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Yoda: Lost a planet, Master Obi-Wan has. How embarrassing. - Attack of the Clones

Earthlink is planning to offer wireless ISPs franchises for muni-wireless deployments in towns that they have no plans to bid on, reports ISP Planet. EarthLink believes it has a proven architecture using Tropos gear, planned for Philadelphia’s network and San Francisco’s city cloud.

Earthlink estimates there are about 750 major cities in the U.S., with 31 million households that are ripe for municipal wireless.

“EarthLink doesn’t have the resources to do this deployment and could not do it in an aggressive time frame,” said Bill Topeglian, vice president of corporate development for Atlanta-based EarthLink. “We need partners to build the infrastructure, own it, and allow roaming.”

“In exchange for the roaming agreement and other unspecified conditions, EarthLink will share the architecture, offer its volume pricing for equipment and services, and, if the WISP wishes, share EarthLink products and its support infrastructure,” notes the report. Earthlink would offer no financing and there would be no revenue sharing.

EarthLink has acquired New Edge Networks (above), a Vancouver, Washington-based CLEC known for its small to mid-sized enterprise (SME) data services. EarthLink paid $144 million for New Edge, reports Telephony.

The move is part of EarthLink’s plan to become “a total communications company,” said president and CEO Garry Betty. “We will provide voice, data, wired and wireless services. We plan to provide auxiliary services as well including safety and security, Web hosting and technical support for consumers.”

Meanwhile, the FCC recently approved a Linksys branded wireless adapter for EarthLink (right).

The MWA200 will be based on the 802.11b/g standards and most likely will be distributed by EarthLink as optional network hardware for its customers and looks like it will be targeted at metro-wide applications.

The MWA200 is being called a “High-Power Metro Wireless Internet Adapter” because it converts Ethernet interfaces on laptops and PCs to wireless bridges, connecting to municipal wireless.

Other centrally managed muni networking approaches include:

The Association For Community Networking and CivicSpace has developed their own community LAN package. Here’s a list of applications and features with links to handbook pages. CivicSpace says it features a flexible and powerful Content Management System (CMS) capable of running all kinds of websites. It comes with a WYSIWIG editor and it is said to be simple to use. Google’s Web Toolkit is said to make writing AJAX powered dynamic web applications easy.

My buddy John Cooper, who consults with cities on muni-wireless and runs Metronet IQ as well as Wiki Metronet and Metro Nano, believes municipal wireless is weighed down with too much bureaucracy. Multi-year planning studies and RFPs, in his opinion, take too much time and money.

He says the time has come for entrepreneurs to take charge and move out.

Related DailyWireless stories include; City Clouds: Becoming The World Cup, The Wireless Mobile Router, AWS Auction: Does It Suck?, 3G Band Scam?, WildBlue: AT&T’s DeathStar?, AOL + Clearwire, Winner of the Triple Play, Satphones Localize and Mobile WiMAX: The Attack Plan.

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