The Frequency Daily Pulse September 21st 2022
Jeremy Rollinson ????
Going Beyond Bars with private mobile networks @ Waveriders Collective.
Certifications are a sign of a maturing market so it's been an absolute pleasure to be part of the team that created the new 'Certified 5GLAN Specialist' course from CWNP.
"Ideal for wireless network engineers, architects, decision makers and technology advisors from both the IT and telecom industries, the free, six-hour online course and exam ensures attendees have a solid understanding of the fundamental concepts for private spectrum options, LTE/5G cellular wireless technology benefits, and new generation of application / use case drivers requiring deterministic connectivity on enterprise wireless."
You can sign up for the course via this link, if you have questions join the dedicated C5DS channel on the Frequency Community.
Back to devices now, and I have a confession, after spending 15 years carrying round a heavy two way radio (sometimes two) on event sites all over the world, I'm excited to try out these new radios from Weavix. I should be getting a few in the lab at the end of this month so watch out for a video review and demo.
领英推荐
Whether you're connecting school kids for remote learning, keeping containers moving in critical ports around the country, or supporting the automation of industrial and logistics operations, you can't please everyone. In our world of CBRS, the one person we can never please is Roger Entner, nay-sayer par excellence, who would sooner see the CBRS 'experiment' consigned to the dustbin and the frequency given back to the proper people (carriers).
Sidenote for the editors at Fierce Wireless, one guy's opinion does not qualify for this headline "CBRS riles folks on various sides of spectrum debate." It's not various sides being riled, it's one, it's not new, and the arguments are easily refuted. Why give him the column inches every time he whines about the public having access to something they own? It's poorly judged both side-ism.
My colleague James Plouffe is right. Success is not what CBRS networks are being built, it's what we build on top of them.