"W hen people hear 'Wi-Fi' they say, 'That’s that thing that doesn’t work very well at my house,' " says Jaime Fink.
His company, Mimosa, works with
technology that cou
ld turn Wi-Fi from a way to save money on our
smartphone data plans to an internet connectivity option on par with
fiber and leagues above DSL.
Mimosa gets its name from the
technology that's become its bread and butter: MIMO. As the company's
cofounder, CPO, and "product visionary," Fink explained the impressive
and important tech to Business Insider.
MIMO stands for multiple in,
multiple out and has everything to do with radio waves and spectrums.
Usually there is a limit on the amount of information a computer, radio,
phone, or anything a device can send over the air over a single
spectrum. The "multiple" in MIMO, though, allows for more than one
stream to transmit over a single spectrum.
"This is a completely new frontier we have to innovate on," Fink said.
The Future Is Now
Fink explains that almost 50% of
global internet traffic comes over Wi-Fi. Cellular networks support
less than 3% of the world's traffic. But to Fink, the future of Wi-Fi
should be going after that other 50%. With MIMO, Wi-Fi could replace
cable and fiber, he says.
When medium-size, suburban ISPs realize they
can invest in relatively cheap wireless tech to bring high-speed
internet to customers instead of cable or fiber, a movement will start
and sweep through America's cities.
"I absolutely believe as this awareness grows you’ll see a different breed of ISPs," Fink said.
That's all part of
Mimosa's game plan. Earlier this month, the company unveiled products
that will allow ISPs and consumers to eventually hook up Wi-Fi internet
service, bypassing cable and fiber entirely. The tech is expected to be
available for in-home use this fall.
Mimosa
Wi-Fi is getting a push from a completely different side of
the market, too: developing countries. In many part of the world,
internet is seen as a necessity, but creating the infrastructure to make
it accessible is posing challenges.
Fink cites nations like Brazil and Nigeria as future hubs
for Wi-Fi trailblazing. These nations are home to driven entrepreneurs
who see the need for internet for both their communities and their own
endeavors. In these environments, Wi-Fi is almost the only option for
infrastructure.
"People are not putting more copper in the ground. In developing countries it gets stolen before it gets lit up," Fink said.
He said the copper necessary for building a traditional
wire network is too valuable as a raw material to stay buried
underground.
It's unlikely for any community
to ever go back to that model, he said. "In the 1920s and 1930s what
we did in America putting copper everywhere, that was like God’s work."
Still, without large, powerful cable companies to stop
them, developing nations could actually build out Wi-Fi networks even
faster. Fink said without the terrifying incumbents looming over the
industry like we have in America, African and South American
entrepreneurs might be more inclined to take risks.
Help From The Hill
Another factor that
could cause the all-wireless movement to speed up: some helpful
legislation from congress. Earlier this spring, Mimosa launched a petition for the FCC to allow a certain chunk of the broadcast band to be shared for wireless ISPs to use, FierceWireless reports.
The range Mimosa
wants is the 10Ghz to 10.5Ghz range. Right now that space is used for
amateur radio operators and government applications, Fink said. But he
still sees a possibility for congress to eventually grant shared use of
the band, especially if Mimosa and similar companies can prove they
won't cause interference with the activities operating in that spectrum.
"The public interest
is we need more broadband," Fink said. "The g overnment and the Obama
administration have been very clear that we’re moving into a
spectrum-sharing world."
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