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Not Your Everyday School Test


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#1 ShadowFox

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Posted 29 August 2005 - 04:34 PM

SAN FRANCISCO - On a stormy day at an Argentine agricultural school, Maria del Carmen Villar stood in front of a camera that streamed her image over the Internet to a conference here ? more than 6,500 miles away.
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Such an event is hardly unusual in this era of broadband and webcams, but it was a milestone for the Instituto Agropecuario de Monte, a rural school that until recently had only slow dial-up connections that were bogged down by text, let alone video.

The school in San Miguel del Monte, 90 miles outside Buenos Aires, is one of the first test sites for a wireless broadband technology called WiMax. Now, the school's 250 students use the Internet for research in classrooms and in the fields. They've even collaborated online with schools as far away as Paris.

"WiMax is definitely changing how we do education," del Carmen Villar, the school's director, said as students worked on PCs in the background.

The demonstration showed WiMax can fulfill at least some of its many promises over the years.

It's been hyped as an affordable way to bring the Internet to poorer and rural regions around the world, break the broadband duopoly of cable and phone companies and eventually cover entire countries with seamless high-speed Internet access for viewing video, making phone calls and completing other data-intensive tasks.

Trouble is, despite years of promises, WiMax has yet to move beyond trials and carefully scripted demonstrations, including those at the Intel Developer Forum.

Skeptics question whether all the promises can be fulfilled and suggest that other technologies can solve the same problems sooner.

"Any new technology that comes out takes a while before it either fails or becomes broadly established. In that period, people can say it's been overblown," said Sean Maloney, general manager of the mobility group at Intel Corp., one of WiMax's biggest cheerleaders. "I don't think that applies to WiMax."

WiMax ? short for Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access ? is expected in two flavors. The first, known as fixed wireless, is similar to the wireless standard known as Wi-Fi, but on a much larger scale and at faster speeds. A nomadic version would keep WiMax-enabled devices connected over large areas much like today's cell phones.

Supporters say WiMax would complement and not compete with existing technologies such as Wi-Fi, the wireless networking technology now available through countless hotspots in parks, coffee shops, airports and other locales around the world.

While Wi-Fi typically provide local network access for around a few hundred feet with speeds of up to 54 megabits per second, a single WiMax antenna is expected to have a range of up to 40 miles with speeds of 70 megabits per second or more.

As such, WiMax can bring the underlying Internet connection needed to service local Wi-Fi networks.


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