Tropos on The Cloud
February 01, 2006
The U.K. hotspot network provider will use Tropos mesh equipment to build out city center hotzones.
Hotspots arent enough as the days of citywide Wi-Fi begin inexorably rolling in. So its little surprise that an outfit like The Cloud, the biggest hotspot network provider in Europe, let alone the United Kingdom, is looking to move into the municipal wireless business. In January, the company said it would launch such networks in the cities of London, Manchester and Birmingham. Today, it was revealed that the future networks, which would be used for multiple services such as meter reading and video monitoring, would be powered with mesh equipment from Tropos Networks.
Tropos says the deployments The Cloud has planned are for city center Wi-Fi hotzones that will expand the footprint of The Clouds existing hotspots. It has not revealed specific locations yet, but expects a number of European projects to be announced during the year, according to a statement.
The Cloud is a network wholesaler, selling use of its networks to multiple service providers. The company says this is the first time service providers operating on The Clouds infrastructure can be behind not just the Internet access, but also the value-adds -- imagine multiple providers bidding to offer meter-reading services to a city.
Tropos continues to defy the critics that say its single-radio approach to mesh networking is inferior to the multi-radio approach favored by other startups (such as BelAir Networks and Strix Systems) and well-established companies (Motorola). Thats probably because, in comparison, the companys MetroMesh equipment is inexpensive and easy to configure. Tropos equipment is involved in 300 deployments worldwide. Its equipment is the basis for the networks going into Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and Anaheim, California, and its a finalist in the running to unwire Portland, Oregon, and Minneapolis, Minnesota, all through a continued partnership with EarthLink, the dialup service provider trying to reinvent itself as a public Wi-Fi provider for big cities.
