CSIRO brings Ngara to NBN Co, regulators

 

Symmetric 12 Mbps wireless to be commercialised.

The CSIRO this week met with vendors, regulators and NBN Co to discuss potential uses of its ‘Ngara’ wireless-over-TV technology.

It invited “decision makers” to assess a prototype that provided symmetric, 12 Mbps connectivity to up to six users simultaneously.

“We can't be specific, but folks coming today and tomorrow include potential vendors, the folks in charge of the regulatory environment in which this and other wireless technologies must operate and, of course, the folks running the NBN project,” a spokesman told iTnews on Monday.

The prototype had also been demonstrated in field trials involving a single, 7MHz channel at the 645.1MHz frequency in Smithton, Tasmania, late last year.

To further the Ngara business case, the CSIRO also commissioned an unnamed third party to conduct a comparison study with a version of LTE.

According to CSIRO ICT centre director Ian Oppermann, the analysis showed that Ngara required a quarter the number of transmission towers by operating at lower frequencies.

During recent field testing from a Broadcast Australia tower in Tasmania, the prototype system operated over distances up to 16 kilometres.

“Ngara needs fewer towers because analysis shows it gets greater coverage,” the spokesman explained.

Telstra has reported LTE test results of an average of 88.1Mbps downlink and 29.6Mbps uplink at the edges of a 75-kilometre cell, and 149Mbps down and 59Mbps up in laboratory demonstrations.

While the Ngara prototype was far slower than Telstra’s LTE network, future prototypes were expected to aggregate several 7MHz channels to provide up to 100Mbps to be shared between uplink and downlink.

Ngara was targeted at the seven percent of Australians who would not receive national broadband network fibre. The CSIRO also planned to field test 10Gbps backhaul for Ngara next year.

“It is difficult to compare technologies optimised for different parameters side by side but we commissioned a reputable third party who conducted an analysis which our wireless guys tell me was as fair and reasonable to each technology as it is possible to be,” the CSIRO spokesman said.

“After all, we need a clear unbiased picture too. We're a scientific research organisation, if the technology we're developing is not at the forefront then there's no point doing it.”

Copyright © iTnews.com.au . All rights reserved.


CSIRO brings Ngara to NBN Co, regulators
"Oops, typo - NBNCo certainly *is* going to be reviewing its wireless technology choices as it progresses the ten-year rollout!"
By umbria
 
 
 
Comments: 4
umbria
Mar 22, 2011 4:32 PM
Well done, CSIRO! This could be another Wi-Fi patent bonanza. Before anyone protests that six customers at a time is useless, remember that the TV towers are already there, and that some homesteads and hamlets are extremely sparsely situated. If they would have installed new satellite gear, locking them into VoIP-unfriendly satellite or staying with STD call charges, this technology could see them getting a terrestrial service more cheaply.

In addition to two Ka-Band satellites and ten million fibre drops, the NBN has a mandate to deliver 4% of Australian premises a good terrestrial service without fibre, and Ngara could well prove a best-of-breed solution for some localities. Time will tell.
Rossyduck
Mar 22, 2011 4:34 PM
Good luck to you Ngara. Despite the obvious export benefits if you can get your CPE price to be in the same ball park as LTE - this government is not interested in local industry development. Far easier to import the technoogy, benefit some other country, and hopefully use local riggers to build a network requiring a far denser build. Reuse of existing towers and no labouring work building sites is not politicaly appealing.
umbria
Mar 22, 2011 11:20 PM
@Rossyduck, that must be why the government is encouraging Corning et al to ramp up domestic manufacturer of optical fibre. Would your preference for the NBN have been the inferior OPEL (with Singtel's Optus) project? Even Australian companies like NetComm manufacturer in Asia, and the NBN will certainly create a lot of skilled optical cabling work that will be in demand worldwide when they are done here.

NBNCo is not going to be constantly reviewing its choice of wireless technologies over the ten year build. Wireless it delivers in 2019 will be three generations improved from what it rolls out later this year. Expect a lot of local innovation during that time, and much of it from the newly cashed-up CSIRO. Great to see.
umbria
Mar 22, 2011 11:21 PM
Oops, typo - NBNCo certainly *is* going to be reviewing its wireless technology choices as it progresses the ten-year rollout!
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