One-Watt Wireless Radio Modem Reaches 40 Miles 240
maxstreampr wrote in to plug their
radio modem. It's the size of a credit card, one watt, and can transmit 40 miles line of sight or 3000 feet indoors. Something about using the AT command set to fire off a command 40 miles through the air amuses me.
what about when you go under a bridge? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:what about when you go under a bridge? (Score:4, Interesting)
It comes in great on my car, but hardly at all on any of my other radios. Of course, there are a few spots I avoid because they kill the reception. I'll even drive five miles out of the way just to avoid that patch.
Re:what about when you go under a bridge? (Score:2)
Reminds me of a customer we had to support, his radio wouldn't work on his vending machine. We knew we had coverage in his area, and we drove to the building, perfect. Finally the guy walks down the basement to show us the vending machine......
YA, we couldnt stop laughing either.
These are more for stationary devices like, hvac, meters, pumps, vending machines, cash/pos machines, etc. Its amazing how many
Denial of service attack! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Denial of service attack! (Score:2)
God, does anyone even know what I'm talking about?
Re:Denial of service attack! (Score:2)
Netsplit!!!
actually, no.
/me ducks.
Why do we even need the Internet? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Why do we even need the Internet? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Why do we even need the Internet? (Score:2)
Re:Why do we even need the Internet? (Score:2)
I'm getting 2meg on my UMTS ATTWS Nokia phone.
Re:And I'm getting 14,400 bps on my HSCSD mobile (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:And I'm getting 14,400 bps on my HSCSD mobile (Score:2)
Re:And I'm getting 14,400 bps on my HSCSD mobile (Score:3, Informative)
Also, I think you're wrong on what plans there are. Here's what they've got:
Sprint PCS Vision Pictures Pack
Perfect for people who have a PCS VisionSM Picture Phone.Take, upload and send an unlimited number of pictures with Sprint PCS Picture MailSM. Includes 100 SMS Text Messages and Web access.
Obviously, you need a camera phone. It's $15, and comes with $5 free downloads/month.
Sprint PCS Vision Premium Pack
Per
Re:Why do we even need the Internet? (Score:2)
Re:Why do we even need the Internet? (Score:2)
We could end up starting WWIII. I saw war games, I know what a WOPR can do. These modems can cause global thermonuclear war.
On the flip side you could go on vacation without your boss calling you on your cell phone to ask stupid questions.
Re:Why do we even need the Internet? (Score:2)
Re:Why do we even need the Internet? (Score:2)
Shhhh. We're not supposed to talk about that in front of the kids.
Re:Why do we even need the Internet? (Score:5, Insightful)
If you could live with a shared media with a peak throughput of 115 kbits, sure.
I do not want to rain on anyones parade, but ISM band FHSS FSK modems are kinda cool-for-1997 ...
That being said, if maxstream had a reasonable price for onesey twoseys, (Their web site [maxstream.net] has a promotion for what appears to be this series at USD 90 for qty ten) there could be some cool hack value for moderately low speed stuff in portable projects.
Re:Why do we even need the Internet? (Score:2)
Ribbit! (Score:2)
Re:Ribbit! (Score:3, Informative)
I agree that it's a neat concept, but early experiments with WiFi meshes seem to indicate that it will have problems scaling without a lot of horsepower behind it. And that's with fixed "pads" as it were.
Some substance, more hype, a few uses..... (Score:3, Interesting)
I do wish they would standardise on frequency allocations worldwide, as I live in the UK and might have a use for one of these, as it might be cheaper than what we have, the 458MHz band where things like this have been around for a long time, similar power, same baud rate, similar range with a directional antenna. I note that this one seems to be specified with a 4dB external antenna gain. Now that would be about a 4 element yagi, or a helix or dish, but maybe more as you woul
Re:Why do we even need the Internet? (Score:5, Funny)
Re: One-Watt Wireless Radio Modem Reaches 40 Miles (Score:5, Funny)
Okay, I'll do it (Score:5, Funny)
"Site" - a location.
"Sight" - something visual.
"Line of sight" - a line along which you can see (i.e., an unobstructed line.)
"Line of site" - evidence that what you've written matters so little to you that it's not worth the effort to proofread. You don't care; why should we?
Re:Okay, I'll do it (Score:2, Funny)
Quick follow-up (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Quick follow-up (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Quick follow-up (Score:5, Funny)
Well, at least... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Okay, I'll do it (Score:4, Funny)
Calling Long Distance (Score:5, Funny)
The real question is, did they use Lexar programming techniques?
