WiFi in Your Rental Car 100
Jezebel writes "Avis is bundling a 3G-to-802.11 bridge with their rental cars that will turn the vehicles into WiFi hotspots. Will we now have to worry about laptop use on the Interstate?" From the article "Autonet Mobile CEO Sterling Pratz told the International Herald Tribune that the In-Car Router will function in around 95 percent of the country, including all major US cities. Pratz claims to have minimized the problem of dropped signals with a technology similar to that used by the space shuttles to maintain an Internet connection."
In soiviet Russia (Score:5, Funny)
The Killer App (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
Around busier interchanges, there is an overhead gantry with a smaller matrix per lane, which allows police to advise traff
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
- 25% of the drivers seeing the sign would be confused, coming to a near stop on the freeway while they ponder the meaning
- 25% would dive to the breakdown lane, accelerating around everyone so that they can be the first on in line at the merge point
- 25% will do nothing, staying in the right lane until they reach the closure point, then will sit there with a turn signal blinking, waiting for someone to let them over.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
The other killer app will be posting on slashdot *while* you are driving to work.
Re: (Score:2)
Regulation (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Regulation (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Regulation (Score:4, Informative)
Mrs Donna Marie Maddock also had her license suspended for 20 months for an alcohol related offence just before being handed this ban and these points. Whatever the courts and BBC tell I bet that the magistrates handing out the ban actually knew who is getting it and the list of her previous (or in processing) offences. In fact they definitely knew, because her solicitor has asked the judges to reduce or waive the ban because she was already serving one (the best example of Chewbacca defence I have ever heard of).
Re:Regulation (Score:4, Insightful)
We have laws like that (in most places) here in the U.S. as well, but enforcing existing laws doesn't let the politicians demonstrate how freaking "in-touch" and "useful" they are. Thus, we get nonsense legislation every few years. Solving problems that don't really exist or that ought to be covered by existing laws already is a favorite.
Re: (Score:2)
Careless or negligent driving
Reckless Driving
Reckless Endangerment
Contributing to an accident
And when all else fails and a police officer know you were being a dumb ass and deserve to be charged with something but can't find something that is fitting:
Miscellaneous traffic violations
It's stupid to legislate laptop usage in cars because it's not the laptop usage it's the mindles
Re: (Score:1)
Re:Regulation (Score:5, Funny)
No no no, much better that the law tries to define exactly and explicity what you can't do while driving a motor vehicle. Let's see, item 2647a - watercolour painting, 2647b sketching with a pencil
My client was, in fact, doing a landscape in oils and playing the clarinet when he ploughed through a red light and killed 23 people. He is innocent!
Re: (Score:2)
California bans front-seat laptops, dvd players (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Reverse wardriving! (Score:2, Funny)
Re: (Score:1)
Have a little heart the next time some pimply-faced kid starts tailgating your rental car - maybe he's just trying to get the rest of the Paris Hilton video before you get out of range.
Looks like we'll have free broadband on the run :) (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Looks like we'll have free broadband on the run (Score:1)
Re:Looks like we'll have free broadband on the run (Score:1)
If you're on the spaceship, and you're hitting a morse code key at 1 hz a second, or you're transmitting WiFi at 2.1 Ghz frequency, that's like a clock. You wouldn't get an increased data rate at all. The person you're transmitting to, the observer, sees your clocks slow down. Thus, he see
Re: (Score:2)
On top of that the traveller would have to maintain a constant speed.
Re:Looks like we'll have free broadband on the run (Score:2)
Question: if my car goes 70 miles/hour and my wifi goes 11Mbs, will the overall packet speed be bigger?
Answer: If you are driving directly towards the base station, you'll get about 1.2 extra bits per second. If you are driving directly away from it, you'll lose about 1.2 bits per second.
However I think you were technically mistaken in asking about an 11Mbps wifi speed. The relevant l
Actually an interesting question (Score:2)
So why would doppler not be a problem with WiFi? I'm just thinking out loud here...
Here's the math: (Score:2)
Can they really achieve the coverage (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1, Insightful)
Coverage first starts out in the major metro areas and works its way out to the suburbs of the largest cities, and especially those that are "centers of commerce.
