 Welcome to Bornholm, Denmark, an island located in the busy shipping lanes of the Baltic Sea off the southern coast of Sweden. We are here to visit Zebra Wireless, a wireless ISP offering high-speed wireless access in urban areas as well as underserved rural areas. One of the largest challenges faced by Zebra Wireless is the intense DFS errors produced by densely populated radar installations. The use of antennas with those side lobes and precise radiation patterns was the clear choice for dealing with these issues. Hi and welcome to the beautiful island of Bornholm. My name is Morten Milsen from Zebra Wireless and I'm a product specialist within Wireless products. Zebra Wireless delivers the wireless solution for Bornfiber. Bornfiber is the one responsible for the internet services and the end users. Here in Bornholm we are delivering wireless services to both private households and also commercial businesses. We use RF elements and antennas all over and we use ubiquity products as radio communications. One of the issues that we have had here in Bornholm is that it's an island and we have ship traffic all around the island and as well there's a lot of radars on the island. Before we rolled out the entire island we have tested various antenna products and we ended up with RF elements horn antennas since they are not that sensitive to back-lobe and side-lobe interference as usual panel antennas. Once we started this project we started testing normal panel sector antennas and then found that they are very sensitive to radar and what other kind of noise there is on this island. We are sitting in the same height on some towers together with mobile operators and we have had a lot of interference from them as well seen as false positives as radar. I have never heard about RF elements and seen their products before we went to a conference in Amsterdam and then we got this sales pitch about how good these small antennas were compared to these big panels but we decided to test them anyway and actually we found that they were better than the standard panel antennas so we got all in. Our idea is to start up a tower with 490 degree sector antennas and then once the density kind of requires it we can change sectors for example when the density requires it we can take one 90 degree out and replace it with three 30 degree sectors but in some sites we already started up with six or more 30 degree antennas. We finished up the primary part of the installation in December actually the 23rd and the first customers started to sign up and was installed from January and are still moving on and a lot of customers like several hundreds are now waiting to get their installation. I just got for a year ago I got CIPA wireless to provide the internet because wireless I was a little bit concerned about it was wireless. Does it work? But it's been fantastic. Stability is incredible. It's fast. It's given us all what we wanted. All in all we're of course very happy for the horn antennas otherwise we wouldn't have gone all in. We will continue looking into what RF elements will develop in the future and we of course look forward to expanding in other areas as well with RF elements as a good partner that using the horn antennas was the best solution for us.