Noteworthy news from the private side
From time to time, vendors tell us of activities on the private side of the wireless world that offer insights on the many things the technology can achieve. One of the most interesting of these recent epistles came from Motorola which headed the consortium of companies that built the mesh network for the Pan American Games in Rio de Janeiro. Games over, the companies are giving the infrastructure to the city to continue running valuable public safety applications.We are muniwireless.com (emphasis:
Perhaps the most heart-warning of these epistles this summer came from Motorola which worked with a consortium of companies in deploying its MOTOmesh network for the Pan American Games, held last month in Rio de Janeiro. Games over, the companies are giving the infrastructure and applications that were used to the city.
This is a marvelous gift to Rio‚Äö?Ñ?Æa ready-made muni network that, according to a Motorola news release, “allowed for a computer-aided dispatch of emergency calls‚Äö?Ѭ?The police also had access to an intelligence system that analyzed data coming from the different sites throughout the city designed to detect illegal activity. The police vehicles, already equipped with computers supporting satellite location systems, were able to receive information such as vehicle records and drivers licenses, all while in motion and without the use of voice radios.”
As PennState’s Prof. Jack Carroll noted in an opinion piece we highlighted earlier today, mobility opens all sorts of possibilities for new applications.
Applications being run on two other private networks that recently came to our attention demonstrate the efficiencies that mobile applications also achieve. These stories come from private companies but, until case studies on muni apps start rolling in, they are useful in gaining a vision of what happens when wireless apps are put to work.
Ray Cammack Shows (RCS), for instance, put a Firetide mesh to work to support its mobile carnival midway shows. A press release from Firetide tells how the group can quickly set up and break down its mesh to support a “digital midway” that provides eTicketing, inventory management, and time card tracking for its more than 500 employees.
In a very different setting, the Falkirk Mining Company, a subsidiary of North American Coal Corp., a large U.S. coal producer, deployed a Strix mesh to carry critical logistics data communications to moving coal trucks and bulldozers across a 25 square mile surface mine in North Dakota . According to a Strix press release, “coal trucks are linked to an innovative GPS system which uses 802.11 to relay logistics information to the central office network, which tracks vehicle locations, active and planned mining areas, and time sensitive operations data.”
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Nice piece Esme, we need more of these success stories to offset the image problems we are experiencing in our Metro Mesh markets due to failures of some of the first generation deployments, poor designs, overhyping of vendors products and politicos buying into Free everything.
We need to keep reminding people that this is a business and it needs to be Carrier Grade and someone needs to make money or the concept will fail
Jacomo
We are trying to highlight all of the useful applications for wide-area wireless networks. The mainstream press just focuses on public access, but I’ve been saying since 2003 when I started Muniwireles that there are so many uses for this technology. People should go beyond public access and use these networks intensively for all kinds of apps.
About free access: it’s very strange to me that cities are not willing to pay for broadband infrastructure (wired or wireless) but they’ll find hundreds of millions of dollars overnight for a sports stadium.
I will post very soon on my top 10 muni wifi peeves from vague RFPs to insane login procedures.