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White Space Debate Intensifies As Vote Approaches 94

Ars Technica reports that the debate between broadcasters and white space supporters has intensified after each side recently made inflammatory comments and suggested that science would vindicate their position. Several organizations are pushing to delay the upcoming white space vote, in part because it takes place on the same day as the US presidential election. We recently discussed Google's claim that a test of this system was rigged to fail. From Ars: "The broadcasters contend that adjacent channel interference would be significant even at the 40 mW level proposed by Kevin Martin. In fact, they claim that such a device would interfere with digital television signals when the viewer is 25 miles from the television tower and the whitespace device is 10m or less from the TV set. At 50 miles from the television tower, a whitespace device within 50m from a set could allegedly cause interference. The broadcasters also want several safeguard requirements put on the technology that go beyond the new, lower-power transmission levels."
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White Space Debate Intensifies As Vote Approaches

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  • Umm... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by the_skywise ( 189793 ) on Saturday October 25, 2008 @11:36AM (#25509719)

    Perhaps a short explanation of what "white space" is in this context in the summary might be helpful?

    Yes I even RTFA to try to figure it out but it already assumed prior knowledge as well.

  • Whitespace use (Score:5, Insightful)

    by sahai ( 102 ) on Saturday October 25, 2008 @01:25PM (#25510255) Homepage

    Since this is actually my research area, I thought it would be good to give some input here. Part of the controversy is simply due to the language used.

    1) "Whitespace" is used in two subtly different senses by people that causes some confusion.

      A) From the perspective of the potential new user of the spectrum, a "whitespace" is where the band is clean and so it could be used to deliver relatively high data-rate without having to put out too much transmit power relative to the desired range.

      B) From the perspective of the existing user of that spectrum, the above perspective is troubling since it seems to ignore the externalities imposed by interference to others. The existing users' perspective is better captured by the idea of a "spectrum hole" that reflects where a new user could safely transmit without significantly bothering too many existing users. However, spectrum holes are also called "whitespaces" and this causes confusion.

    The apparent weasel words "significantly" and "too many" above reflect a real set of engineering-tradeoffs underneath that must be navigated at least partially at the political level.

    2) "Interference" is used by people in two different senses and this also causes confusion.

      A) Interference is a purely technical concept that describes how performance degrades for a receiver with the introduction of additional signals into the environment. Here also there is some ambiguity because of a distinction between what would necessarily degrade performance even for an ideal or well-engineered receiver and what is feared to degrade the performance of possibly poorly designed or shoddily built receivers.

      B) Interference is also an English word that encompasses uses like "you're interfering with my business model by offering a competing service."

    Keep this in mind as you read any general articles about this subject. There are real tradeoffs involved in this topic, but sometimes the language used obscures or obfuscates them rather than making them clearer.

  • by Mozk ( 844858 ) on Saturday October 25, 2008 @06:24PM (#25512501)

    I'm glad that I'm not the only one who noticed that. And yes, there is a space between a number and its symbol.

    I'm in the United States, and personally I've been using metric units in everyday use for a while now, and I actually sometimes get confused with US customary units. There's no reason that I should have to deal with that crap.

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