a 5GHz transmitter you may get some bleed through walls but 
not reliably. 24GHz will not propagate through objects as it's millimeter 
wavelength. That coupled with the fact it is a directional PTP product, you 
will be able to get a good amount of density of 24GHz PTP links using the same 
frequency in a small area (downtown for instance).

Another point, the GPS on the airFiber will also allow for frequency reuse to a 
point. I would like to see smaller channel sizes though. I hear it will be a 
software upgrade down the road. I'm shocked the old Canopy guys didn't code 
that into the first release to be honest.

Dylan

-----Original Message-----
From: Owen DeLong [mailto:o...@delong.com] 
Sent: Thursday, March 29, 2012 7:18 PM
To: Oliver Garraux
Cc: NANOG list
Subject: Re: airFiber (text of the 8 minute video)


On Mar 29, 2012, at 12:33 PM, Oliver Garraux wrote:

>> Also keep in mind this is unlicensed gear (think unprotected airspace). 
>> Nothing stops everyone else in town from throwing one up and soon you're 
>> drowning in a high noise floor and it goes slow or doesn't work at all. Like 
>> what's happened to 2.4GHz and 5.8GHz in a lot of places. There's few urban 
>> or semi-urban places where you still can use those frequencies for backhaul. 
>> The reason why people pay the big bucks for licenses and gear for licensed  
>> frequencies is you're buying insurance it's going to work in the future.
>> 
>> Greg
> 
> I was at Ubiquiti's conference.  I don't disagree with what you're
> saying.  Ubiquiti's take on it seemed to be that 24 Ghz would likely
> never be used to the extent that 2.4 / 5.8 is.  They are seeing 24 Ghz
> as only for backhaul - no connections to end users.  I guess
> point-to-multipoint connections aren't permitted by the FCC for 24
> Ghz.  AirFiber appears to be fairly highly directional.  It needs to
> be though, as each link uses 100 Mhz, and there's only 250 Mhz
> available @ 24 Ghz.
> 
> It also sounded like there was a decent possibility of supporting
> licensed 21 / 25 Ghz spectrum with AirFiber in the future.
> 
> Oliver

I don't think it's an FCC issue so much as 24Ghz has so much fade tendency with 
atmospheric moisture that an omnidirectional antenna is about as effective as a 
resistor coupled to ground (i.e. dummy load).

The only way you can get a signal to go any real distance at that frequency is 
to use a highly directional high-gain antenna at both ends.

Owen




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