Introducing The Wi-Fi-Mobile 63
tech writer writes "A Twin Cities tech entrepreneur has retrofitted an old TV-station truck to serve as a roving hot spot for Internet access. His technology firm has blanketed the metropolitan area with WiMax transmitters atop local skyscrapers, so all he needs to do is grab bandwidth using the truck's telescoping mast and convert it to Wi-Fi for use in the vehicle's immediate surroundings. The dude happens to be in a band, so his wireless arrangement has been great for streaming outdoor Savage Aural Hotbed performances!"
Re:Right, how long before he gets arrested? (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Right, how long before he gets arrested? (Score:2)
Re:Right, how long before he gets arrested? (Score:4, Interesting)
Plus, I wonder about whether or not he was harvesting information from people hooking up.
Re:Right, how long before he gets arrested? (Score:3, Interesting)
Not me. I'm not wondering about that at all. I think it's fairly safe to say that such folks are in it more for what they can get via sniffing than the $1/hour.
Re:Right, how long before he gets arrested? (Score:3, Insightful)
It's about as criminal as one asking his parents to borrow money to buy a toy, only he's asking his employers to let him broadcast material he owns the copyright to. Please, think about reading the post in full before writing an uninformed comment.
Re:Right, how long before he gets arrested? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Right, how long before he gets arrested? (Score:2, Interesting)
Ding ding ding! (Score:3, Interesting)
Basically what this guy is doing is pulling bandwidth from his own company's WiMax (802.16) system, and pumping it out for the peeps 802.11b (Or b-g? or a-b-g? The article didn't say.) stylee with his truck.
Nothing illegal is going on here. This is a dynamite piece of guerilla marketing, though. I wish this guy all the best.
Re:Ding ding ding! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Right, how long before he gets arrested? (Score:1)
I read the FA and not the summary. In the article not much attention is drawn to where the bandwidth was comming from, it spaeks only of "pulling bandwidth from the surounding area". Turns out its from his own company.
Re:Right, how long before he gets arrested? (Score:2)
You need sleep, pal.
Re:Right, how long before he gets arrested? (Score:1)
God forbid one may live without... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:God forbid one may live without... (Score:3, Insightful)
Most Cities in the world don't even have Wi-Fi on the street corner, so I would say that it was an interesting piece for about 90% of it's readership.
Re:God forbid one may live without... (Score:1)
Farmer John needs his daily slashdot as well.
Is this technology adaptable to fixed networks? (Score:4, Informative)
Obviously, this DeVaan guy is a networking whiz. I'd like to replicate this same 'rebroadcasting' of WiFi coverage inside my home. The article does not mention the type of machinery he uses beyond the media van that it's all stored in. Do any of the networking engineers here at Slashdot know of a way to boost the signal strength of my home wireless network?
Re:Is this technology adaptable to fixed networks? (Score:5, Informative)
The truck is basically a WiMax to WiFi router. It doesn't just act as a WiFi repeater, since WiMax and WiFi are different radio signals. From an Intel site [intel.com]:
WiFi is IEEE standard 802.11, usually 802.11b or 802.11g. It operates over short distances, usually under a mile. You can get lots further with paired line-of-sight antennae, but most uses are short range.
The simplest way to add more coverage in your house is connect a second base station by wire.
Re:Is this technology adaptable to fixed networks? (Score:4, Informative)
Well, you could run some cat5 downstairs to another access point, or if you have a Linksys wireless router, you could purchase another AP and set it up to repeat the signal from one floor below (depending on the model). Barring that, you may have some luck with the Linksys high-gain antenna [linksys.com], or even one of these [freeantennas.com].
Re:Is this technology adaptable to fixed networks? (Score:2)
Well, go figure, the WAP11 just wouldn't go into wireless repeating mode, so I still ended up running a CAT-5 upstairs to the wireless AP. Thankfully, the second floor is now blanketed and I have no more drop-offs - but I
Re:Is this technology adaptable to fixed networks? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Is this technology adaptable to fixed networks? (Score:1)
1. Put together linux box with two interfaces, one being an 802.11g pci card, the other a not-yet standarized possibly 802.16d card. Connect both to rooftop or clown held antannas.
2. enable dhcp/ip routing/nat between the interfaces, or simply bridge the traffic if possible.
