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6.15. SR 05-19-1997
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6.15. SR 05-19-1997
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Planning December 1996 <br /> <br />Wireless World <br /> <br />Telecommunications <br />technolo~,,--and local <br />government response-- <br />is at a crossroads. <br /> <br />By William Covington <br /> <br /> ompanies hoping to succeed <br /> in the highly competitive <br /> ~ communications arena must <br /> ~k ~, have good relations with lo- <br />~ cai governments. It's the lo- <br />cal governments, after all, that supply <br />e franchises and permits needed to <br />_ sliver cellular and paging services and <br />ot?.er communications products. <br />'So far, those relations have been pretty <br />good. Local governments want the ben- <br />efits that new forms of communication <br />can bring, and wireless service providers <br />understand that cities and towns must <br />exercise some control over what comes <br />into the community. The challenge is to <br />keep things on an even keel at a time of <br />rapid growth in the telecommunications <br />industry. <br />A sign of that growth is the auctions <br />held oh August 26 by the Federal Com- <br />munications Commission. On that date, <br />the FCC began the second in a series of <br />auctions that will allow more companies <br />to offer wireless communication services. <br /> <br />How it works <br />The term wireless communications re- <br />fers to a family of communication de- <br />vices that can send and receive messages <br />instantly--by voice in the case of cellular <br />telephones or alphanumerically in the <br />case of pagers. Soon, too, computer users <br />· .411 be able to send and receive data via <br /> 'eless modems. <br /> One Of the newer forms'of wireless <br />voide communication is the personal com- <br />munications service. PCS is similar to a <br />cellular phone but operates at different <br />radio frequencies and requires, twice as <br />many communications facilities. In peg- <br /> <br />ing, the lat- <br />est innovation is narrowband messaging. <br />This service allows customers to acknowl- <br />edge a page by pressing a button on their <br />pagers. Soon they will be able to receive <br />short text messages as well. <br /> Wireless communications typically re-. <br /> <br />buildings, on billboards, atop wooden <br />utility poles, and on metal poles. Lattice <br />towers are considered a last resort. <br /> <br />On the ground ', <br />Several considerations determine where <br />cell sites are Placed. The first is that the <br /> <br />quire three components: a device [tele- site must be close enough to the caller to <br />phone, pager, or portable computer); a._receive the-signal generated by a half- <br />cell site/radio link; and a switching of- watt portable phone. The second cons/d- <br /> <br />rice. Every major metropolitan area has <br />one or more switching offices, where <br />calls from cell sites are processed. The <br />calls are then sent out through the tele- <br />phone system. When a wireless customer <br />calls another wireless telephone, the <br />switching office locates the cell site clos- <br />est to the party being called and connects <br />that caller via that cell site. Over 90 <br />percent of all wireless communications <br />still start or end on a traditional tele- <br />phone system {called "wireline' in the <br />business}. <br /> When a call is made, the device seeks <br /> <br />eration is that cell sites must be located <br />far enough apart to eliminate cross-talk. <br />The third is interference. Tall buildings <br />and large bodies of water, for instance, <br />can distort a signal, precluding high-quality <br />service. - <br /> Finally, according to the industry, good <br />service requires that there be at least one <br />cell site in every neighborhood, normally <br />within every six to eight square miles <br />depending upon terrain and number of <br />customers. <br /> Wireless communications companies <br />can share cell sites. They cannot, how- <br /> <br />out a radio link, also known as a cell site. ever, share the radio equipment that sends <br />Radio links capture the signal, process it ' and receives calls and information. Should <br />Iverifying that the caller is a legitimate:':': ~o ca~riers share a site, normally 10 feet <br />customer), and send it om Most cell sites i 'of'~l~'a-ce m'usi seParate th'~ antennas be- <br />include one or more antennas, a struc- ' longing to each ~ompany.'A~ the'number <br />ture to support them, and a building to '. of custo~ners increases, so must the num- <br />house radio and computer equipment:., b~:'~)fcell .... s~tes.' 7.H°wever;..'-'. ........ the. ..... additional <br />Cell sites can be located on the roofs of site~'typically are' smaller and easier to <br /> <br /> <br />
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