Re:Calling Long Distance (Score:2)
Wireless... (Score:2, Funny)
Did anyone else read this... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Did anyone else read this... (Score:2, Funny)
Translated: all we do at the office is play minesweeper
What kind of antenna?? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:What kind of antenna?? (Score:5, Funny)
A thin, copper one, 40-miles long.
Re:What kind of antenna?? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:What kind of antenna?? (Score:5, Informative)
Do the math ...
Po = +30 dBm ... let's see ... at 9600 bps it requires -103 so that gives you 3 dB of fade margin even with isotropic radiators.
path loss over 64km at 915 MHz: -130
Pr = -100 dBm
Put a +6dBi yagi (I think that is the maximum allowed on ISM under Part 47 anyway) at each end and you've got 15dB of fade margin, which should give you a couple of orders of magnitude of BER performance (the datasheet was notably lacking a BER / EbNo chart ).
Re:What kind of antenna?? (Score:2)
Moderator:OOHahh,me see um symbol math thingies. Must no bee troll.
all in good fun ;)
Re:What kind of antenna?? (Score:2)
They have a couple of different options, from a simple 3" piece of wire built right onto the board to a hi-gain Yagi or Omni-directional antenna, depending on your needs.
They didn't mention directly the kind of antenna, because that is usually something that would be decided by a customer when they have an actual application they would want to use it for. The default antenna works fairly well for testing and development purposes, and in many cases works just fine in the
Credit Card Sized? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Credit Card Sized? (Score:2)
I think you were trying to make a joke (although I'm not sure exactly what .. that so few slashdot readers know what a credit card is, but do know what formfactor PCMCIA is?)
I think the reason they avoid using that acronym is to avoid confusing their potential customers -- saying something is PCMCIA-sized might lead people to leap to the assumption that it has meets PCMCIA interface specifications.
Re:Credit Card Sized? (Score:2)
Well you wouldn't want to accidentally buy one of those debit-card-sized modems, would you?
Yeah but... (Score:2)
Speed (Score:5, Interesting)
9600 baud is pretty darn slow, even with compresion.
Re:Speed (Score:2, Insightful)
This is ideal for certain applications. Environmental monitoring and remote metering are two technologies where dial-up modems are still used at speeds similar to this. These are prime candidates for upgrading to wireless. Despite their lack of publicity there are still thousands of low data rate products in use today. You could have 10s - 100s of these devices reporting to one local substation with a broadband connection to a main monitoring station somewhere else in the world.
Not everything has band
Re:Speed: defense of 9600 baud (Score:5, Insightful)
9600 baud is good enough for modem-to-modem chat, e-mail via pine, text processing with vi or emacs, or almost any *nix command. Thinking about this reminds me of how terribly bloated everything has become with verbose formatting and styling of pages. Pictures may be worth a 1000 words, but they require 10 to 100 times the bandwidth of those words.
Re:Speed: defense of 9600 baud (Score:2)
But for a purely text application, 9600 bps is usually more than enough.
Re:Speed (Score:2)
Not for straight stats, pumps, hvac, meters are very low bandwidth, you could get by with 2400 without compression. Now if its XML based with pretty pictures or microsoft powerpoint, yes, 9600 is slow.
Re:Speed (Score:2)
Friends of SCO (Score:2, Funny)
Lindon, Utah is sure a happening place.
Re:Friends of SCO (Score:3, Interesting)
MaxStream RF modem (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:MaxStream RF modem (Score:2)
"io serialdata rate: software selectable 1,200 bps to 230,400 bps"
Testimonial (Score:2, Informative)
Not very impressive (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Not very impressive (Score:4, Interesting)
* Up to 3000 feet range (Indoor/Urban environments, @9600 RF data rate)
We're talking about this thing for what reason?
CmdrTaco, please, drink some Jolt and wake up. That's twice in one day you've made me want to smack you around for wasting my time. 9600 baud? Really, why would we want to use this?
To compare this to 802.11b, they have what looks like a version [maxstream.net] that operates in the 2.4GHz band, guess what? 1500ft range, at 9600 baud.
While I'll admit this thing might have some very specific uses, like remote data collection where you don't have a lot of data, but you want it delivered at regular intervals over a distance where it'd be hard to put in relays or run a real link... but the damn thing costs more than $400 [google.com], so if you *can* use 802.11g instead, you'll probably want to!
Re:Not very impressive (Score:2)
Re:Not very impressive (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Not very impressive (Score:2)
Re:Not very impressive (Score:2)
How much does this cost? (Score:2)
Re:How much does this cost? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:How much does this cost? (Score:2)
God: There is no exp(pi*sqrt(163))
I can't believe I just replied to a .sig. What a dork I am.
wow, I learn something new everyday (Score:3, Interesting)
CBSD
Re:wow, I learn something new everyday (Score:3, Informative)
Thats where the external directional antennas come in. Works for bluetooth and wifi.
