Mike,

Definitely wanted to clarify on your question/comment on colocation capacities 
for the group.

For the B5 backhaul PTP technology, colocation is in separate directional 
paths, so 4 of the B5s can be colocated sharing the same channels, but must be 
directionally coordinated, this leverages integrated 1PPS GPS+GLONASS TDMA sync.

As Fred pointed out nicely, the B5 has a fantastic aperture efficiency 
integrated antenna that is about as clean as there is out there, and the RF 
isolation techniques needed to get us to that performance.

No magic pixie dust, just great technology.

Looking to the future, for sharing the same antenna pattern/path, I absolutely 
see these capacities, but that will more be leveraged for PTMP beamforming and 
MU-MIMO technology shared across multiple clients. We’re on public record about 
the work that we’re doing with our partner Quantenna on their next generation 
technology they’ve announced for 2015 called 10G Wi-Fi. You can imagine the 
amount of compute that takes, bordering more on magic pixie dust!


Cheers!


Jaime Fink • Mimosa • Chief Product Officer
300 Orchard City Dr Ste 100 • Campbell • CA 95008 • 
www.mimosa.co<http://www.mimosa.co>

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On Aug 5, 2014, at 9:29 AM, Mike Hammett 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

>From a TechCrunch article:

The B5 backhaul radio is a piece of hardware that uses multiple-input and 
multiple-output (MIMO) technology to provide up to 16 streams and 4 Gbps of 
output when multiple radios are using the same channel.

Now I wonder if that is four radios on the same path? If so, that's pretty 
amazing.




-----
Mike Hammett
Intelligent Computing Solutions
http://www.ics-il.com

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________________________________
From: "Fred Goldstein" <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, August 5, 2014 11:21:29 AM
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Mimosa Networks New product released

On 8/5/2014 11:21 AM, Adair Winter wrote:
I didn't want to be negative nelly this morning. But that was my thought also..
I'm moving as much as possible to licensed links because I can't hardly keep my 
5Ghz PtP's running out of my data center.


The 5 GHz band is getting quite crowded, but at least this new radio seems to 
be efficient in how it uses the spectrum.  Any of these U-NII radios 
essentially transmits based on demand.  If traffic is 10 Mbps and the link is 
capable of 500 Mbps, it won't be on the air very much of the time.  So it 
doesn't need the frequency all to itself.  We are doing a lot of urban links 
and share the frequencies with all sorts of stuff, including "Cable WiFi" (all 
over, even below 5250, ugh), but it doesn't kill performance, at least for the 
type of moderate load applications (mostly cameras) we're supporting on 5 GHz.

We do most of the backhaul on higher frequencies but 5 GHz is sometimes used as 
a backup to take over during rain fade.  During the storm last week that 
brought a tornado just a few subway stops from downtown Boston, we even lost 11 
GHz links for time.  The rainfall was off the charts for the second time in a 
month.  But 5 Ghz links hardly noticed it.

Also to Mimosa's credit, it comes with a 44 cm 25 dB dish, whose narrowness 
helps with frequency reuse.  It will probably produce a lot less clutter than 
outdoor access points, or even some indoor access points that use more power 
than necessary.  (We put a NanoBridge 5G25 on a hilltop and were able to pick 
up WLANs inside office towers four miles away.) And they are petitioning the 
FCC to open up 10 GHz under Part 90 (light licensing, like 3650).


On Tue, Aug 5, 2014 at 10:16 AM, Matt Hoppes 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Oh dear.... so more backhauling noise on the 5GHz spectrum?

AF5 + Mimosa....



Matt Hoppes
Director of Information Technology
Indigo Wireless
+1 (570) 723-7312<tel:%2B1%20%28570%29%20723-7312>

On 8/5/14, 9:31 AM, Dennis Burgess wrote:
> Have to give them credit on the website. Nice look J
>
>
>
> *_Dennis Burgess, Mikrotik Certified Trainer_**Author of "Learn
> RouterOS- Second Edition
> <http://www.wlan1.com/product_p/mikrotik%20book-2.htm>”
>
>  Link Technologies, Inc -- Mikrotik & WISP Support
> Services
>
>  Office*: 314-735-0270<tel:314-735-0270> <tel:314-735-0270<tel:314-735-0270>> 
> *Website*:
> http://www.linktechs.net<http://www.linktechs.net/> 
> <http://www.linktechs.net/> – *Skype*:
> linktechs
> <skype:linktechs?call>
> */ /**/-- Create Wireless Coverage’s with 
> /*www.towercoverage.com<http://www.towercoverage.com/>
> <http://www.towercoverage.com/>*//*/–*900Mhz – LTE – 3G – 3.65 – TV
> Whitespace  */
>
>
>
> *From:*[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
> [mailto:[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>]
> *On Behalf Of *Gino Villarini
> *Sent:* Tuesday, August 05, 2014 7:49 AM
> *To:* WISPA General List
> *Subject:* [WISPA] Mimosa Networks New product released
>
>
>
> http://www.mimosa.co/home/b5-page.html
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Gino A. Villarini
>
> President
>
> Aeronet Wireless Broadband Corp.
>
> www.aeronetpr.com<http://www.aeronetpr.com/> 
> <http://www.aeronetpr.com<http://www.aeronetpr.com/>>
>
> @aeronetpr
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
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--

Adair Winter
VP of Network Operations / Owner
Amarillo Wireless | 806.316.5071
C: 806.231.7180
http://www.amarillowireless.net<http://www.amarillowireless.net/>




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--
 Fred R. Goldstein      k1io     fred "at" interisle.net<http://interisle.net>
 Interisle Consulting Group
 +1 617 795 2701

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