Arcwave Touts Wireless Plant Extension Benefits Over Other Wireless Solutions at Cable Industry Conferences; Panelists at Cable TV and Broadband Expo Agree on Service Benefits of Wireless Plant Extension vs. WiMAX and WiFi.CAMPBELL, Calif. -- Arcwave, Inc., a provider of wireless solutions for the cable industry, today announced that Chris Martin This article is about the Coldplay musician. For other people named Chris Martin, see Chris Martin (disambiguation). Christopher Anthony John Martin (born March 2, 1977) is the lead singer, pianist and occasional rhythm guitarist of the popular rock band Coldplay. , vice president of marketing for the company, will present the case for Wireless Plant Extension (WPE WPE Writing Proficiency Exam WPE Worst President Ever WPE Winsock Packet Editor WPE Wall-Plug Efficiency WPE Weight Per Epoxide WPE Word Processing Equipment WPE Work Performance Evaluation WPE Williams Precision Engines WPE Workpackage Exchange ) technology at the upcoming 2006 NTCA NTCA National Telecommunications Cooperative Association NTCA National Telephone Cooperative Association NTCA National Tile Contractors Association NTCA National Token Collectors Association NTCA Northern Territory Cattlemen's Association Broadband Summit in Las Vegas Las Vegas (läs vā`gəs), city (1990 pop. 258,295), seat of Clark co., S Nev.; inc. 1911. It is the largest city in Nevada and the center of one of the fastest-growing urban areas in the United States. , January 11-13. The company also announced that Martin's recent presentation on WPE at the Cable Television and Broadband Expo 2005 received a positive response from cable operators. At the NTCA event, Martin will explain how rural and small cable operators can use WPE technology to extend their existing cable services to the millions of underserved small-to-medium-sized businesses (SMBs). Martin will speak as a part of the "Wireless Broadband High-speed wireless transmission of data. What is "high" speed is always a changing number. Wireless systems are typically slower than land-based, wireline networks. In the past, wireless broadband started at 250 Kbps, whereas land-based broadband was generally considered to start at T1 Access Technologies" panel on January 12, from 1:30 - 3:00 p.m. Earlier this month, at the Second Annual Cable Television and Broadband Expo 2005, Martin participated as a member of the "Getting Down to Business" panel. As a part of the panel, Martin emphasized the service benefits of WPE over other wireless technologies such as WiMAX and WiFi that offer broad coverage, but lack the business-class service transparency required to profitably penetrate the commercial services market. Several cable operators on the panel concurred with Martin and indicated their preference for WPE solutions to extend their voice and data services to the SMB (1) (Small to Medium-sized Business) Also called "SME" (small to medium-sized enterprise), it refers to companies that are larger than the small office/home office (SOHO), but not huge. segment. Martin further emphasized that general purpose wireless solutions based on WiFi or WiMAX protocols can effectively provide broadband services for hotspot or rural market applications respectively by creating service islands. However, unlike WPE, these technologies do not support delivery of standard cable modem or optical Ethernet services and require the creation of new service offerings based on their own underlying protocols. In addition, because of start-up costs and other operating expenses Operating expenses The amount paid for asset maintenance or the cost of doing business, excluding depreciation. Earnings are distributed after operating expenses are deducted. , these wireless solutions will actually provide lower operating margins than services delivered over a standard wired network. "Only 40 percent of SMBs in the U.S. currently have access to broadband services and 90 percent of SMBs are within a mile or two of cable plant infrastructure," said Martin. "But, it has been too expensive for cable operators to physically extend their network to reach these new commercial customers. Now, with WPE, cable companies can easily expand their footprint to service this lucrative market, and significantly improve profit margins without building out their network or substantially increasing operating costs. At the same time, they can deliver business-class service that far surpasses other wireless protocols." Wireless Plant Extension differs from other wireless solutions in its ability to extend standard cable service offerings into new markets at minimal expense. Cable operators can deploy and manage WPE wireless equipment using existing field engineers and network management systems. Moreover, since WPE provides a transparent bridge from the cable plant to the customer modem, the cable operators' startup costs are limited to training and network integration. About Arcwave Arcwave is the leading developer and provider of wireless plant extension solutions for the cable industry. Arcwave's products enable domestic and international multiple system operators (MSOs) to leverage the latest wireless technologies to extend the reach of their existing services and to increase service offerings within their current plant and operating infrastructure. The company has patented technology and experience in the wireless industry combined with a unique understanding of the MSO (1) (Multiple System Operator) Typically refers to a cable TV organization that owns more than one cable system, but it may refer to an operator of only one system. business model. Arcwave's solutions are designed for "plug and play" deployment and leverage existing and future technologies, such as Wireless DOCSIS (Data Over Cable Service Interface Specification) A cable modem standard from the CableLabs research consortium (www.cablelabs.com), which provides equipment certification for interoperability. (Data Over Cable Service Interface Specification (communications, networking) Data Over Cable Service Interface Specification - (DOCSIS) ITU-approved interface requirements for cable modems involved in high-speed data distribution over a cable television network. ), 802.11, 802.16d and 802.16e. Arcwave's ARCXtend product has been deployed by 14 of the top 15 cable system operators in more than 100 regions of the country. The company is funded by Vulcan Capital, Venrock Associates, SBV SBV State Bank of Vietnam SBV Sistema Bibliotecario del Vimercatese (Itay) SBV Schweizerischer Baumeisterverband (German) SBV Swift Boat Vets SBV Smithsonian Business Ventures SBV Space-Based Visible Venture Partners, Comcast Interactive Capital and Mayfield. For more information about Arcwave and ARCXtend, visit www.arcwaveinc.com. ARCXtend is a trademark of Arcwave, Inc., and DOCSIS is a registered trademark of Cable Television Laboratories, Inc. All rights reserved. All other trademarks are the property of their respective holders. |
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