BEIJING, March 25 (Xinhuanet) -- Google Inc. on
Monday unveiled plans to use vacant television airwaves to provide wireless
Internet without interfering with current equipment, media reported.
In a letter to the U.S. Federal Communications
Commission, the Internet leader outlined plans for low-power devices that use
local wireless airwaves to access the "white space" between television channels.
A Google executive called the plan "Wi-Fi 2.0 or Wi-Fi on steroids."
"As Google has pointed out previously, the vast
majority of viable spectrum in this country simply goes unused, or else is
grossly underutilized," Google said in the letter. "Unlike other natural
resources, there is no benefit to allowing this spectrum to lie fallow."
Rick Whitt, Google's Washington telecom and media
counsel, said this class of Wi-Fi devices could eventually offer data
transmission speeds of billions of bits per second -- far faster than the
millions of bits per second available on most current broadband networks.
Google and Microsoft are part of a group that wants
the FCC to unlock the airwaves for unlicensed uses, like mobile Web access,
after broadcasters convert to digital signals in 2009.
The group also includes Dell Inc, Intel Corp,
Hewlett-Packard Co and the north American unit of Philips Electronics.
Google plans to bolster revenue by creating more
Internet services for mobile phones and devices based on Android, Google's
software that a variety of major equipment makers plan to use to build
Internet-ready phones. Portable technology is outselling personal computers,
giving the company new spots to place online advertising.
The idea is opposed by U.S. broadcasters and makers
of wireless microphones, who fear the devices would cause interference.
(Agencies)