It has been several months since I asked about the status of LTE. Im following up with a few questions and hope that since the technical guys at EANOG <http://orion.my.co.ke/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/eanog>are still interested we can get some answers. 1: Can I assume that the government is focused on the frequencies below 1GHz in use by the UHF spectrum? 2: Considering all channels are not used in all areas within the country, (commonly known as TV white space) is it possible for at least one vendor to show us using such free channels in some rural part of the country how this frequencies are ideal for good propagation and the maximum throughputs we'd expect? ie go beyond the physics and actually show us? - This is important for companies planning rural wifi. It wont make sense to make such an investment if cheaper options exist. - This would mean that the LTE devices don't interfere with Television and obviously they would have to withstand/tolerate interferance from television signals. - This is probably a long shot but it would be nice to imagine it was considered. Im sure we have alot of 'white space'. 3: How will you control spectrum access? 4: Is there a chance that this will be licence exempted like the 2.4GHz band? I would expect some control but maybe no fee. I think this is where the consortium came in but I can't honestly say I understood this model yet or who is in it, what their role is etc... 5: How soon is this expected and would you advice an investor to go ahead with other modes of mass broadband provision. Lets just call it WIFI? -Are broadcasters keen on moving on to digital? or is there a push back? Im sure others will come up but those are the ones top on my mind at the moment. Gitau
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John Gitau