Intel Wi-Fi Provides 6 Mbps Over 100 km 77
MIT Technology Review describes a new Wi-Fi router from Intel capable of sending a Wi-Fi signal tens of miles with 6-Mbps performance. This is perfect for rural areas without Internet service, and for less developed countries interested in building out their Internet infrastructure but no means to lay expensive cable or fiber optics. The routers cost about $500 each, and you need two of them for a point-to-point connection. Quoting: "Intel's RCP platform rewrites the communication rules of Wi-Fi radios. Galinvosky explains that the software creates specific time slots in which each of the two radios listens and talks, so there's no extra data being sent confirming transmissions. 'We're not taking up all the bandwidth waiting for acknowledgments,' he says. Since there is an inherent trade-off between the amount of available bandwidth and the distance that a signal can travel, the more bandwidth is available, the farther a signal can travel."
Re: (Score:2)
I love that they chose to make a big deal about a Wi-Fi solution when WiMax was supposed to be here already. Wasn't it this time last year when they were talking about WiMax adapters being standard on laptops?
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Somebody get these researches 4-digit Slashdot logins so they can catch up.
still too expensive (Score:4, Interesting)
Even if they were available when I helped start a community wifi, we would not use them. they are too expensive. We are getting WRT54GL routers for $50.00 each, and tere is a never ending supply of free dish network dish assemblies with mounts.
Re:still too expensive (Score:5, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
The restriction on these devices is that you can't AMPLIFY them. But High-Gain antennas are NOT amplifiers.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
In the US 2.4GHz point to multipoint (your typical access point) is limited is 36dBm EIRP. Which can be reached by f.ex. a 15dBm (30mW) radio and a 21dBi antenna or a 30dBm (1W) radio and a 6dBi antenna.
For point to point, the base limit is also 36dBm (30dBm radio, 6dBi antenna). But for every 3dB over the 6dBi antenna, you only need to subtract 1dB of input power.
Re:still too expensive (Score:5, Informative)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
You don't even need to do such a hack job either. My parents receive 2 to 3 Mb/s rural internet service over a distance in excess of 10 km using off-the-shelf equipment provided by their ISP, purchased for much less than $500 about 5 years ago. I even think that the bandwidth is limited upstream of the wireless link (ie. the wireless technology is capable of more than the bandwidth they
Perfect for regional australia (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Perfect for regional australia (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
db
Re: (Score:2)
I know a few people on remote properties that could benefit from this, the furthest being 120KMs from town. While that's out of range it would be possible to link the routers to the other two properties forming a relay back to the town or even extend to the two road houses that are another 50 or KM from town. 6 Mbit between 3-5 properties still isn't bad and these arnt the sort
Re: (Score:1)
A lot of issues with this (Score:3, Interesting)
The biggest issue is that 2.4, with only 3 non-overlaping channels, is it almost unusable for long distance shots. I'm working in a WISP that has some 2.4 and it will make you pull your hair out. At one tower, in somewhat of a rural area, we could see 121 different SSIDs from an omni antenna a couple of hundred feet off the ground.
At 500.00 a unit, I doubt this will see high deployment, but if all of these things don't play nice with each other, it will be yet more interference.
And last, 2.4 could already do ten miles easy already, and much cheaper. You could build a Mikrotik AP for 600.00ish and have 20 clients at 10 miles for 200ish a client unit, if they are all line of sight. But note that you have stretched 2.4 well beyound what it was designed for, and in no time you will understand exactly why WISPs startup and fold like crazy...and the only people who made ANY money are the ones who sold you the equipment.
Transporter_ii
Re:A lot of issues with this (Score:5, Informative)
Let me tell you, two to three times, I have been involved in a 2.4 build-out. Each time it went like this. You spend a lot of time and money going around and swapping out that "expensive" Canopy equipment for the much cheaper 2.4 equipment. Everything works fine for about four days to a week. You run back and swap a few people back to that "expensive" Canopy equipment for various reasons...but within six months, when the crap hits the fan for some reason, and you have to have help scrambling to find enough Canopy equipment to put everyone back on...because its the only thing that "just works." It may not be perfect, but it does work.
