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Wi-Fi News Briefs
Spreading Its Wi-Fi
Tentacles
Agere Systems
of Allentown PA, maker of ORiNOCO wireless LAN equipment, is gearing up
to spread its Wi-Fi technology further and wider.
Agere announced a deal with Young
Design Inc. under which the Falls Church VA wireless network equipment
maker will market the ORiNOCO technology to original equipment manufacturers
(OEMs) in North, Central and South America and the Caribbean.
YDI will provide wireless LAN products and services to small- and medium-sized
OEM customers, many of which are start-ups and emerging companies. Agere
will continue to service the wireless LAN needs of its large-volume OEM
customers directly.
Under the agreement, YDI has the right to sell a number of Agere's integrated
wireless infrastructure and client products to OEM customers, including
PC cards, MiniPCI devices, USB Client devices, Residential Gateways and
Access Points.
In addition, YDI can offer certain Agere Wi-Fi products under its own
"Go Wireless Data" private label.
YDI will supply a broad range of OEM services that enable the incorporation
of Agere wireless LAN technology into new and existing product offerings.
In addition to embedded solutions, YDI will provide customized software
and product labeling, as well as specialized modifications to WLAN systems
enabling efficient performance with unique or proprietary operating systems.
"This relationship with YDI supports our strategy of meeting the demands
of a wider set of customers," says George Holmes, vice president of North
America sales for Agere Systems.
"Together, YDI and Agere can ensure that our customers receive the highest
quality of service and support they require for their wireless networking
systems."
"The combination of two industry leading offerings, Agere wireless LAN
products and YDI's services, will bring customers the total solution they
require as they look to provide wireless data networking products," says
YDI CEO Robert Fitzgerald.
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Wi-Fi Security
Solved?
Interlink Networks Inc. of Ann Arbor MI announced recently that it
has developed a RADIUS-based wireless LAN authenticator. The software
is currently available in beta release.
The Wireless Access Manager (WAM) provides secure network access control
for Wi-Fi wireless LANs (WLANs), the company says.
The product is compatible with RADIUS-compliant WLAN access points, including
Cisco Aironet, Agere Systems ORiNOCO, Enterasys Networks, 3Com and D-Link
wireless LAN access points.
The WAM solution allows network administrators to maintain total control
over their wireless network and its users by providing an enhanced level
of Authentication, Authorization and Accounting (AAA) functions, thus
adding a new level of security, Interlink says.
AAA RADIUS technology was originally, and still is, used by ISPs as a
robust solution for controlling and authenticating user access to dial-in
networks, the company notes. But the technology has been slow in entering
the wireless market because of vendor compatibility and standards architecture
issues.
"There has been a recent media frenzy regarding the results of security
attacks that have been carried out by numerous laboratories against WEP
and wireless LAN networks," notes Interlink president and CEO Mike Klein.
"WECA (Wireless Ethernet Compatibility Alliance) has long urged wireless
users to supplement their security with extra measures, and RADIUS based
AAA technology certainly qualifies as being well above an extra measure
of security."
Using Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP) coauthored by Interlink
founder and CTO John Vollbrecht, the WAM product supports multiple authentication
types including MD-5 and LEAP, Cisco's proprietary implementation of EAP.
Interlink claims the WAM solution resolves major IEEE 802.11-based WLAN
security issues including: unauthorized network access, rogue access points
and limited encryption keys.
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Public Access Wi-Fi
In Europe
Frost
& Sullivan, an international marketing consulting company, has issued
a generally upbeat forecast for public wireless access point installations
in Europe.
The company notes, however, that there are uncertainties in the market
and some potential barriers to growth.
The study pegs European revenues for public wireless access at $4.12
million in 2001, but it predicts they will jump to $3.06 billion in 2006.
The market at this point is only just coming out of its infancy and is
expected to mainly attract business users initially.
But Frost & Sullivan believes public hotspots will also eventually be
used to deliver consumer services as prices for Wi-Fi and Bluetooth-enabled
devices plummet and the technology becomes readily available.
In Europe, Telia, the Swedish telecom services provider, and a company
Frost & Sullivan identifies as Sonera are at the forefront of installing
public access points. The two have installed "a couple of hundred" hotspots
across Scandinavia between them, the report says.
Wide-scale deployment of wireless-enabled devices and the continued proliferation
of Wi-Fi equipment in offices and homes will help push the public access
market forward, the report says.
However, it also points out that the forecasted growth is not deemed
spectacular among the mobile network operators who are expected to drive
the public access market in Europe.
Most of these companies, furthermore, are currently crippled by exorbitant
3G network costs and licence fees.
Fast roll-out of wireless LAN access points would detract from their
3G mobile data revenues. As a result, says Frost & Sullivan program manager
Jan ten Sythoff, many of these companies are still evaluating the public
access point opportunity.
"They are contemplating their next strategic move in this climate of
uncertainty, limited resources and the ongoing struggle to boost wireless
data services," ten Sythoff says.
"Some players are taking an early lead, while others may choose to concentrate
on the cellular business, and perhaps embark on an acquisition or partnership
drive."
Frost & Sullivan's research also suggests that commercial property ownersfor
example in the hospitality industrycould use public Wi-Fi access
points on their premises to differentiate their offerings, generate additional
revenue and foster stronger customer loyalty.
"Although the market is, overall, very promising, it also faces a number
of challenges," ten Sythoff says, "first and foremost, the varying degrees
of regulatory forces currently covering the 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz bands in
Western European countries."
"These regulations will hamper development of public access services
in nations with tight regulations, while countries with no regulations
at all clearly offer a more open playing field."
The absence of roaming standards and the complexity of setting up roaming
agreements are also barriers, ten Sythoff notes.
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