Open Networking 112
New10k writes "Here is a feature article on guys in Seattle, San Francisco and elsewhere who are bringing the Open Source ethic to the idea of an available to all wireless Internet. Includes a short explanation of telco vs. free methods of providing access." I know folks who do this already, just not with permission (roam around cities with sniffers and find networks that aren't locked down ;)
Re:Not through walls? (Score:1)
The *real* problem (Score:1)
It is not just LAN and point to point network equipment in this range. There are 2.4 Ghz video cameras, cordless phones, and, yes, your microwave oven. Try it. Set a laptop or a PC with a 2.4 Ghz (microwave) network adapter in the proximity of a microwave oven. Start a data stream. Start heating some food or water. Watch your performance degrade.
Even the same type of equipment in neighboring areas will interfere, not just a little bit. It can take a system off-line. A single client with a weak/poor connection to a central access point will degrade performance to the entire cell. Watch your investment dollars. Have fun anyway.
Re:"free" (Score:1)
$160 for an 802.11b card.
Your local network speed will be much higher than DSL or cable.
Re:"free" (Score:1)
How much does that DSL modem cost? Now how much does it cost for the service?
Re:how would it work? (Score:1)
Yea, that sucks with satellite TV too
If the internet connection was out too it'd be pretty damn terrible!
--
Great Idea, but -- (Score:1)
Perhaps, the better way to pull this would be a subscription-based thing. $5/month for that constant connection.
This does allow for all kinds of lifestyle reflection. In addition to being yet another way to find you, it'd allow for point of view cameras all over, even a virtual overlay a la CyberGeneration.
Anyway -- I'm done.
Re:Apple made it popular (Score:1)
http://www.msrl.com/airport-gold/
One cool thing is that you can also use the newer Apple computers as base stations. So if you have a desktop & a laptop, you can use the desktop as a base station & then get wireless web surfing around your house with the laptop sharing the desktop's connection.
Anyone doing anything in NJ? (Score:1)
one of these in central NJ for a while now.
Is anyone interested? I could definatly act
as a node although I have squat for net bandwidth.
Mike
Re:900Mhz / 2.4Ghz IP networks and security. (Score:1)
I think I'm still looking for someone who can *demonstrate* that it is easy, instead of just claiming that it's so.
A.
Source for Antennas (Score:1)
Re:Tragedy of the common? (Score:1)
Re:once again... (Score:1)
fcc regs? (Score:1)
Re:What about the FCC? (Score:1)
</BLOCKQUOTE><BR>
But now that there are Evil Hackets and net.paedophiles involved we must <B>Protect The Children.</B>
<P>
Expect appropriate budget allocations.
<P>(See also "war on drugs")
Re:how would it work? (Score:1)
<A HREF="http://www.seattlewireless.net"> here </A> ifn' you were too quick to read the story, follow links etc. Granted that's only for the Seattle one, but there's links to the others too.
I'd really like to see this guy with the sniffer. It hinges on a lot of different things.
1) That's there's more people using 802.11 than I actually thought.
2) That the users went out of their way to subvert the basic encryption features on 802.11 cards.
Neither one of these would surprise me, but I can't really see it being to the point where it would actually pay back the time spent cruising around the city looking for it. Then again, if you have nothing better to do....
Just because it's wireless doesn't mean you have to throw security out the window. Can you give me a good reason why FreesWan wouldn't work just because it's going over an 802.11 connection instead of a land line? Plus, with recent releases of PGPNet, you don't have to worry as much about which OS you're using to connect to the FreesWan servers in the first place.
I think at the first meeting of Seattle Wireless it was expressed best, "If we get it to work, great. If we don't get it to work, still cool, cause we got to learn a lot of new things, meet new people interested in this, and drink some beer." I'll let other people argue whether or not that beer was free.
an education supported node (Score:1)
here at columbia university in new york, we have a public wireless network, although it only covers the main quad of campus, it's open to all, which is a suprising move for columbia, which tends to shy away from innovation when it comes to these sorts of things.
Area's? (Score:1)
More Public wireless links (Score:1)
www.seattlewireless.net/
www.teleport.com/~samc/psuwireless/
And at burning man with sat link:
www.eugeneweb.com/~bm/ibm.html
I think all of these are 802.11 based.
Re:900Mhz / 2.4Ghz IP networks and security. (Score:1)
Yes.
I have a home 2.4GHz wireless network. I live in a fairly large (416 unit) apartment in downtown Saint Louis.