Re:Can they really achieve the coverage (Score:4, Interesting)
GSM Coverage Maps:
http://www.coveragemaps.com/gsmposter.htm [coveragemaps.com]
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
alternate to municiple wifi (Score:5, Interesting)
Tho the way things are going, some paraoid person is going to flip out because it will make it easier for people to get untraceable internet access and lord knows we can't allow that, and will ruin it for everyone.
Oblig (Score:2)
I just couldn't help it, because in this case, it almost makes sense:
In Soviet Russia, car wardrives YOU!
Now do we have to worry about those pesky homeowners logging in illicitly on our mobile connection?
Re: (Score:1)
That would be AWESOME. I would love to tell someone what an idiot they were for cutting me off. Of course you'd have to worry about their gun.
Or what about chatting with that cute girl in the next car? Wouldn't that be nice. Although I would never have the guts anyway...too bad. Not for me.
Re: (Score:2)
This would be an interesting way to solve the problem of municiple wifi.
Too bad it won't work.
a) Range of WiFi is limited in these devices. The power levels are intentionally low so as to avoid interference. Even if you were to crank them up, the distance is not significant. How far are you from a street where one of these cars could be reasonably expected to be?
b) 3G networking is not free. Whoever has these devices in their rental cars will be paying for it. There will be access controls of some sort, these won't be open hotspots. Probably just a WEP key on the side of the b
Re: (Score:2)
Obviously this assumes parking is plentiful where you need it, which is generally true in some cities and generally false in others.
this could be cool (Score:1)
if you are driving with multipule vehicles, you could have a lan party or play UT.
just think of the possibilities!!
Re: (Score:2)
Drive-Thru Pr0n!!!
Re: (Score:1)
"No fair, we hit a bump!"
You don't need Internet access to have a lan party, though... You need it to play online.
DS Lite! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Been there done that
Let me tell you google maps + Wireless from Verizon + Tablet PC = never ever having to stop to find your way again.
Kind of Shortsighted, don't you think? (Score:4, Interesting)
Yes, because the first application I think of when I think of riding in the car is a surfing the web on a laptop. This is a step further in a persistent connection to caches of information on the road. We're pretty much limited by GPS, commercial radio, cellular and CB communications. Let's get out of thinking that a computer is something you sit at and type. Multiple devices can take advantage of a persistent connection on the road. A networked car computer will either enhance or replace already existing information channels (like the ones I previously mentioned). And supply a few more; think of automated driving and distancing through wireless arrays. Traffic systems that can 'predict' with greater accuracy when cars need the lights changed or the railroad crossing sign lifted. Anyway, Yeah, people will use it to download iTunes (is that a bad thing), but let's get beyond the old man sitting at the terminal inputing text at a keyboard. That is SO twentieth century.
Using a Wifi device in a car (Score:5, Insightful)
Firstly Wifi != Laptop, this could enable things like Google Earth sat images to be downloaded in real time to your Sat/Nav system, it could be used to switch your mobile to VOIP rather than using a cell, it could be used by the cars Radio/CD/iPod player to offer you new tracks.
Secondly the person driving doesn't have to be the person working. Last year myself and a friend drove from San Francisco to Las Vegas, with a bunch of work to do we split the driving and use a car-charger adapter for the laptop, we got a good 10 hours of work done and an internet connection would have made that a lot better.
Thirdly this also means that Avis can start flogging you added extras that work on Wifi, which is cheaper than 3G connected devices.
My big question though is do all those cars have different SSIDs and will they be WPA and greater protected? If I'm connecting up to a network then I'd prefer people not being able to hijack my devices, some SatNavs can already be bluejacked and this could make it miles worse.
Re: (Score:1)
To quote the summary:
Re: (Score:1)
I'm sure you have a point, but I'm missing it.
Re: (Score:1)
I think I've misread your post, and you are talking about lots-of-WiFi kit talking to a single bit of 3G kit, rather than having lots of 3G kit. But I don't see when that would be the case, you normally have one bit of 3G kit, talking bluetooth to the other net-enabled kit.
