Wireless Broadband: Markets, Models and Spectrum
Wednesday, September 8, 2010, 1:00 - 6:30 PM
@ Wittemyer Courtroom, Wolf Law Building, University of Colorado
Post-Event Coverage
For a report summarizing the conference writtne by Colorado LLM Student Keith Clayton Click Here Wireless broadband has arrived. For anyone that has replaced their landline phone with a wireless phone, or that has purchased a 3G smartphone or iPad, it will come as no surprise that innovative wireless technology and wireless services are a major driver of economic growth in the United States. Over the past 15 years, while the rest of the economy grew at roughly 3% annually, wireless services experienced annual growth of over 16%. Silicon Flatirons' conference, Wireless Broadband: Markets, Models and Spectrum, will examine the emerging wireless broadband marketplace. In particular, it will analyze opportunities for disruptive innovation, the nature of the changing business models, issues associated with spectrum management, and the potential public policy responses. In so doing, Silicon Flatirons will bring together a broad group of experts - policymakers, lawyers and business - to discuss these issues. The outset of the conference will feature a tutorial on wireless broadband by Silicon Flatirons' Executive Director Dale Hatfield. Mr. Hatfield is a frequent speaker on spectrum policy and wireless issues. He is recognized as a national thought-leader in the area and currently co-chairs NTIA's Commerce Spectrum Management Advisory Committee. The first panel, Disruptive Innovation and a Changing Technological Environment, will consider technological enablers and opportunities that will accompany wireless traffic growth. By the end of 2014, Cisco projects that the demand for North American wireless networks will increase by 40 times, and Morgan Stanley estimates that mobile data usage will increase by 4,000 percent. Without question, there are major development and investment opportunities to be exploited, both domestically and internationally, in wireless technology, wireless infrastructure and wireless services nationwide. The second panel, Changing Business Models and Emerging Opportunities, will focus on the business implications of wireless demand and opportunities for new business models, whether from existing players or new ones. Intimately related to increased investment in network infrastructure and capacity, many of the network and content providers that make up the Internet "ecosystem" are under increasing pressure to alter their business models. From an architectural perspective, will these wireline networks need to be reconfigured to support the explosive growth in demand for wireless access? Should incumbents be concerned with Google's upcoming "experiment" with bringing a high-speed 1 Gps fiber-to-the-home network to one or more communities in the U.S.? From the content perspective, what would this kind of bandwidth do to existing cable companies and their business models? Will all media distribution finally converge onto the Internet Protocol Standard-what happens when we get there? There look to be serious implications for both content and network providers alike. Finally, our third panel, Public Policy Implications, will consider the regulatory aspects associated with wireless broadband. The National Broadband Plan comes with a host of recommendations that are generally aimed at increasing the availability of high-speed Internet nationwide, and specifically emphasizes wireless broadband as a means to that end. Many parts of the Plan depend on the FCC having jurisdiction over the Internet, however, but the recent Comcast court decision calls the FCC's regulatory power, and thus many parts of the Plan, into question. What will the FCC do to ensure its ability to protect consumers with respect to broadband services, wireless and otherwise? What are the implications of the various actions the FCC might take? Is this really a wakeup call to Congress to amend the increasingly outdated Act itself? Additionally, the National Broadband Plan discusses at length the scarcity of spectrum available for wireless broadband. The FCC, Congress, and industry players are all calling for significantly more spectrum to be made available for wireless broadband purposes. By some estimates, even the relatively large amount of spectrum being called for-approximately 500 MHz-may not be enough. The looming question then is, where do we find the additional spectrum and, if necessary, what re-shuffling of current spectrum use makes sense? Finally, assuming the regulatory issues are solved and the projected spectrum needs are met, there is still the question of infrastructure and investment. Some analysts say that within five years or less, more users will connect to the Internet through mobile devices than desktop PCs (see the 2010 Morgan Stanley Internet Trends report). This has major implications for network providers in that there will likely be a concurrent explosion of data traffic on their networks-some of which can already be seen with the significantly increased data usage patterns of iPhone owners who, according to research by Consumer Reports, use on average nearly 273 MB of data per month (or nearly twice the amount of data used by owners of other smart phones). How will the networks handle this increase? Will investment be sufficient to supply the infrastructure build out necessary to support this explosive demand? Will broadband infrastructure deployed through use of stimulus funds make an appreciable impact on broadband access and availability? As the demand strains existing capacity in the near term, what role will network management techniques and the Net Neutrality debate play in the wireless broadband world?
Silicon Flatirons looks forward to a stimulating discussion on September 8. Panels and speakers are provided below. We hope that you will join us.
- Dale Hatfield
Senior Fellow
Silicon Flatirons Center
Adjunct Professor
University of Colorado
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- Erwin Hudson
Chief Technology Officer
WildBlue
- Roger Marks
VP of Technology Standards
WiMAX Forum
Chair
IEEE 802.16 Working Group
- Mark McHenry
Founder
Shared Spectrum Company
Moderator
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- Jeffrey Carlisle
Executive Vice President, Regulatory Affairs and Public Policy
LightSquared
- Teresa Elder
President of Strategic Partnership and Wholesale
Clearwire
- Phil Kelley
Senior Vice President, Corporate Development & Strategy
Crown Castle International
- Paul Mitchell
General Manager of Policy and Standards, Entertainment and Devices Division
Microsoft Corporation
- Andrew Newell
General Counsel
Viaero Wireless
Moderator
- Raymond Gifford
Senior Adjunct Fellow
Silicon Flatirons Center
Partner
Wilkinson Barker Knauer, LLP
Former Chairman, Colorado Public Utilities Commission
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- Brett Glass
Founder and CEO
Lariat.net
- Joan Marsh
Vice President Federal Regulatory
AT&T
- Kathleen O'Brien Ham
Vice President of Federal Regulatory Affairs
T-Mobile
- Jennifer L. Richter
Partner
Patton Boggs, LLP
- Michael Senkowski
Partner
Chair of the Telecommunications Practice
Wiley Rein LLP
Moderator
- Brad Bernthal
Associate Professor of Law
University of Colorado
Entrepreneurship Initiative Director
Silicon Flatirons Center
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