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April
19, 2004
Cal-(IT)2 And
UC San Diego Select Entrée Wireless To
Supply
Mobile Gateways For High-Speed Connectivity
On Homeland Security Communications Project
By Doug Ramsey
Entrée
Wireless, a leading developer of Mobile Wireless Gateways, and
the California Institute for Telecommunications and Information
Technology [Cal-(IT)²] will deploy Entrée’s
technology solution to provide high-speed wireless connectivity
in the field for first responders in disaster situations. “Entrée
has taken a concept first implemented as part of Cal-(IT)²’s
CyberShuttle project, and turned it into the first commercial
product of its kind,” said Ramesh Rao, director of the
institute’s San Diego division and a professor of electrical
and computer engineering in the University of California, San
Diego (UCSD) Jacobs School of Engineering. “These mobile
gateways will be a cornerstone of the communications networks
we are developing for homeland security and other purposes.”
Entrée’s
Mobile Area Network solution—dubbed the MANPack—is
a battery-powered, briefcase-size device that integrates a high-speed
wireless Wi-Fi access point with access to a third-generation
(3G) cellular network. It can be easily transported to any location
within the coverage of a 3G network, and instantly extends the
reach of the 3G system to Wi-Fi-enabled devices nearby. “Using
a standard Wi-Fi-enabled laptop or PDA, users can access the
Internet at broadband speeds thanks to the seamless convergence
of Wi-Fi and 3G networks,” said David Ahlgren, president
of Entrée Wireless. “In crisis response situations,
the MANPack will enable communication with, and tracking of,
first responders, resources and casualties at locations where
permanent Wi-Fi access is not available.”
The first commercial
shipments of Entrée hardware and software will be deployed
as part of the Wireless Internet Information System for Medical
Response in Disasters (WIISARD), a project based at UCSD and
funded by the National Library of Medicine, part of the National
Institutes of Health. Led by UCSD School of Medicine professor
Leslie Lenert, M.D., the $4.1 million project will explore and
test the use of sophisticated wireless technology to coordinate
and enhance care of mass casualties in a terrorist attack or
natural disaster. San Diego’s Metropolitan Medical Strike
Team, a partner in WIISARD, will incorporate the mobile ‘hotspots’
in an emergency test on May 12, when it will enable police,
fire and other emergency service personnel to connect to the
Internet at high speeds.
The MANPack is a three-in-one
device, combining:
- an 802.11b/g Wi-Fi
access point;
- a connection to
Verizon Wireless’s nationwide ‘Broadband Access’
data-optimized 3G network which is based on QUALCOMM’s
CDMA 1xEVDO/RTT standard and was recently deployed on Nortel
Networks’ CDMA infrastructure in San Diego; and
- access-control gateway
software that provides captive portal advertising and manages
security, bandwidth utilization, user authentication, remote
management and other services.
The system is noted
for its proprietary Bandwidth Limiting Technology (BLT) that
protects the cellular network, and its provision for Incremental
Revenue Generation (IRG).
While the MANPack is
the first such product on the commercial market, Cal-(IT)²
introduced the first experimental version of the technology
in April 2002 with the launch of the CyberShuttle. The bus service
between the UCSD campus and a nearby commuter train station
permitted students and faculty with laptops to use their regular
UCSD Wi-Fi cards to access the Web through a link to QUALCOMM’s
experimental high-data-rate system—a precursor of today’s
1xEVDO technology. “This Cal-(IT)² project allowed
the campus to live in the future, experimenting with broadband
access that is only now becoming a commercial reality,”
said Cal-(IT)² division director Rao. “Our work was
in the public domain and Entrée should be congratulated
for the speed and focus with which it has taken our initial
work and turned it into a product for the marketplace.”
Although first-responder
applications will be the focus of WIISARD, Entrée Wireless
sees homeland security as the tip of the iceberg when it comes
to future demand for gateways that link local Wi-Fi hotspots
via 3G wireless to the broadband Internet. “We foresee
corporate applications for professionals and consumers in mobile
venues such as rental cars, trains, limos and buses, as well
as temporary or re-locatable office venues for auditing, sales
events/demo, trade shows or emergency repair teams,” noted
Entrée president Ahlgren. “These systems enable
3G wireless carriers to address new customers, increase revenue,
and harness the Wi-Fi gold rush by monetizing the large and
growing installed base of Wi-Fi-equipped laptops and PDAs.”
According to Ahlgren, Entrée will also work closely with
Cal-(IT)2 to develop future enhancements to the first generation
of gateways, including the integration of position-location
technology.
About Entrée
Wireless
San Diego-based Entrée
Wireless is an early stage, technology-driven company specializing
in the development and marketing of Gateways that create Mobile
Area Networks (MAN) and extend the reach of 3G Wide Area Networks.
The first product is a Mobile Wi-Fi Gateway that bridges the
gap between 3G CDMA Broadband Access and today’s pervasive
Wi-Fi-enabled laptops and PDAs. The products feature mobile
and instant installation and provide Internet access for consumers
and mobile professionals. The Gateways are designed to be carrier
friendly, and feature Incremental Revenue Generation (IRG),
Bandwidth Limiting Technology (BLT), SNMP based monitoring and
management, and standards-based RADIUS authentication, billing
and class of service management. www.EntreeWireless.com/
About Cal-(IT)²
The California Institute
for Telecommunications and Information Technology is one of
four institutes created by the State in late 2000 to ensure
that California maintain its leadership in cutting-edge technologies.
Cal-(IT)²’s mission: to extend the reach of the current
information infrastructure throughout the physical world, enabling
anywhere/anytime access to the Internet. More than 220 professors
and senior researchers from UC Irvine and UC San Diego are collaborating
on interdisciplinary projects. www.calit2.net
.
Media Contacts:
Doug Ramsey,
Cal-(IT)² (858) 822-5825
David Ahlgren,
Entrée Wireless (760) 846-0357
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