DocumentCode
1081213
Title
The Revolution in Spectrum Allocation
Author
Greenstein, Shane
Author_Institution
greenstein@kellogg.northwestern.edu
Volume
29
Issue
3
fYear
2009
Firstpage
4
Lastpage
6
Abstract
At the end of 2007 (the latest data) the US Federal Communications Commission estimates there were 263 million wireless subscribers (almost 2.3 subscriptions per household in the US). Subscribers used an average of 769 minutes per month, generating US$0.06 average revenue per minute for all traffic ($0.05 for voice traffic). The FCC also estimates that 14.5 percent of US households received their primary service exclusively through a wireless phone. A related revolution has largely gone unnoticed. Since 1994, the US has assigned spectrum for mobile telephony through auctions instead of the traditional regulatory mechanisms. The transition from analog to digital television freed up additional spectrum, giving the FCC the opportunity to set up an auction in the 700-MHz range. That spectrum auction ended in March 2008. The spectrum will go into use in June 2009, after analog television retires.
Keywords
frequency allocation; mobile radio; analog television; mobile telephony; regulatory mechanism; spectrum allocation; spectrum auction; wireless phone; wireless subscribers; Asset management; Auditory system; Delay; Digital TV; Elevators; FCC; Licenses; Proposals; Subscriptions; Telephony;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Micro, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0272-1732
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MM.2009.49
Filename
5076433
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