Marty et al, I've read with interest of Dave Hughes' efforts out west with wireless connections between schools using unlicensed spectrum, and the NII/Supernet filings at the FCC. I presume that's at least a part of the coming wireless technologies to which you refer. Sounds real promising; but my planning mode of constructive pessimism causes me to wonder two things: 1) I'm not a radio (i.e. wireless) technologist, but folks I've worked with who are give me the impression that installing and managing radio technologies can be a bit of a black art, with subtle idiosyncracies not encountered in commodity wireline technologies - perhaps especially for new wireless technologies, and 2) I'm not convinced that K12 school systems are the right place to provide the test bed for a new technology that may require some hard to come by radio/wireless expertise and that will in effect be used for mission-critical activities. I'm not from Missouri, but I need the NII/Supernet advocates to "show me" that a school system without a Dave Hughes to lean on can introduce this stuff effectively as the Wide Area Networking method before I can feel real comfortable about the technology's application to K12. If all we were talking about was theoretical long-term prospects I wouldn't even bother bringing this up - I believe you're right about this in the long-term, but I suspect we're talking about a "fix" that could become a significant part of the near-term picture in resolving the Telecom Act's requirements for K12/library connectivity. It looks real appealing to say we've got a new low-cost technology that will save us from having to bulk up the Universal Service fund to cover the subsidies for all those phone lines and T1's the schools are going to need. Anything other than a stable, commodity technology platform has a thing or two to prove before I'd recommend it to a customer like a school system as their near-term solution. -Jack McFadden >>> Marty Tennant <marty@sccoast.net> 09/11/96 08:10am >>> ---snip snip ...New inexpensive wireless technologies, unregulated, with very high bandwidth. It's gonna knock the telcos and cable tv companies for a loop (no pun intended). Because it will use a unique unregulated part of the spectrum, it will make a lot of the new spectrum owners wondering if they bought too soon. There is a new networking world coming folks. It will not resemble anything we've seen before. Whoopie!!! Marty Tennant