3. Profit*
Also, most wifi manufacturers are creating wireless repeiters (basically bridges) which will extend the range of your signal. Purchasing upgraded antan
Re:Is this technology adaptable to fixed networks? (Score:4, Interesting)
CP
Re:Is this technology adaptable to fixed networks? (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Is this technology adaptable to fixed networks? (Score:2)
In normal antennas, the strongest signal is perpendicular to it with the weakest above it or below it ( pointing at it or away from it ). This is fine if you point the antenna straight up and you're on the same floor because the strongest reception radiates horizontally out around it. If you're two floors below it, try turning the antenna 90 degrees so the sweet spot aims down toward you.
If this doesn't work well enough
Comment removed (Score:3, Funny)
It sounds similar to an ice cream truck.. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:It sounds similar to an ice cream truck.. (Score:2)
Re:It sounds similar to an ice cream truck.. (Score:2)
You were saying?
What a fantastic Hack! (Score:5, Interesting)
The first things that pop in mind is ruarl schools can have an "Internet Day" when the truck pulls up in front of the school, or possible military operations, extending internet out into the desert or jungle, or high steppe, or wherever they want to go next.
Re:What a fantastic Hack! (Score:2)
Re:What a fantastic Hack! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:What a fantastic Hack! (Score:1)
The internet dishes that RVs use cost ~ $10k for hardware and installation with a monthly service cost starting at $100. See this page about the Internet Archive's bookmobile [archive.org] for details. Here's a photo (small [archive.org], large [archive.org])of their network connection.
The vendor, Motosat [motosat.com], claims download speeds of 400kb/s and up, with upload speeds of 30-90 kb/s. So you would have enough bandwidth to serve a single high latency
Re:What a fantastic Hack! (Score:2)
Re:Isn't This Illegal? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Isn't This Illegal? (Score:1)
I know I work there and was very surprised to see Implex on Slashdot this morning.
Interesting (Score:1)
Wi-max gear retailers (Score:5, Interesting)
I find one place "Wi-lan.com" via google - but not only are they not in my country (type accepted???), they've got some marketing channels outside of what I'd prefer to use.
Come on slashdoters - share the 'insight'!
Re:Wi-max gear retailers (Score:1, Informative)
Results 1 - 10 of about 1,340,000 for wi-max. (0.25 seconds)
generic (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Wi-max gear retailers (Score:4, Interesting)
www.apertonet.com
www.alvarion.com
www.tr
www.smartbridges.com
www.motor
www.part-15.org
www.dslreports.com
www.isp-wireless.com
Not all Wi-Max, not even all vendors, but good reads nonetheless
Re:Wi-max gear retailers (Score:1)
http://www.wispdirectory.com/blog/index.php?s=wim
Also, http://www.wispdirectory.com/ [wispdirectory.com] has additional WiMAX info.
This is really an exercise club for geeks... (Score:1)
... as the people running behind the truck with their laptops can only get healthier!
Eric
How to masquerade your browser [ericgiguere.com] (Hint: Firefox makes it easy)
The speed must be nice.. (Score:3, Interesting)
I have the all-you-can-eat data plan on my Nextel, so sharing that connection over wifi meant we could both get online without having to share a laptop or toss the phone back and forth. Nextel's great firewall is horrid (NAT up the wazoo, no UDP, mangles JPEGs on the way in), and the latency makes SSH excruciating, but it's better than nothing.
The amusing bit was watching people associate. I set the SSID to something like "MySlowPhoneBeNice" and figured anyone who finds it deserves it. It's funny being the only WISP in hickville and finding the only wardriver.
As far as I can remember, Nextel's AUP only prohibits reselling service, so I was even in the clear for sharing it with a coworker. (The resulting throughput is its own penalty, I guess.)
I wish like anything that Ricochet was still up, I'd love to have a serious upstream for these antics. I guess WiMax will come someday, but without a unified back-end it'll still be a comedy of overlapping signals and non-roaming. Ugh.
WiMax, Trucks & the Last Mile (Score:2)
It is, in effect the new frontier for innovation by companies such as Alvarion. Intel is pushing hard in this areas as they see this domain as an untapped area where they can gain traction.
This article is informational: http://www.dmeurope.com/default.asp%3FArticleID%3 D 3753 [dmeurope.com]
Of course, WiMax, is being promised as that solution to t
Only licensed spectrum for now... (Score:1)
It'll be huge, however, once its available to the rest of us.
Regards,
Kory
service costs (Score:1)
In case you where wondering (Score:1)