Wireless Bypass Inc. FAQ's
How can the DL radio series help my business?
Fast and easy deployment of broadband access over wireless means fast revenue with minimal maintenance costs. Cable system operations can simply beam available CMTS bandwidth to multiple locations with minimum engineering effort at breakthrough price per port levels. DL equipment supports cable modem buildout in the office park and other competitive arenas where last mile access is an issue.
What is the DL series of Microwave Radios?
The DL series is a new concept for wireless HFC extensions and node addition to the CMTS. These radios operate in the licensed U.S. bands of 18, 23, 26 GHz and the unlicensed band at 5.8 GHz, and can be deployed in Point-to-Point, or Point-to-Multipoint Configurations. Outside the U.S., frequencies from 2 to 60 GHz can be accommodated.
What makes the UDL leapfrog existing technology?
Simply stated, cost. Cable modem data transmission over wireless can be difficult to work with, translating to expensive equipment. The DL radio system uses a unique (patent pending) signal processing technique that allows not only protocol independence, but also robust- error free transmission that point-to-point microwave users have enjoyed for many years.
What industries do we serve?
Currently, Wireless Bypass' primary market is the Muliple Service/Systems Operators (MSO's) that emereged from the Cable Access Television (CATV) service providers. While the MSO's committed themselves to entering the high-speed Internet and data services market and have been quite succesful in the residential arena, nonetheless, capturing the most profitable segment—commercial services—has been illusive. Recent history on the commercial services front shows the MSO's hemmed in by a host of interelated issues. Geographical, legal and environmental constraints in various combinations dovetail with the high cost of additional plant and equipment, and make for high Price-per-Port. During the hay-day expansion of CATV, the cable infrastucture/network was never extended to commercial buildings as there was little market for the unidirectional video servides that were offered. At a minimum, internet and data services require bidirectional functionality. The demand for greater bandwidth to deliver these services, of course, is consumer driven. These factors continue to underscore market share domination of low bandwidth Telco and Satellite incumbents who deliver services at a competative price point despite the slower performance of 56K dial-ups or asymetrical service. However, Wireless Line Extension is changing that by delivering a range of highly adaptable DOCSIS compliant products enabling the CATV industry to access the now viable BWA market utilizing existing infrastructure.

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