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PATMOS, Greece July 23, 2008 -– The 3,000 plus islanders of Patmos and its thousands of
visitors
will soon have the convenience of island-wide free mobile
networking delivered by joint venture Uni Nortel using a Nortel
wireless mesh solution. Uni Nortel is a joint venture in Greece between
Nortel and Unisystems, an IT company and leading Systems Integrator.
Patmos, located in the Dodecanese chain of islands in the Aegean
Sea, is a global tourist magnet. The monastery of St. John the
Theologian founded in 1088 is located on the island and is a place of
pilgrimage and Greek Orthodox learning.
The Nortel wireless mesh solution for
Patmos – jointly developed in the Media Lab of MIT and the Nortel
Solutions Interoperability Laboratory in North Carolina – will be
launched this summer to provide wireless broadband and Internet access
services across the island. The network includes user-friendly hotzones
and indoor Wi-Fi, all delivered with minimal capital expense using
Nortel's affordable mesh technology.
The Patmos wirefree
project was initiated under the leadership of Nicholas Negroponte,
co-founder and former chairman of the MIT Media Lab, and Michail
Bletsas while both were at the Lab. The project is being implemented by
local Internet Service Provider (ISP) 12Net working with Uni Nortel
which is responsible for the commissioning, design and installation of
the network.
Negroponte has a home on Patmos and visits often.
In the 1990s his inability to get Internet access prompted him to set
up a local dialup Internet service provider – ISP 12Net. In 2001,
Bletsas, then research scientist and director of computing at the Media
Lab, researched the possibility of providing broadband Internet
connectivity to Patmos. Bletsas' paper "Wirefree in Patmos" was
published in the BT Technology Journal in October 2004.
"With
the support of Uni Nortel and 12Net, the Wirefree Patmos we envisioned
is coming to fruition and the fact that we've used a Nortel Wireless
Mesh Network solution to do this is exciting because we contributed to
its development," says Bletsas.
The network will deliver the
benefits of broadband Internet access across the island and offer
access for visitors. This will boost the island's tourist trade by
providing new communications options such as the ability for visitors
to keep up with news from home by watching streaming videocasts online.
In the Patmos school year starting September 2008, high school teachers
and students on Patmos and its surrounding islands will be able to use
the new network to access on-line educational resources.
"The
Patmos network provides affordable wireless access achieved
cost-effectively," adds Kostis Stavropoulos, managing director, Uni
Nortel.
Initially the Patmos network will use eight core nodes
wirelessly connected with a Nortel Wireless Bridge 7230 and 50 Nortel
WP7220 and WP7215 Access nodes, covering the major area of the island.
Information Source: Nortel
Image courtesy of MIT media website
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