Every time the linux-wlan [linux-wlan.com] package starts, it lists all the other wireless networks it can see. When I first set the package up, I noticed on Channel 6 that there was an SSID listed named "dave". Low and behold, configure anything on my network to SSID "dave" and I have full access to this guy's network. He lives downstairs somewhere, from what I can tell.
Now, granted, I'm not trying to break in to this guy's network. I'm just saying that for a total of a $115 investment (Pentium 166 I obtained for free + Zoomair 2.4GHz card) I am able to see what 2.4GHz wireless networks are within my reach. If I had a laptop with Linux, I can roam around and find out even more I'm sure.
Dave Hughes should also get a tip of the hat (Score:1)
Re:Tragedy of the common? (Score:1)
Re:Kinda Related (Score:1)
NYC anyone? (Score:1)
Re:Tragedy of the common? (Score:1)
Garage door hacking kicks ass! (Score:1)
The funniest incident by far was when a guy's garage opened which clearly hadn't been opened in a long while. There were boxes piled high against the door which all spilled out onto his driveway. This was at about 1:00am and we were on foot, and it took all our will power to keep from laughing very loudly as we quickly walked away. We walked back to my car and drove past the place on our way out of the neighborhood and saw a guy outside in his bathrobe picking up boxes. We probably should have felt guilty, but we just laughed even harder. He must have thought aliens had abducted his garage door.
As far as wireless networks and security go, I'm interested in using the Cisco Aironet products for a project like this. They have a "system ID" for security purposes (I think it's a 24-bit value) which at least provides a basic level of security, but I don't think that would be quite enough. I also don't know what the deal is with 802.11b network cards as far as whether it's possible to put them into promiscuous mode and/or change their MAC address. I've heard rumors that one or both of those things aren't possible with some cards, which would definitely improve security substantially.
Multiple file downloads? (Score:1)
Heck, why not have one user download a file and everybody else hop on for the ride? User A downloads the file on their large connection, and shares it wirelessly to users B C D etc. This would save on both the ISP's bandwidth and the servers bandwidth, and on bandwidth on the internet in gerneral.
This could be taken even one step further, as communities could have general proxy servers that could act as area wide internet cache's, @Home does this already for all of there users (you can bypass it if you want to go through the trouble to get an extra 10kps or so, and knock 5ms or 10ms off of your ping) and works resonably well. The automatic mirroring of certin pages (Slashdot.org and all links on the main news page would be nice for starters, I still can't get through to those darn pictures of Jupiter!) and contant caches of other pages, such as www.newgrounds.com could help the local community save alot of bandwidth. You even use a distrubuted networking setup and have the cached data spread pseudo-randomly about the computers of volenteers (have some extra HD space to donate to the community as a whole, well then, sign on up!)
Re:HAM radio enthusiasts have been doing it for ye (Score:1)
This very morning I visited a company called NERA [www.nera.no] who make equipment for doing precisely what we are discussing (internet over radio links). Their top of the range point-to-point systems will do 155 Mb/s.
This sort of thing is not cheap and certainly not affordable for home use, but I was not suggesting that people could easily implement even 20 Mb/s links. I was just pointing out that available RF bandwidth is not the limiting factor.
Re:Anyone doing anything in NJ? (Score:1)
Re:Sniffing/Security (Score:1)
Re:What about the FCC? (Score:1)
Heh. I'm only barely productive on Caltrain right now because I have no Internet access. Must...fight...temptation...
Re:Tragedy of the common? (Score:1)
OK, how many people are actually looking forward to the internet being split for a period of time and the complete flipflop of what you have been doing up to this point?
You will lose connectivity with sections of the known internet and the on-line world as we know it now will be split.
Don't get me wrong the 'concept' of IPv6 is there, we just need to find a better way for this to be done.
I really don't see our near future in IPv6.
Just my humble opinion.
More on-topic than other post ;p (Score:1)
As a cyber-prophet(or whatever) I forsee that most of the Internet will be come similarly segregated nodes. joined together through a system of main-pipe gateways. and NAT-like address management.
DECENTRALIZE!@%&^@%!&
Re:Tragedy of the common? (Score:1)
I think the latter is the choice we need to go with. we could say screw you IPv6 and stay with IPv4 by segregating into smaller internal addressing schemes.
Re:Tragedy of the common? (Score:1)
And *why* would we want that? Why is it that you don't favor IPv6?
