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Gaining Control Over The Wireless Explosion
InnerWireless system lets customers
manage
a wide variety of applications
By Elena Malykhina
InformationWeek
March 14, 2005
As wireless communication becomes a bigger part of everyday business,
the challenge of managing a wide variety of wireless signals--cell
phones, pagers, two-way radios, wireless data, security cameras, and
even wireless thermostats--becomes increasingly difficult. Few establishments
face a greater challenge than the Time Warner Center, a new 2.8 million-square-foot
complex in Manhattan that features shops, restaurants, a hotel, condos,
a jazz center, and broadcast studios for CNN.
The Time Warner Center wants to make sure that visitors and tenants
can receive wireless signals wherever they roam.
To ensure that its guests, customers, residents, and commercial tenants
can receive wireless signals wherever they are in the center's 55
floors, the building's management team tapped InnerWireless Inc. and
its "wireless utility" technology, which is designed to
distribute signals for as many as 13 wireless applications that use
radio frequencies ranging from 400 MHz to 2.5 GHz.
"We were excited about not needing to set up various different
networks," says David Heckaman, former regional director of IT
for the center's Mandarin Oriental Hotel who's now an independent
consultant. The system uses coaxial cable snaking throughout the building
to carry and radiate the wireless signals, as well as access points
on each floor. All of the center's communications, including messaging,
paging, two-way radios, police and fire communications, and Wi-Fi
data access, are plugged into the system.
The Mandarin Oriental Hotel, which uses the top 20 floors of one of
the center's two towers, faces additional challenges. Its height makes
it more difficult to receive strong cellular signals, Heckaman says.
But all of the major cellular carriers are linked with the InnerWireless
system through cables connected to base stations in the basement,
so visitors and guests can get a signal in any part of the building.
"This particular aspect is very attractive to our hotel visitors
and condo residents," he says.
"What makes InnerWireless different is that it doesn't tie companies
to a single technology like a wireless LAN and doesn't force them
to set up several different systems," says Iain Gillott, president
of iGillott Research. "This gives the building owner more control
over what networks they offer in the building."
The University of Chicago Hospitals deployed an InnerWireless system
in a children's hospital it opened last month. CIO Eric Yablonka chose
the technology because "it's a single wireless-distribution system
for all of our applications," from pagers to patient monitors.
"Since paging is a heavily used application in hospitals, it's
important to have all paging systems tied into this single utility,"
he says. The hospital also has integrated patient monitors with the
nurse call system, enabling a faster response from nurses who are
connected to the system via wireless IP telephones. There are more
than 100 such telephones in the hospital.
Since the hospital also rolled out Wi-Fi and cellular services, patients'
families can use notebook computers to access the Internet or E-mail
and receive and make cell calls anywhere in the hospital, Yablonka
says. The system has proven to be so successful that the University
of Chicago Hospitals has decided to retrofit its adult hospital with
the same technology.
Cost for the InnerWireless system ranges from $1 to $2 per square
foot of coverage.
Copyright (C) 2005 CMP Media LLC, All
rights reserved.
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