RF distance can be surprising (Score:3, Interesting)
9600 baud 'em (Score:5, Funny)
Dilbert: okay.
Mordac: What?! No engineer gives up email so easily. Assume the position!
Dilbert (at home, to Dogbert): So, he found the modem strapped to my ankle, but he missed my wireless pen modem.
Nothing amazing here (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Nothing amazing here (Score:2)
But only with a license.
I can find no reference to license requirements for these devices, and since they're operating in the 900 MHz band, I'm assuming they're unlicensed.
This makes me wonder about these, and things like the WiFi shootouts. Are there or are there not FCC regulations regarding these antennas and transmitter power? Obviously there are, but what are those limits? 1 watt? 4 watts? 50 watts? And what about encryption, even on good old 802.11? The FCC has alwa
Re:Nothing amazing here (Score:4, Informative)
As for encryption, it's only the ham rules (part 97) that prohibit encryption. They also require that you ID yourself at the end of each message (and at least every 10 minutes) and that the usage be non-commercial. The FCC itself doesn't frown upon encryption, at least not publically.
Yup. This link [qrpis.org] might be an interesting place to start.Wow! (Score:4, Funny)
NO CARRIER
In the army (in Finland) (Score:4, Interesting)
no time penalty (Score:5, Interesting)
No time penalty is incurred during AES encryption or decryption.
That's pretty interesting. Perhaps they meant to say that there is no additional processing overhead beyond that which is introduced by performing the full number of rounds for a 256 bit key in hardware.
It seems you still need a shared secret. I assume it isn't doing any authenticated Diffie-Hellman to establish a session key.
Sorry, it's just kind of irritating when you hear things like "security through encryption." Great. You get integrity protection and data confidentialy while the data is in trasit. There are many other opportunities for an attacker to get your data besides when it's flying around in mid-air.
it's 900MHz (Score:4, Informative)
But than I read this modem works on 900MHz, so that's quite a feat, worthy of a "Pringles can award"
/.ed (Score:3, Funny)
How can you tell if someone is a complete geek? (Score:5, Funny)
A: If they say, "Something about using the AT command set to fire off a command 40 miles through the air amuses me."
umm, line of site at 40 miles? (Score:2, Interesting)
1000 Miles per watt award (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:1000 Miles per watt award (Score:2)
Someone better at math (and less lazy) than myself could probably explain the bit about the amount o
Re:1000 Miles per watt award (Score:3, Interesting)
packetradio.com [packetradio.com]
I work PSK31 occasionally and have worked Euro
Distant Horizon. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Distant Horizon. (Score:4, Insightful)
Don't be cynical. I can look out my office window and see a mountain which is 65 miles away from here. The world is not a "totally flat plain or ocean."
Do you live in the Midwest or something? The entire world isn't all like that, you know!
Re:Distant Horizon. (Score:2)
Anyone planning a long haul like this would do well to read up on "fresnel zones". I have a 10mbit link that works well with more than 10 knots of wind. Below that the water between gets too shiny and the signal falls apart from multipath reflection problems.
Re:Distant Horizon. (Score:3, Insightful)
What about Free Space Optics? (Score:2)
Cool Stuff (Score:2, Informative)
It's not an 11b replacement! (Score:3, Informative)
But that's not what it's aimed at. Look at the interface it has on the non-RF side: multidrop serial. It's designed for telemetry applications. And when you're doing telemetry, lower power usage is good (as you may be running off solar-charged batteries) and bandwidth needs are minimal - you're not going to need more than a few bytes for a current water level or similar
Personal Remote Internet (Score:2)
Been looking into using HAM packet radio for this very purpose..
Or us it in the back 40 of your yard, where wifi is too weak..
Its *plenty* fast enough for a terminal desktop session, connections to imap, etc...
It didnt mention costs.. any ideas?
900MHz 40 miles? maybe on the moon (Score:2)
Receive sensitivity is good down to -110dBm which is just fantastic for a radio that size - Cisco Aironet cards are only good down to about -95dBm.
HOWEVER
Its not magic, but its cool - 9600 baud at a cheap price with a band that has
Re:Ad Dot (Score:4, Funny)
Seriously all companies (and governments) turn out the same eventually. Just like with google, we'll be sitting around one day commenting "Remember when slashdot was that indie little "news for nerds" site?
Re:Ad Dot (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Ad Dot (Score:2)
Re:problems (Score:3, Funny)
Re:problems (Score:2)
3000 feet (Score:2)
Re:40 miles?! (Score:2)
Re:9k6 (Score:2)