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By Matt Hamblen
June 12, 2006
COMPUTERWORLD
Wireless technology gives new
meaning to ship-to-shore calls
Making cell phone calls from the
middle of nowhere is getting cheaper
June 12, 2006 (Computerworld) -- Technologies that have emerged in
the past two years have lowered costs for making wireless voice or
data calls at sea, creating a revenue incentive for cruise lines and
making calls from the middle of nowhere commonplace.
Island Cruises, a small cruise line based in East Sussex, England,
was one of the first to enable passengers to use cell phones while
on board -- and being an early adopter has paid off, Patrick Manuel,
director of IT for the cruise line, said in an interview last week.
"The world's making a shift to cellular, and it's considered part of
everybody's life," he said. "Our cruise line customers expect it,
and the movement of wireless data to handhelds has definitely made
me very happy we can support it."
While at sea, a user's cell phone call is transmitted to small
distributed radio antennas that look like ceiling smoke detectors
throughout the ship. Those antennas connect via a cable to a
satellite dish and from there are transmitted to a satellite in
space and then back to land. The system is on installed Island
Cruises' two ships, which can carry a combined total of 3,600
passengers.
Island Cruises gets a portion of the cell phone calling revenue,
which Manuel would not disclose. Customers now pay only a fraction
of what the calls cost two years ago.
Today, passengers can browse the Internet, send e-mail and make or
receive cell phone calls to a party thousands of miles away on board
dozens of ships from various cruise lines, according to Manuel and
industry analysts. The per-minute cost ranges from 75 cents for Web
browsing to $2to $5 per minute for voice calls, depending on the
user's cellular provider, analysts said.
Full-time connections from a phone in a passenger's cabin became
possible about a decade ago and at the time cost about $15 per
minute. Those prices have dropped to $6 to $8 per minute now, said
Rob Marjerison, general manager of Wireless Maritime Services (WMS)
in Miramar, Fla., which provides cellular services to Island
Cruises.
About five years ago, onboard Internet cafes came into vogue,
followed more recently by the growing popularity of Wi-Fi.
"People expect to be able to stay in touch wirelessly these days,"
Marjerison said.
Manuel said coverage with the WMS system is pervasive and "works
well," even though metal onboard a ship makes wireless connections
more challenging. The satellite connection tends to create a small
delay in voice calls, "but that is generally your expectation when
you travel," he said.
Manuel said he
investigated a variety of wireless technologies two years ago but
settled on WMS partly because it relies on a remote monitoring
system provided by LGC Wireless in San Jose. The remote monitoring
is done by WMS from Florida for about 30 ships, to help reduce the
number of dropped calls and improve call quality, Manuel said.
"We're not in the telephone business," he added.
LGC also allows WMS to use fiber or Category 5 or 6 copper cable to
connect the distributed antennas to the cellular switching hardware,
which is flexible and easier to use on a ship than rigid coaxial
cable, Manuel said.
Competitors to LGC's technology include MobileAccess Inc. in Vienna,
Va.; Inner Wireless Inc. in Richardson, Texas; RadioFrame Networks
Inc. in Redmond, Wash.; Nokia Corp. in Finland; Ericsson in
Stockholm; and Motorola Inc. in Schaumberg, Ill., said Jack Gold, an
analyst at J. Gold Associates in Marlboro, Mass.
WMS has installed the LGC technology on 30 ships so far, with
another 50 under contract, Marjerison said. In all, there are about
120 large cruise ships now plying the waters around the globe, many
capable of carrying thousands of passengers each.
WMS provides GMS and CDMA cellular switches on each ship to serve
for customers with different service plans, Marjerison said. The
cost of equipping a single ship with the wireless technology is up
to $100,000 for cable installation, up to $300,000 for switches and
another $250,000 for the satellite dish and related electronics,
Marjerison said. Most ships already have satellite dishes in place.
Manuel said one major issue in setting up the service is getting
roaming agreements with carriers. WMS has so far arranged
partnerships with 340 carriers worldwide.
The cellular service has given Island Cruises and Manuel a few
bragging rights. "Working for a smaller cruise line, it's given me
the ability to be more of a cowboy out there," he said. "Sometimes
there were growing pains, but I beat the big boys. Cruise lines are
very competitive, so it pays to be a little different."
Now that other cruise lines have begun to catch up, Manuel is
watching out for the next wireless application to come along -- as
is Marjerison, who is now weighing the popularity of wireless video.
"Right now, e-mail and messaging are big," Marjerison said.
"Wireless TV will come, but not in 2006. Maybe by 2010."
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