

5 Cool Wireless Reseach Projects 50
Bob B writes "Including an effort by MIT researchers to exploit dense urban networks of existing Wi-Fi access points to create municipal wireless networks rather than relying on EarthLink and cities to fund and build such wireless projects. Secure tunneling is the secret sauce for making it work and not making wireless AP owners liable for miscreants who might use the bandwidth, the researchers say."
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If a story looks like a dup to me, I just don't read it. On the other hand, slashdot's completely broken moderation forces me to read everything, unless I want to miss some really good posts. So if they were going to fix anything, I'd say moderation is where to put the effort, priority #1.
As for the story, someone has to provide access to the net. Distributing it so that people get it from wifi puts the load - and the bill - on the people with the connections. As long as the Internet pipes are a commerc
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Why? No, really, why? If the number of people using wifi this way gets large enough you effectively have a p2p network on the physical layer. The only place you need a traditional ISP is for connections outside the city, and this is where the fun part comes in. You then don't have to live in the ISP's coverage area. Any company with a large quantity of bandwidth (Google, IBM ... ) could start acting like an ISP by hooking into the wireless network a
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troll? (Score:2)
ISP EULAs (Score:5, Insightful)
ISP EULAs (Score:2)
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http://itsmeusvita.blogspot.com/2006/12/is-it-illegal-to-use-someones-open-wifi.html [blogspot.com]
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tier_1_carrier [wikipedia.org]
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This might ( most likely does ) violate most any ISP's eula.
The last time I checked my Embarq (formerly Sprint) DSL TOS and AUP, it not only didn't violate it, it discussed a few requirements for when you shared your access. (Namely, that your end-users also not $%^& up the network hardware upstream from you.) YMMV.
Municipal Wireless using existing (private) APs (Score:5, Interesting)
However, based on my experience with wifi, there seem to be one major problem here: interference effects. I already have problems that I can see about 6 different access points from my desk... on four different networks and SSIDs. The 802.11 spec only allows for three non-overlapping channels (in the US frequency bands, anyway). This problem gets worse as the capacity utilization factor approaches 100%, as it's more and more likely that two packets will happen to collide. This might be a huge problem for this kind of large-scale wifi, as 802.11b/g isn't really designed to operate well when you can see so many APs at once.
In any case, I wonder if they're also overestimating the infrastructure deployment costs. One of the most amazing things to me was how, within a decade, everyone suddenly had wireless in their home and workplace. In fact, in urban areas, it wouldn't surprise me if there were 1 private access point for every 10 or 20 people. People aren't afraid to pay to get cool technology -- although it's a bit different when the government does it.
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Educational microcontroller kits for the digital generation. [nerdkits.com]
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I think that this structure should help, not hurt, the access point clashing that goes on in highly dense
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However that won't solve the main problem, interference effects, as parent noted.
Re:Municipal Wireless using existing (private) APs (Score:5, Interesting)
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As for ISP bandwidth, technically, if you have a CDN (via satellite downlink) the amount of bandwidth actually needed is minimal. Thats because if you are dealing with these neighborhood intern
Reseach projects... (Score:5, Funny)
Downside? (Score:2)
Re:Downside? (Score:5, Funny)
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Facebook on Bittorrent, eh? Sounds like an interesting project! Anyone interested?
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It's like a one of those Nintendo DS brain training games except it hurts your head.
reseach [sic] (Score:1)
"Secure Tunnelling?" (Score:3, Funny)
FON wireless (Score:4, Informative)
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Finally, someone who gets it! I'm sick of all of these whiners who say "I can see 10 or 20 wireless AP's within range of my system, and it's killing me!" Gee, imagine all of those AP's converted into one mesh network. You'd only see 1.
That's right, 1 network to rule them all. If that's too paranoid for you, break it up into 3 overlapping networks. Call them NBC, ABC, and CBS for historical reasons. I don't care. Don't assume that if this model gets implemented any time soon, though, that you are go
So.. What do I need to do? (Score:2)
Is that the idea?
why do i want to open my AP? (Score:2)
NOTHING...???
have a bunch of moochers sapping my bandwidth
opening my network to possible security risks
quite possibly get deprovisioned for breaking my ISP's EULA
run the risk that one of the moochers was d/l'ing child pr0n or was Al-queda and then spend much time trying to explain it was not me...NO REALLY
it is a neat idea... but the downsides for the people you need in order to make it work... seem to really be unsurmountable.
plus besides convincing them to do it... (even if you could
First Responders - Data sharing in Emergencies (Score:2, Insightful)
I think this idea needs to be pursued. Having immediate but temporary access to need-to-know info such as medical history, contact phone numbers, and even a programmable access card for building (apt or condo) access to respond to 911 calls would be excellent.
The temporary, secure design would reduc