Google's Project Fi wireless service has the potential to turn the
mobile industry on its head. But not in the way you might expect.
Last week, Google announced that it is working with carriers Sprint and
T-Mobile to offer a wireless service that will seamlessly switch
between Wi-Fi hotspots and 4G LTE cellular networks. It's calling the service Project Fi.
Project Fi on its own isn't likely to threaten the dominance of
Verizon and AT&T, by far the two largest carriers in the nation, but
it's potentially a big deal to the cable companies. Google could use
its technology and clout to push for a more seamless transition between
Wi-Fi and cellular -- something that hasn't worked so well in the past.
That could pave the way for cable providers to make another bid into the
wireless business by wedding cellular service with their own network of
Wi-Fi hotspots.
"Google will be an accelerant in a market that
the cable companies have already shown interest in," said Spencer Kurn,
analyst at New Street Research. "It will help cable companies figure out
how to improve the quality of the Wi-Fi service so that it can compete
with wireless."
At least one person believes there's a logical
convergence of cable and wireless: T-Mobile CEO John Legere. He said on
his company's earnings conference call this week that it makes sense for wireless and cable companies to merge. Cable tiptoeing back into wireless through a Wi-Fi-based service may be a first step to an eventual deal.
For consumers, that
could ultimately lead to more options in the wireless business, pitting
cable against AT&T and Verizon in the wireless business. The two
sides already compete for consumers in the landline phone, broadband and
pay TV businesses.
How Project Fi works
The basis of
Project Fi is Google's use of more than a million Wi-Fi hotspots that it
will use as the foundation of its network. The beauty of Wi-Fi is that
it uses unlicensed spectrum, so setting up Wi-Fi hotspots is cheap. It's
cheap enough that hotspots have sprouted up in locations ranging from
your home to coffee shops and airports. But Wi-Fi transmits signals over
only short distances, making it too costly to build a network that
offers coverage everywhere the way a cellular service, which uses
licensed wireless spectrum, can.
To fill in the gaps of
coverage, Google has inked deals with Sprint and T-Mobile to use their
cellular networks when Wi-Fi isn't available or a signal is too weak.
This is similar to other services from companies like Republic Wireless,
Scratch Wireless and FreedomPop. They were among the first companies to
build mobile businesses that use free Wi-Fi networks first and then
fall over to cellular service as a backup when Wi-Fi is not available.
A key aspect of the Project Fi service is its use of technology that
allows it to connect to determine which network offers the best
connection. This means it will seek out the best-performing network,
whether that's Wi-Fi or T-Mobile's or Sprint's 4G LTE and voice
networks. And then it will seamlessly switch among these networks if the
connection weakens. For instance, if you start a phone call or data
session in a Wi-Fi hotspot at home and then get in your car
and drive down the street, the call will stay connected even as your
phone reconnects to a cellular service once it is out of range of the
Wi-Fi connection.
Keeping costs low is the key to competing in
this market against AT&T and Verizon. Because customers using a
Wi-Fi-first service are on Wi-Fi networks about 95 percent of the time,
according to Republic Wireless, the fees the operators must pay wireless
operators, like Sprint and T-Mobile, for the use of their networks, are
minimal. This allows Republic Wireless to offer a service starting for
as little as $10 a month.
Google's service is priced a little
higher than some of these other services. Google is charging $20 a month
for unlimited voice, text and international coverage in more than 120
countries. It also charges $10 more a month for each gigabyte of data a
customer uses. Data usage on Wi-Fi is free. If a customer doesn't use
all the gigabytes he or she subscribed to, Google will offer a credit
for any unused cellular data.
Though the service is priced far
lower than typical cellular service, Google doesn't want to topple the
carriers. Instead, it hopes to nudge the industry into thinking about
different ways of offering wireless service.
"We don't intend to
be a network operator at scale," Sundar Pichai, senior vice president
of products for Google, said in a keynote address at the Mobile World Congress
trade show in March, where he first confirmed Google's plans to launch a
wireless service. "Our goal is to drive a set of innovations we think
should arrive, but do it at a smaller scale, like Nexus devices, so
people will see what we're doing."
