This is about as concise and accurate as can be said...Nice summary
Scriv. 


Patrick Leary
Aperto Networks
813.426.4230 mobile

-----Original Message-----
From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
Behalf Of John Scrivner
Sent: Tuesday, April 21, 2009 10:37 AM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Wimax 802.16d v 802.16e

Here is the quick answer:
802.16d is a fixed only technology (no mobility) which performs quite
well for delivering broadband to homes and businesses. Highly available.
Secure. More expensive, more scalable and somewhat higher latency than
similar fixed technologies based on 802.11 and other proprietary systems
similar to 802.11. Most prominently used in 3.65 GHz in the US. Heavily
used in 3.5 GHz in  international areas where no copper plant has been
installed previously. Unique feature of this technology is the ability
to provision service flows with predictable performance criteria. This
enables SLA provisioning on wireless broadband virtual circuits and many
other advantages over any other broadband platform (wireless or wired).

802.16e is a fixed and mobile platform. This is being used now in 2.5
GHz licensed band in the US and elsewhere. Very little has been done to
take full advantage of mobility in this band. More expensive to deploy
than 802.16d. Higher latency than 802.16d. This is a direct competitor
to LTE systems for cellular. If you do not hold an exclusive licensee in
2.5 GHz then this is not likely an option for you at this time.

For more input and more help take it to the memb...@wispa.org list for
paid members and we can dig into it deeper including step by step
instructions for getting your own 3.65 license and applying for
locations.
Scriv


On Tue, Apr 21, 2009 at 8:26 AM, Michael Baird <m...@tc3net.com> wrote:
> I'm researching these two technologies and Wimax in general, does 
> anyone have any firsthand experience with the two current different 
> types of Wimax, or references to the differences in the two different 
> types of technologies for broadband fixed rural deployments?
>
> Regards
> Michael Baird
>
>
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