Wireless broadband to help cover gap in rural France
Small business and residential users as far afield as the Pyrenees mountains in southern France could soon enjoy broadband connections thanks to a partnership between France Telecom (FT) and Alvarion.
FT has begun testing a new broadband wireless access system from Alvarion as part of the French carrier's drive to bring high-speed Internet to most of France by 2005, the Tel Aviv, Israel, equipment vendor said Thursday in a statement.
In Loudenvielle, a remote village in the Pyrenees, FT is testing the wireless broadband technology in a local museum. Visitors can access the Internet from laptops as they move around the museum.
The Alvarion system is a point-to-multipoint technology that enables broadband service providers to connect users in remote areas relatively easily and cost efficiently, according to Alvarion. The system deployed in France uses VSAT (very small aperture terminal) satellite technology to backhaul traffic, it said.
FT expects wireless broadband access technologies such as Alvarion's to help it extend service to areas where the terrain or distance makes it too expensive to deploy wireline infrastructure, said Valerie Martin, director of FT's research and development laboratory in a statement.
Indeed, interest in low-cost wireless access technologies appears to be growing, as operators not only in developed countries seek to plug holes in their fixed-line DSL (Digital Subscriber Line) coverage, but also as developing nations search for ways to close the digital gap.