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Fixed wireless market waking up

Fixed broadband wireless service for business has been a sleepy technology for the past decade, but itโ€™s about to wake up.

TeraGo Networks of Thornhill, Ont., raised $50 million when it was listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange. That money will help TeraGo expand across the country, according to a company spokesman.

Right after the listing it added service to southern Ontarioโ€™s high-tech triangle of Kitchener-Waterloo-Cambridge, bringing to 31 the number of communities it serves.

Meanwhile, in May, Craig Wireless, owned by the wealthy Craig family of Winnipeg, said it plans to raise $35 million through a proposed reverse takeover of a company owned by a private equity firm listed on the TSX venture exchange.

As a result, TeraGo, which operates in five provinces, could face a direct challenge from Craig, which is concentrated in lower B.C. and Manitoba, with footholds in Greece and Palm Springs, Calif.

A number of private companies also offer fixed wireless broadband across the country, mainly to small communities which canโ€™t get DSL or cable Internet service. These include RipNET, which sells DSL and fixed broadband in the Brockville-Kingston, Ont, area, and ABC Communications, which covers central B.C.

Fixed broadband, which operates on licensed spectrum, has barely made a dent among business buyers of high-speed service.

According to a recent survey of broadband buying of 312 small and mid-sized Canadian organizations by the Yankee Group, only five per cent of mid-market respondents, four per cent of small companies and six per cent of very small companies were using fixed wireless technology.

โ€œTo date itโ€™s been a fairly niche area,โ€ said Tony

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