kenglish said:
I read an interesting article a few months ago, where an engineer figured out just how much bandwidth it would take in a typical big city like Chicago, to provide JUST audio service to every commuter via internet.
He figured that, even with frequency re-use, you'd need ALL the available spectrum (not just what is allocated) and have towers every couple of thousand feet, to make it work. So, it sounds like spectrum is NOT unlimited.
I think broadcasting (one sender to an unlimited number or receivers) and internet (one sender per receiver) can, and should, co-exist.
THANK YOU for making a real world case for the argument aganst moving to a point-to-point information system dependency.
The efficiency of 50kw =
47 horsepower as to information transmission to over half the country at night and 250 miles daytimes is unparalleled
yet in the digital mode. We're talking about unlimited receivers vs a whole lot of repetitive physical structures the "wireless" made unecessary.
We COULD have had audio from another continent over wired receivers if WW1 had not intervened. And listened to an Opera from Vienna live, if we'd
developed the tech we already had then to do it. But Radio took over, with the advantage of a "ready built" infrastructure courtesy of the laws of physics.
Spectrum is most defintely not unlimited, and the greater dependency on higher frequencies makes repeaters more necessary.
I see many apartment buildings here in Chicago with cellphone antennas just above apartments and I shudder.
It is essential that broadcast continue to exist, and in the best interests of all, determine a ratio that recognizes and respects the efficiency of broadcast.
I use this laptop wirelessly when not at home, but at home I plug in to the network
because it works better 'coz there's less busy-stuff going on.
It is a total waste of radio spectrum to use radio to do something wired (or fiber-optic'd) does better.
No matter what wavelength you do it at.
The internet still needs to learn from broadcast and move toward its efficiency where a server could group out 10 or 10000 feeds, trunk them, and release the 9999 feeds worth of bandwidth again. But this takes more interactivity than exists now. NO, the tech exists now. The competetive model of our
cell phone network will not permit such an efficient usage of BW. I'm sure a law or 3 would need to be changed to permit full through-pass of service.
And as that is where cellphone providers seem to compete ( in coverage) I wouldn't expect they'd much like any such improvement.
I remember back in 1990 in Sydney Australia, that the analog cellphone, instead of saying something useless like Cingular, instead said something useful, like Randwick or Coogee and told me which tower ( and Neighborhood) I was "in" as far as the phone was concerned, and it changed a lot.
The competetive model is holding back on the bandwidth because they're going to dole it out like a premium channels package.