After it saves your ass a few times, that Canopy equipment doesn't seem so expensive.
Transporter_ii
Re: (Score:1)
I've been running off of one for almost 3 years now with very few issues. 99.9% uptime.
Re: (Score:2)
it's better in the 5.7 band, but even more expensive. you can't win with wireless
Re: (Score:2)
I've got many Canopy links at 5.7GHz which have been working at ranges averaging in the realm of 12 miles (the longest is 17 miles) for about four years without adjustment. These are mounted to things like the handrail on top of a grain elevator, or on non-penetrating mounts on the top of tall industrial buildings -- places I was sure that either vibration or ice accumulation would push things around in no time. It's been fine.
I've also got a handful of 2.4GHz links which are not quite line-of-sight
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
We've only got two wide-spread (read: county-wide) networks that we maintain. On one, the access points are mounted near the middle of a 90-foot tower which is atop a 12-story office building, which is by far the tallest structure in the vicinity, but it sits near the bottom of a natural valley within an otherwise-flat landscape. The APs are only up around 120 feet, with topology taken into consideration.
The other network (which covers another entire coun
Re: (Score:2)
i certainly wouldn't have picked canopy since it's so expensive, but it was imposed to us by the boss (he had a friend who could get us realllll
Re: (Score:2)
Syncing to GPS alone could be an issue for wide adopting as a last-mile technology though. It would really suck if intermittent GPS failure (due to extreme weather, military blackout, etc) caused everyone's last-mile links to malfunction due to bad timing. The situation could be remedied by ensuring the APs also have a very stable monotonic clock source to run from between GPS syncs, but it has to be stable enough to support your wireless timing at sufficient precision for hours or more. That will add co
Perfect..... (Score:3, Insightful)
I often wondered what is stopping a mesh network from spreading. It would be basically the type which the OLPC has, except essentially a router with an antenna could be put on top of your house and connect with others of its type, from spreading. Of course, there would have to be a central hub connected into a fat pipe every so often so the signal doesn't hop around like mad.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
I have done a little work on this problem over the years and I suspect there is just a lack of all the necessary pieces for a good high performance mesh network solution. Here are some ideas off the top of my head while ignoring economic and political reasons:
1. Cu
Be More Paranoid (Score:2)
Don't rely on wireless encryption - they all seem to fall eventually.
Use TLS/SSH/VPN as needed and taunt the script kiddies to thwart you. OK, maybe skip the taunting part.
You would have thought that would be obvious.. (Score:1)
Well.. Duh.
The catch (Score:5, Funny)
What are they talking about? (Score:1)
While my friends enjoy 21km link using two 20Eur Atheros-based WiFi cards pluged in PC's (routers) running linux, I just don't see what's the big fuss. Not to mention that You can buy a pair of routers for 50Eur and do the same trick using DD-WRT firmware and two parabolic 19-24dBi antenas.
You won't get my $500 for that box.
Re: (Score:1)
This [nswireless.org] works more than fine. It is not the first time long range have been achieved using WiFi equipment.
I'm not saying that Intel's routers are bad. This one looks like it can survive the ice age. If they could get it under $200...
Bad article summary (Score:5, Informative)
Single point failure. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re: (Score:1)
I would link the article, but ive tried searching for it and I cant find it . . just take my word
Not New or News (Score:1, Informative)
They Never Heard of ZModem? (Score:2, Insightful)
Doh
How innovative, get a patent! (Score:2)
Sounds vaguely familiar... (Score:2)
I Don't Understand (Score:1)
The summary says:
I'm confused - in what way are bandwidth and the distance a signal can travel related?
Re: (Score:2)
Cheap (Score:1)
sum up the problems in one phrase (Score:1)
Latency? (Score:1)
On the Road. (Score:2)
It also provides... (Score:1)
The Ubiquitous Anywhere Internet is Here! (Almost) (Score:2)