Whoa... hold up one sec. (Score:1)
The Space shuttle is connected to the Internets?!?
nmap -A -T4 atlantis.sts.critical.nasa.gov
pr0n in 0G (Score:2)
Look up The Uranus Experiment. First zero gravity cum shot, I believe.
Re: (Score:1)
The name of the space shuttle technology (Score:2)
the rollout is new, but not the tech (Score:3, Informative)
Remember Tor Amundson's DYI Linux StompBox [slashdot.org]*?
Or commercial boxes like the Junxion Box, which showed up in this solar-powered hotspot [slashdot.org]?
Now there are several little routers that will take these cards, and with EV-DO rev A, speeds are starting to compete with older-generation DSL lines.
*instead of using the URL in that article, use this one [stompboxnetworks.com].
Woohoo! (Score:2)
Now nerds world over can actually leave their house while waiting for 12 hours spawns to pop.
No fan of this (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/artic le/2006/12/12/AR2006121201695.html [washingtonpost.com]
"But not always. In one Loudoun incident that has become infamous among area police departments, a man stole a bait vehicle and was able to drive it from Leesburg to Southeast Washington because of technical difficulties. Police eventually got the suspect, minutes after the camera caught him smoking crack and masturbating. He had spent part of his ride urina
Re: (Score:1)
Now worry? (Score:2)
Now? Over a decade ago, I saw a computer parts catalog selling a laptop mount for the car - that attached to the steering wheel. It scared the hell out of me because I can easily see people on the DC Beltway using it during their commute. It wasn't just a distraction, it was a hindrance to the already poor driving ability of most people on the road.
Fix your customer service first... (Score:3, Interesting)
While this works for the most part with airlines, it blows for people flying in at 11pm. There two real people on duty with a line of about 50. The kiosks wouldn't pull up anyone's info and directed you to go to the counter instead.
After waiting in line for over an hour, I was told that the kiosks are down. Awesome, direct me there when you know full well they don't work.
So, if they can't keep their kiosks running, I can't only imagine what their 3Gwifi will be like.
Massive adhoc network (Score:1)
Roadcasting FTW ! (Score:1)
Umm.. Passenger use? (Score:1)
Already doing this! (Score:1)
http://picasaweb.google.com/sriram.venkataramani/
Re: (Score:1)
internet is not so cool ... (Score:1)
Make it work like car TV's (Score:4, Informative)
However, I believe that by law, a screen visible to the driver is/should be disabled when the e-brake is off or perhaps when the vehicle is out of park if possible. Applying this to wifi wouldn't be too difficult either, especially if this is a factory install.
I must ask though, why do you need wifi in a car? If you need a laptop signal then an ethernet jack in the center console would work fine, even if it is piggybacking on a wireless system.
Get a free radiation treatment ... (Score:1)
No honestly, I am into wireless technology like everybody else, I use mobile phones, I use
bluetooth to connect that mobile phone to my notebook and I hava a wireless hotspot at
home so I can sit outside without having to throw a ethernet line out the window.
But
these other devices when I'm done using them.
Somehow I don't think you can turn off the access point in those car
So, now we can revise the age-old question,. . . (Score:2)
Car A, traveling 70 miles per hour (mph) with a 802.11b (11 MBPS) WiFi Hotspot, leaves Westford heading toward Eastford, 260 miles away. At the same time Car B, traveling 60 mph with a 802.11g (56 MBPS) WiFi Hotspot, leaves Eastford heading toward Westford. When do the two cars meet? How far from each city do they meet? When can a person in Car B pick up the WiFi signa
doppler effect (Score:1, Funny)
3G is already wireless (Score:1)
A new reason..... (Score:1)
"...worry about laptop use on the Interstate?" (Score:1)
I think you meant to say "Internet use."
What still baffles me is how ingrained it is in North American culture that you have to drive alone, and that passengers don't exist. (Well, actually cars altogether...)
- RG>
Simple tech solution requires political will (Score:1)
http://tinyurl.com/yfyldy [tinyurl.com]
Electronic distractions are more easily eliminated. All that's needed is elementary communication between distracting devices and cars. When the wheels are turning, only 911 calls are a