Light Reading Mobile – Telecom News, Analysis, Events, and Research

9:15 AM -- The buzz about Wi-Fi is growing louder ahead of the mobile industry's big gathering in Barcelona, so much so that the "W" in MWC could well stand for "Wi-Fi" this year.

Whether it's adding the wireless technology to the cellular radio access network (RAN) or inside small-cell base stations, or fusing Wi-Fi access to a mobile operator's core network for deeper service integration, or even the rude mutterings heard when the Wi-Fi access at the Fira doesn't work, Wi-Fi will be a big deal at Mobile World Congress this year.

In this Wi-Fi renaissance, the wireless technology is about more than just mobile data offload, which, let's face it, is such an unpleasant word in this context. Who wants to be "offloaded," anyway?

A shift is apparent in mobile operators' designs for Wi-Fi that goes beyond using the wireless technology as a blunt offload instrument. What's different now is that as the traditional cellular brethren give Wi-Fi a bigger, warmer embrace, their offload strategies are becoming more fine-tuned so that they can extract more value (and, naturally, more money) from subscribers' Wi-Fi use.

A good illustration of how things have changed is Ericsson AB's reported interest in acquiring Wi-Fi firm BelAir Networks Inc. (See Ericsson Sizing Up BelAir Buy for Wi-Fi Push.)

So expect to see more Wi-Fi added into small cells and more efforts further back in the network to blend Wi-Fi access into mobile operators' core network systems so that operators can keep better track of subscriber usage patterns when they're on Wi-Fi. There is also likely to be talk of different pricing models for mobile and Wi-Fi service bundles.

You can find our Wi-Fi coverage and all the MWC news on our Mobile World Congress dedicated show site. Here's what we've covered recently:

— Michelle Donegan, European Editor, Light Reading Mobile

9:15 AM Expect a Wi-Fi renaissance in Barcelona this year
February 14, 2012 | Michelle Donegan |


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