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Sunday, January 26, 2014

Ofcom gives the go-ahead to faster broadband speeds on trains, coaches, ships and aircraft

UK telecoms regulator Ofcom has agreed to make radio spectrum available for transport operators to offer faster broadband connections to passengers on aircraft, boats, railway trains and coaches.

Each vehicle could receive a data connection of around 50Mbit/sec, providing more than 10Mbps via WiFi to an individual passenger.

The service would be offered via geostationary satellites that would connect to an ‘earth station’ on moving vehicles, rather than a conventional mobile phone signal. It’s a system referred to as Earth Stations on Mobile Platforms (ESOMPs). Frequencies in the 27.5 to 27.8185GHz band, the 28.4545 to 28.8265GHz band, the 29.4625 to 30GHz band and the 17.3 to 20.2GHz band are being allocated by Ofcom; a total 4,128MHz of spectrum.

Ofcom’s decision follows a consultation that took place last year. It’s designed to take advantage of new antenna technology that can track a satellite even when the ‘earth station’ is moving quickly.

Philip Marnick, Group Director of Spectrum at Ofcom, said “We want travellers to benefit from superfast broadband on the move at the kind of speeds they expect from their connection at home. Today’s decision means that operators of trains, boats and planes will soon be able to begin the process of making these valuable services available to their passengers.”

Earth stations on land-based vehicles won’t need a spectrum licence, although those on aircraft or ships will need to be licensed by Ofcom via the Civil Aviation Authority or Ship Radio licence as appropriate.

The new licensing regulations are expected to come into force from the summer, with ESOMPs operating on vehicles by the end of the year. It’s expected that transport providers will partner with satellite service operators to provide connectivity.

[Ofcom statement]

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1 comments on article "Ofcom gives the go-ahead to faster broadband speeds on trains, coaches, ships and aircraft"

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Tavistock Superfast Broadband

1/26/2014 7:54 PM

If anything could mock the UK Government universal minimum service target of 2 Mbps for all, then this is it. Millions will have to travel to get anything approaching decent broadband.

Particularly those from commercial roll-out areas when the easy to reach but not economically viable are easily left...

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Opinion Articles

‘The Eyes Have It’ at Mobile World Congress

James Rosewell writes:

DoCoMo are one of many network operators and handset manufacturers demonstrating innovative new products as Mobile World Congress. Our eye was caught by the employee demonstrating “Eye Controlled Earphones”. It’s a good job the ladies from the CBOSS stand weren’t walking past at the time.

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James Rosewell writes:

Monday’s Mobile World Congress conference agenda dedicated one of 4 streams to Mobile Money - Transfers, Transactions and Technology allowing all stakeholders to share experiences and debate the future of Mobile and Money.

Two types of service dominated presentations and panel discussions; Near Field Communication (NFC) technology enabling payment at traditional Point of Sale (PoS), and the Mobile Wallet replacing plastic or cash.

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‘Innovation Corner’ at Mobile World Congress

James Rosewell writes:

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Cootek.com win the prize for simplest innovation... an accurate touch screen keyboard. They’re a few months away from being ready to release the software to handset manufacturers, but the demo handsets worked very well. The keyboard assumes the user is not going to press the intended key, but in fact might miss and press another key in the same area. Based on this knowledge and an extensive dictionary of words and language context, it’s able to determine the intended word with surprising accuracy. I sincerely hope their technology will be made available for the Nexus One in the not too distant future.

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Google “Mobile First” from Eric Schmidt’s Key Note at Mobile World Congress

James Rosewell writes:

Google CEO, Eric Schmidt, presented a compelling vision of a mobile centric future. The phone has become the “high value end point” for Google services enabled by a combination of increasing handset power, mobile data networks and cloud computing. By far the scarcest resource is the bandwidth available through the mobile data networks. Google appear committed to work with Mobile Network Operators (MNO) to maximise bandwidth usage, although several audience questions suggested scepticism from the main stream mobile industry. Eric expressed a need to maintain a harmonious relationship with MNOs stating Google could not operate its service on mobile devices without their co-operation.

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The great Windows Mobile 7 conspiracy theory

Mark Bridge writes:

I like a good conspiracy theory. A good one, mind you. None of this “Funny thing happened on the way to Mars” nonsense. Oh no, not me. And, despite occasionally mirroring Jerry Fletcher by balancing a bottle on the door handle, I’ve never been inclined to publish such a theory. Until now.

You see, it’s Mobile World Congress in a fortnight’s time. Which is when the great and the good of the mobile industry – along with their mates and hangers-on – head for Barcelona. Microsoft will be there. They’re holding a press briefing on Monday afternoon. And there’s a lot of talk about Windows Mobile 7 being (unofficially) on the agenda. But where’s the evidence?

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