Cable's mobile ambitions
This technology could be a key driver in helping new entrants, like
the cable companies, enter the wireless market. Since Wi-Fi will cover
only a portion of a network, upstarts in the market will likely have to
lease network capacity from established wireless players. A technology
that can, on the fly, determine which connection will perform best lets
operators strike deals with multiple wireless operators to get the best
performance available when customers are not in an area with Wi-Fi.
This means cable companies could offer their subscribers faster and
more-reliable connections when customers roam off Wi-Fi. It also might
let the cable companies further reduce costs by forcing the carriers it
leases capacity from to compete with each other.
"The cable
industry already has an extensive Wi-Fi network, and they have a
substantial amount of fixed assets in the ground that can be easily
tapped in a way that current wireless can't," Kurn said. "If they can
offload 80 to 90 percent of their traffic to their Wi-Fi networks, and
provide cellular access to fill in the gaps, their costs to offer
service would be a fraction of what it is for the big carriers."
For years, the nation's largest cable companies, Comcast, Time Warner
Cable, Cablevision, Cox and Bright House Networks, have been building
out public Wi-Fi networks in their territories. The service has mainly
been used as perk for home broadband customers, providing free Wi-Fi
access to subscribers when they aren't at home. To extend the footprint
of their individual networks, the companies, which all operate in
different regions, created CableWiFi, which connects their disparate
Wi-Fi networks to offer cable subscribers access to more than 200,000
indoor and outdoor hotspots throughout the country.
Comcast has
also launched a new service that partitions home Wi-Fi routers so these
devices also broadcast a public Wi-Fi signal. This has expanded its
Wi-Fi footprint even further.
It's no secret that cable
companies have wanted a piece of the mobile market for a long time. In
2005, a group of cable companies partnered with Sprint on a joint
venture called Pivot, which allowed each cable provider to sell its own
branded wireless service through Sprint's network. Some of them bought
their own spectrum in 2006 and 2008 but eventually sold it to Verizon in
2011.
Cablevision has been the only cable company to test the
waters with its own limited wireless service. Earlier this year, it
launched a Wi-Fi calling service called Freewheel. But the service works
only on Wi-Fi and doesn't offer a cellular backup option to improve
network coverage.
So far big cable companies are keeping quiet
about their plans to move into the wireless market. But executives are
likely watching Google and Project Fi closely.
"Google is doing
some interesting things," said a cable executive who didn't want to be
named. "It could be a beacon in the wilderness that paves the way for
anyone looking to compete against AT&T and Verizon."
A shaky handoff
All of this sounds great, but a Wi-Fi-first system has one catch:
there's no guarantee the service will work well on Wi-Fi, or when you're
moving between Wi-Fi and cellular networks. This may be fine if you're
downloading email to your smartphone, but it's unacceptable when it
comes to making voice calls or streaming video.
Some work has
been done by Republic Wireless, Scratch Wireless and T-Mobile to improve
the quality of those calls and the handoff between different networks.
Wi-Fi standards groups have also tried to help alleviate some of these
problems with standards to define network handoffs as well as other
technical issues.
But more work is needed to make a Wi-Fi-first
service work as seamlessly and effortlessly as a cellular network run by
an individual carrier. In order to make it work today, Republic and
Scratch have had to work closely with handset makers to adapt devices to
be able to make these transitions.
This is a time-consuming and
expensive process that severely limits the devices that these services
can offer customers. Are you a Republic Wireless customer who also wants
to use an iPhone? You're out of luck.
This is where Google's
Project Fi can play a significant role in the development of the
technology, said Jon Finegold, vice president of marketing at Scratch
Wireless.
"Google controls the operating system," he said. "And
it has influence throughout the entire ecosystem. We've tried to make it
easier to get onto Wi-Fi networks and to switch between Wi-Fi and
cellular networks, but Google will be able to do so way faster than we
ever could on our own."
Indeed, Google's control of Android,
the most widely used mobile operating system in the world, could help
improve the Wi-Fi first service by baking new technology innovations
directly in to the software. And because of its role in the device
ecosystem, Google could influence chipmakers and even network equipment
makers to include technologies that make using Wi-Fi and cellular more
seamless.
"We'd never have that kind of influence over the
market in terms of getting technology into devices and network
equipment," Finegold added.
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