Thursday, 16 February 2012 01:10

LightSquared misjudges consumer sentiment with LTE network

By Callie Purvis, The Daily Gamecock
viewpoints@dailygamecock.com
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Remember the days when house phones were a necessary lifeline to the outside world and the Internet was rarely used because it took hours to start up?

Well, now online technology is more accessible than ever. Creators of the company LightSquared have devised a multibillion-dollar program in which wireless Internet can be made available to millions of people at one time. However, they are unable to get their business up and running because they have had some difficulties preventing their technology from tampering with global positioning systems in airplanes.

Even though people should be impressed by the sheer magnitude of the project LightSquared is taking on, the makers are letting the allure of a worldwide Internet system blind them to the actual needs of Americans. It appears the age-old rivalry between the seasoned but reliable and the young visionary has been spurred up once again.

Both the airline transportation system and LightSquared have much to offer society, but the real question focuses on what is necessary and what is superfluous. In recent interviews, LightSquared has suggested that the same GPS companies used in airlines, cars and tractors are trying to sabotage the company’s efforts by performing unrealistic tests on its technology in order to deem it unworthy of use. Regardless of if the GPS companies are indeed undermining LightSquared’s efforts, transportation and premapped routes are a part of an industry that will always be useful.

Had Lewis and Clark faced the same dilemma today as they did so long ago, they would have more than likely looked up directions on a GPS, not watched the latest YouTube video. LightSquared needs to remember that the transportation industry is a billion-dollar market that provides people with the jobs and necessary goods they need to live — a feat LightSquared is unable to compete with.

The transportation industry has been a livelihood for this nation and has functioned just fine for many years without the interference of new technology; LightSquared has no right to insinuate that its product is more important than the global positioning system.

The Internet provides information and entertainment that could last a lifetime, but it will never be able to accommodate people with tangible essentials such as an income and food on the table. It is apparent that LightSquared’s selfishness and greed supersedes the company’s concern for the well-being of its customers and clients when it cannot see the devastating consequences of its product.

Last modified on Thursday, 16 February 2012 01:13

4 comments

  • Comment Link trollCall Friday, 17 February 2012 09:14 posted by trollCall

    You and the FCC are way off base and reflect the malpractice that the FCC perpetuated when it took LightSquared's money without considering the power requirements of LightSquared's terrestrial network that the GPS industry says "interfere" with their operations when LightSquared is using only the frequency band to which it bought licences from the FCC. You might want to read the back story of LightSquared and "how we got here" before assuming that they have no "right." LightSquared have a right. LightSquared has a LEGAL right. It's called a spectrum license. Ask a fellow Gamecock what that's about.

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  • Comment Link accord1999 Friday, 17 February 2012 17:45 posted by accord1999

    If you actually read up the history, you would find that LightSquared received its spectrum license when it bought the assets of a bankrupt company called SkyTerra in 2010.

    The license was for satellite communications, which is low power and compatible with neighbors like GPS. SkyTerra did in 2003 get a waiver for an ancillary terrestrial component, allowing it to build some ground transmitters to fill-in for areas of poor satellite reception.

    However, the waiver never allowed a stand-alone terrestrial network, and under Federal Regulations 25.255, LightSquared's ground transmitters are forbidden from interfering with other users, including GPS in the 1.5-1.6 GHz spectrum.

    FCC has simply, albeit belatedly, upheld the law against LightSquared's greedy attempt to go around existing laws and regulations.

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Out of the following options being considered, which musical act would you most like to see Carolina Productions bring to campus next semester?

Goo Goo Dolls - 25.4%
Fun. - 17.7%
Ben Folds Five - 14.4%
Gavin DeGraw - 11.3%
Cobra Starship - 6%
Snow Patrol - 7.3%
Other/None of the Above - 17.9%

Total votes: 1952
The voting for this poll has ended on: 26 Apr 2012 - 13:08