The rise of smartphones and subsequent explosion in mobile data usage has put a strain on mobile networks, slowing them down when congested and requiring more and more radio spectrum space to accommodate the demand. Artemis Networks hopes to solve this problem with a new technology called pCell, which promises full speed mobile data regardless of the number of users.
Artemis Networks is a San Francisco-based firm that was founded in the early 2000s and has been "incubated" for over a decade. It claims its new mobile network base stations will be able to eliminate network congestion, dead zones and unreliable connections, instead providing mobile users with a "fiber-class broadband experience."
The base stations, or "pWaves," are used in place of mobile network towers. They do not need to be placed at regular intervals like mobile towers and so instead can be placed with cost and convenience in mind. According to Artemis, they are cheaper to run and more efficient than conventional mobile towers, as well as being cheaper and quicker to roll-out. Most importantly, however, they can provide high performance service regardless of the number and geographical spread of users.
Traditional mobile towers create network "cells" of anywhere between five and 50 km (3 and 31 miles), whilst trying to avoid overlapping and interfering with other cells. All mobile devices in the area share the cell's capacity for data transmission, meaning that the more users there are trying to connect via the same cell, the worse its performance becomes for each user. pCell technology, on the other hand, supposedly turns this model on its head.
"Instead of dodging interference, pCell exploits interference, combining transmitted radio signals from multiple pCell base stations to synthesize tiny "personal cells" – pCells – of wireless energy around each mobile device," explains Artemis. "So, rather than hundreds of users taking turns sharing the capacity of one large cell, each user gets an unshared pCell, giving the full wireless capacity to each user at once."
Steve Perlman, the founder and CEO of Artemis Networks, demonstrated the technology at the company's unveiling event at Columbia University. As well as demonstrating 4K video streaming using the pCell mobile network, Perlman argued that pCell effectively leapfrogs the need for 4G technology. Perlman suggests that not only can pCell provide a better quality of service, but that it works with existing devices and can hand-off to existing cellular networks when a user goes out of range.
Artemis is already in talks with prospective partners and expects to begin rolling out the technology in one major city this year.
The video below provides an introduction to pCell.
Source: Artemis
Get say 10 people together and costs would be fairly small each. You could even start it as a business delivering cell and internet to others out of town range.
Mel since they already track you to a foot in stores like Walgreens by asking your tracker/cell phone, does it matter? We need to just ban most data collection and limit data storage time of what is allowed.