Milton Keynes ready for WiMax broadband trial

Buckinghamshire city is committed to improving broadband provision

Milton Keynes will become the first UK city to use WiMax broadband technology when trials begin in December.

The system uses specific bands of radio spectrum to provide long-range wireless access speeds of up to 10Mbit/s.

The six-month trial, run by supplier Pipex Wireless in co-operation with the city council, will use five base stations to provide broadband access to 500 business and domestic users. If successful, it will be extended to the whole city, says Pipex Wireless.

The supplier’s pilot system in Stratford-upon-Avon has been running since mid-2005 but has only one base station and a small number of users. The Milton Keynes project aims to test the technology’s scalability and how it performs in a commercial environment with assorted users receiving different speeds.

‘This project reflects our continuing commitment to the digital economy in our town and to improving broadband provision,’ said Milton Keynes Council head of IT Steven Jewell.

The trial will initially offer only fixed access, but WiMax could work with broadband technologies such as short-range WiFi and 3G mobile networks to allow large-scale wireless internet access in built-up areas.

‘At the moment WiMax is largely theoretical, but once proven it will be an important technology because it is another alternative,’ said Butler Group analyst Mark Blowers.

WiMax will help overcome Milton Keynes’ network problems, says Blowers. Because the city’s telephone network was built with aluminium rather than copper, the most common form of broadband access, ADSL, is unavailable.

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