Re:Sniffing/Security (Score:1)
Re:What about the FCC? (Score:1)
Re:Garage Doors (Score:1)
Re:HAM radio enthusiasts have been doing it for ye (Score:1)
Amsterdam & Elsa (Score:1)
Re:802.11b? (Score:1)
I had an apt. in Tel-Aviv and pointed my antenna out my apt. window at my office in Ramat-Gan, or at Hayarkon Park, and could get decent signal, enough to browse
My point here is, it does work, and if done right, falls right under the point where the FCC gets edgy.
A host is a host from coast to coast, but no one uses a host that's close
Re:Area's? (Score:1)
A host is a host from coast to coast, but no one uses a host that's close
Re:Area's? (Score:1)
I have the techworks.com airstation and card (802.11b) and spent 140 on the card and 270 on the base station. if you're just interested in trying to cruise other's networks, just get the card.
100 dollars if you buy the lucent silver orinoco in it's apple form. (apple form is without the antenna...choose wisely)
A host is a host from coast to coast, but no one uses a host that's close
Kinda Related (Score:1)
The device will set up an adhoc network consisting of these devices when they are in correct range (150 - 300 ft) Not enough range really - but certainly neat display for a child's toy.
Very neat tech for less than $100. There is a 'mail in rebate' for a free add on module that makes the device an MP3 player as well..
No im not getting paid for this - Ive just been reading alot of reviews etc trying to decide if it was appropriate for an Xmas gift this year...
Re:Tragedy of the common? (Score:1)
Re:Sniffing/Security (Score:1)
Re:fcc regs? (Score:1)
(observe the consumer flogging that is occuring thanks to the DMCA)
I actually got questioned like that when I wanted to buy a cellphone to "attempt" to modify for ham bands (I've heard of ppl doing this).. exact words went like this "What would you want with a cellphone without a service?" "To modify for amateur radio bands" "Isn't that illegal?"
AFAIK, the 2.4ghz band is completely unlicensed.. witness the string of 2.4ghz cordless telephones, video transmitters and other AOL-leeches type of products being released.
I predict that the 900mhz band will be free before the 2.4ghz band is (By then, we'll be buying 10ghz telephones and video senders.. with a 15mile radius that are constantly interfereing with each other... typically)
-since when did 'MTV' stand for Real World Television instead of MUSIC television?
Re:"free" (Score:1)
I run ADSL in Canada also. It's a bargain, but it doesn't help me with my notebook when I'm sitting in Chapters or the library or a hotel lobby. I'd love to be able to tap into stray RF networks around downtown rather than working offline.
Re:Great Idea, but -- (Score:1)
From what I see, they key to success would be to keep the nodes small and local like digital cellular. If that isn't done things could get slow fast. Unfortunately, the last mile isn't the only component in the system.
My concern is that even if this works for the last mile, how do you pay for the connection to the rest of the structure? It is currently commercial and is paid for by someone even if you are using a free ISP.
There has seldom been good colabaration between for profit and anarchisic groups. How does this bridge get crossed? I don't have the foggiest.
Re:Garage door hacking kicks ass! (Score:1)
Re:Area's? (Score:1)
Re:once again... (Score:1)
Re:Open Source Ethic? (Score:1)
Re:What about the FCC? (Score:2)
Ricochet is going to cover 100 million people in the U.S. before the end of next year, and while it isn't as fast as 802.11, it is infinitely more reliable and designed by a company that has Paul Allen and WorldCom's blessing (and money).
http://www.ricochet.com [ricochet.com] It's a wide-area LAN that uses hundreds of Microcellular Digital radios (usually attached to light poles)arrayed around a city in a checkerboard pattern, with Wired Access Points directing the mesh network traffic onto tthe wired internet. It uses the 915Mhz and 2.4Ghz bands of free, unlicensed spectrum, so it avoids the billions of dollars of spectrum costs that the cellcos are going to have to pay for 3G...and here's the best part - it is available today at 128kbps, going to 256 and then 384kbps within the next two years.
Streaming media on a laptop, batman! I live in Santa Cruz and work in San Jose - but with my Ricochet modem (available in PC card form later this month) I can check my e-mail wirelessly from anywhere in the Bay Area - or Dallas - or Mahattan or anywhere else the network is eventually deployed. A co-worker of mine rode the ACE train from Fremont to work the other day, and stayed connected to the internet the whole time at 30-40kbps. The 128+kbps speeds (I've gotten as much as 250kbps at Stoddard's in Sunnyvale) are typical when you are stationary, but even 30kbps is usable for e-mail and light web use, turning the morning Caltrain or BART ride into productive time. It works with PCs and Macs, and with the USB support in the 2.4 kernel, porbably with Linux too (they've got a serial cable for the modem too, just in case).
