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PIPEX COMMUNICATIONS - TIPPED FOR 2004 (PXC)     

moneyman - 03 Jan 2004 20:03

Tipped by the independent 2/01/2004

........."And so to our traditional "wild card". Pipex Communications, formerly known as GX Networks, is a telecoms company created by one of the entrepreneurs behind Ukbetting, Peter Dubens. It has been assembled from six smaller players. The ambitious company is generating cash for the first time but is still not widely followed in the City. It could be an undiscovered gem".

andrewbertram2003 - 25 Aug 2005 15:21 - 1432 of 1874

To add:

Timeline for us as investors....well....perhaps 1 year of testing and another year for revenue to hit the bottom line.....what do you think?

zscrooge - 25 Aug 2005 15:23 - 1433 of 1874

You'll have pulled into a lay-by of course.

NielsJensen - 25 Aug 2005 16:37 - 1434 of 1874

Andrew, yes the more I look the better it gets. I just don't want to wear blinkers like the YOO guys. :)

andrewbertram2003 - 26 Aug 2005 08:48 - 1435 of 1874

Airspan is a $5 company on the Nasdaq so hopefully they are a good company to get into bed with. Not had much to do with their products.

What do we know of Telebria, are they a thorn where Pipex are concerned?

If there are only 2 licences...how many forthcoming?

Whats BT and C&W up to?

I very keen to see next set of annual accounts. This stock will be a steady up and onwards and may well be a 2 to 3 yearer!

Troys - 26 Aug 2005 12:01 - 1436 of 1874

Someone selling?

skids - 26 Aug 2005 12:50 - 1437 of 1874

10m dumped

Troys - 26 Aug 2005 14:05 - 1438 of 1874

more to come?

belisce6 - 26 Aug 2005 14:28 - 1439 of 1874

thought it was only worth about half a % of total shares on issue.

NielsJensen - 26 Aug 2005 15:08 - 1440 of 1874

Found this recent talk by Otellini from Intel:

Video on WiMax and Intel plans

Now, does any of you know if the Pipex license allows for "cell handover"?

Troys - 30 Aug 2005 10:20 - 1441 of 1874

Another 11m dumped.

Troys - 30 Aug 2005 10:26 - 1442 of 1874

Looks like it may have been a buy. the price dropped. Interesting?

Results due soon

skids - 30 Aug 2005 10:47 - 1443 of 1874

yep, 8th sept results day. i'm out for the time being tho. will read the results on thurs and see.

Troys - 31 Aug 2005 07:43 - 1444 of 1874

Very interesting

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/08/30/pipex_wimax_trial/

andrewbertram2003 - 31 Aug 2005 09:05 - 1445 of 1874

Good article Troy. Well spotted.

I just think its up to Pipex in getting a useable product out as soon as!

Will wimax compete with what the cellular people will provide or will it replace it???
Maybe thats why the mobile phone carriers are being aggressive defensive over Wimax rollouts and looking perhaps at ensuring WiMax is used in a bandwidth which is not so good. Not sure if I fully understanding the technologies being used here.

However, Independent comment points at this WiMax stuff being good to excellent for Pipex.

NielsJensen - 31 Aug 2005 10:41 - 1446 of 1874

The key question here is "cell handover"; this is not permitted in some European licenses making WiMax a non starter as a competition to truly mobile devices in Germany and France. There's also the minor problem that it only works at less than 100 Km/h.

andrewbertram2003 - 31 Aug 2005 14:33 - 1447 of 1874

Niels...

Is that speed your referring to or celluar coverage?

I think you write about "Cell Handover" for true nomadic connectivity.
How do we find that out for sure?

NielsJensen - 31 Aug 2005 17:12 - 1448 of 1874

Andrew, it's the maximum speed you can move at without breaking the signal. Yes, "cell handover" is the ability to switch seamlessly from one cell to another, essential for true mobility. I don't know how we find out, perhaps someone here can help?

andrewbertram2003 - 01 Sep 2005 09:21 - 1449 of 1874

Just a few extracts from my reading session this morning....look at the two links at the bottom....good background info and may help. 3G -v- WiMax....then theres the next generation....802.20 and 802.22 ??? godsake!

Neils....I think the answer of "cell handover" is in these articles. The standard caters for 'line of sight' and 'non line of sight'. Not totally clear about what speed you will be able to travel at and get good connectivity. In vehicle capabilities is only one piece of the jigsaw.

Mobile WiMax moves customers and dollars from expensive cellular networks to less expensive but more diverse and widespreadand possibly overlapping and competitivenetworks operated by large and small firms alike. The diversity and extend of the deployment to come puts Intel into the supplier catbird seat. They are trying to become the dominant force in mobile WiMax

WiMax has a huge array of benefits for carriers that want to roll out WiMax in the same way they deployed DSL: few truckrolls (because of good non line of sight protocols) and lots of ratcheting in bandwidth offered to provide discrete services that mimic DSL and cable modems. These benefits are more appealing to carriers that are trying to integrate broadband wireless into an existing portfolio. These carriers are also in a better position to bundle applications on top of WiMax thus making it more reasonable for them to eat or subsidize a $500 CPE cost than even a large regional ISP or municipality.

The article also walks through mobile WiMax, which hasnt been finalized yet and is possibly due in late 2006. The Economist points out Intels previous failures to deliver on anything like a timetable, so 2007 might be optimistic, still.

I admit that I like the idea of mobile WiMax, but I have a hard time believing that it will seem like a good idea when its actually ready to be deployed. With the increase in speed and sophisticated of systems based on or parallel to Wi-Fi and 3G cellular, its just hard to see mobile WiMaxs place in that ecosystem by the time 2007 rolls around. [link via

802.16e, due to be finalized in October 2005, adds hand-off capability, thereby supporting portability and mobility. Operating in the 2-11GHz range, it is designed for point-to-multipoint applications and does not require LOS.

Where LOS can be achieved, WiMAX cell coverage can as much as 50 km (31 miles). Under NLOS conditions, the typical cell radius might be in the range of 8 km (5 miles). The fixed wireless standards provide for shared bandwidth up to about 70 Mbps per BS. The level of actual throughput depends on LOS, distance, air quality, interference and other factors that can affect signal quality. Mobile network deployments (802.16e) can be expected to provide up to 15 Mbps of shared bandwidth within a cell radius of up to three kilometers.

http://www.commweb.com/showArticle.jhtml?articleId=166403898

http://www.3g.co.uk/PR/August2004/8196.htm

Troys - 02 Sep 2005 14:00 - 1450 of 1874

Some interest been shown here today. Pre results next week. Still no movement in this mule yet. Come on Pipex show them what you are made of. LOL

Troys - 02 Sep 2005 15:43 - 1451 of 1874

Nudged up.
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