The service isn't cheap, with prices at around $70.00 per month, but I think that we'll see that dropping over the next few months. For the convenience (and soon the ubiquity) of Ricochet, it's a small price to pay - plus, no tiny cell phone screens to squint at.
Some of you self-styled geeks should go check this out. It actually works and it is here today.
how would it work? (Score:2)
Lucent Wavelan 802.11b Security - detailed (Score:2)
DECT phones and security (Score:2)
Most (all?) base stations ship with a default security code of "00", which makes it easy to reassign a random base station, if you just so happen to be walking down the street with a DECT handset.
Or something.
Anyone played with data over DECT? I see that there are standards for data and DECT, and DECT to ISDN gateways, etc., but haven't really seen any products. Data over DECT could be fun...
...j
Re:Sounds Familiar... (Score:2)
If there was a node about 500 meters closer to me, I would be in range, but, well, until them. D'oh!
...j
Re:"free" (Score:2)
Thats right.. Current network setups only give 9600 baud. Or, you can goto a screaming 56k for nearly a grand..
Re:"free" (Score:2)
An 802.11b card cannot provide nearly enough range for what is being talked about here. And you also have another limiting factor at that point. You're now sharing bandwidth with *EVERYONE* using this free service..
Re:Tragedy of the common? (Score:2)
Open Source Ethic? (Score:2)
http://www.opensource.org/osd.html
Re:HAM radio enthusiasts have been doing it for ye (Score:2)
A usable network would be about 2-3 Mbps at 10Ghz to 24Ghz.
I suppose you could take a larger spread with more xpensive equipment to get up to 20Mbps, but then you get more interference. The 2.4Ghz is already polluted from the sounds of the article. Its saving grace is that it doesnt carry very far, otherwise it would be extremely dirty.
At any rate, im not an RF expert like you said, but 20Mbps still seems very optimistic with any kind of hardware.
Re:HAM radio enthusiasts have been doing it for ye (Score:2)
10Ghz microwave bands are nice for throughput, but what is the range for 10Ghz?
Re:HAM radio enthusiasts have been doing it for ye (Score:2)
Actually there is a HAM group in Columbia, SC that has dynamic routing configured for their packet network.
I don't know the details, but it functions similar to an RF RIP protocol of some sort.
They may have something about this online, i'll look...
Re:HAM radio enthusiasts have been doing it for ye (Score:2)
A typical 2.4Ghz network can handle over 1.2Mbps. Far beyond anything HAM bands can support.
While packet radio has its place, high bandwidth RF needs high frequency transport.
Re:900Mhz / 2.4Ghz IP networks and security. (Score:2)
There are a number of channel frequencies the devices operate at (within the 2.4Ghz or 900Mhz bands).
Via software configuration you can choose one of hundreds of available 'channels' and pretend your a valid RF device.
If you can communicate at all, you have found an active channel. If not, try the next.
Proprietary devices which do not use any standard or common channel frequencies require the more expensive scanning equipment to pick out the signal.
The real answer (Score:2)
That is fact, no matter what. You are transmitting data through networks you do not control, and have absolutely no power over.
Re:how would it work? (Score:2)
---
But building what Kahle calls "a citywide wireless LAN that grows from anarchistic cooperation" isn't as simple as contributing code to Linux. Participants must have not just time and patience, but also the soldering skills of an electrician, not to mention the ability to work on rooftops without falling. Ultimately, "it's all a bit dangerous," Stevens admits.
---
I imagine at some point it WOULD end up as a service, but not until it matures. Not sure how many people would want to pay for service that deteriorates when it rains. There's also the hinderance of the signals not being able to pass through concrete.
Re:What about the FCC? (Score:2)
You are right. The FCC had a proposal to grant thousands of low power licenses and the NAB [nab.org] poured millions into quashing this. Right now a bill that will kill this is on an appropriations bill, waiting for Congress to resume.
For more info see on the bill see this article [indymedia.org].
For more on the media industry's lobbying to take away your airwaves see this report [publicintegrity.org] from the Center for Public Integrity.
Re:Tragedy of the common? (Score:2)
Unfortunately the public mechanism that we have for arbitrating use of spectrum (the FCC) is under the thumb of the NAB [nab.org]. Witness what is happening with low power radio [mediaaccess.org]. The NAB pours millions into an effort to kill a proposal to grant thousands of low power radio licenses, that would bring diversity to the airwaves and permit the kind of civil society to flourish that these do it yourself networking projects have. If these projects become successful industry will in all likelihood manipulate the regulatory mechanism to quash any competition to their wireless services like MMDS [wdslconsortium.com].
We need to learn from what has happened to low power radio and not get behind like we are in open access. We need to create mechanisms for civil society to self regulate public resources, with the stakeholders doing the regulation not the government. And we need to make sure we keep access to our spectrum and not let the NAB lock it up.
NOT OT - Call for volunteers? (Score:2)
I live in the Phoenix, Arizona area - specifically north of the east/west portion of Loop 101. My actual location makes it difficult to impossible to reach anything south and west (due to some mountains being in the way), but if anyone would like to help me set up a wireless (preferably optical!) net between houses - contact me or post to this thread. With enough nodes, dispersed properly, we could get around any obstacles of the nature...
Worldcom [worldcom.com] - Generation Duh!
Re:900Mhz / 2.4Ghz IP networks and security. (Score:2)
How do you determine the SSID of the signal you want to tap (without a $15,000 box)?
Forgive me for playing the devil's advocate here, but people are fond of pointing out how easy it is to sniff wireless networks, but I've yet to see one person say 'I have done it and here is how'. One person said he sniffed his own network - but with a card set up for that net - well duh, no kidding.
So, can you (or anyone) just arbitrarily sniff on an unencrypted RF network without knowing anything about the network (like the SSID, for instance)? If so, how?
Inquiring minds...
A.
Re:fcc regs? (Score:2)
It's a bit of a cat and mouse game with industry and the FCC in this regard. Industry needs to have connectors mass produced to keep costs down, the FCC wants to insure that people don't hook up antennas to devices that cause them to violate regulations and cause problems. Thus the need for "Industry standard non-standard connectors"
_____________
Re:Tragedy of the common? (Score:2)
The only downside is that it's set up for NAT and now I can no long remote print because stupid LPR bitches that I'm no longer using a priviliged socket .... anyone got any ideas for a quick fix?
Next step of course will be to find a way to get the local Cafe wired .....
Re:HAM radio enthusiasts have been doing it for ye (Score:2)
No. Stick to small yagis, mabye a uni-quad and friggin 802.11.
Like all things free... (Score:2)
Some of us are working on this in Portland, Oregon (Score:2)
the mailing list archives are here....
http://lists.spack.org/pipermail/ptp/ [spack.org]
-------
Re:Tragedy of the common? (Score:2)
Re:HAM radio enthusiasts have been doing it for ye (Score:2)
What a load of rubbish. HAM radio has a band at 2.4 GHZ with enough bandwidth for at least 20 Mbps (not to mention 3300-3500 MHz, 5650-5925 MHz etc etc), it even says in the article that these guys got their antennas from amateur radio suppliers. I agree that most amateur packet radio happens at painfully slow baud rates, but there are people doing much higher speed backbones.
The point which I was trying to make is that a wireless LAN consists of two very different technologies. The computer bit (protocols, error checking, addressing etc) and the RF bit (modems (not the same problem as telephone modems), amplifiers, IP3 performance, antennas, propagation etc). The RF bit is every bit as complex as the computer bit. Being an expert in computers does not make you an expert in RF engineering. It is a seperate subject which takes just as long to study at University. HAM radio has spent very many years learning lessons about widely distributed radio LANs, it would be realy stupid to ignore that knowledge when its available free for the asking.
I do research into future aircraft radio equipment and I often meet people who design wonderous inter-aircraft digital comms systems in the fond belief that the RF bit will be easy to add on at the end. They put it all together and prove once again that old adage that "a little knowledge is a dangerous thing". Then they go white when I tell them how much its going to cost to fix it.
Garage Doors (Score:2)
Re:how would it work? (Score:2)
We just need to actually sit down and do it. We live in Florida nad theres not too mutch for reliable cheap high-speed connections so we figured that why not do it ourselves...
This way we can also be a bit secured from the prying eyes of the outside world.
As to how it can be done, we have speculated on several methods. One being to build a magnified antenna using a few items from Home Depot and Radio Shack - coupled with a cheap-o wireless NIC. I admit its a bit crude but you can get away with things like this here in the flatlands.
We have also discussed several IP schemes and the possability of using our owne 'Inner-Upper-Top-Level Domains' as in we would use blahblah.xnet or whatever as a domain instead of
All in all it looks like we will be able to do it with very few problems, at least untill we decide we wanna turn it loose to the public.. but thats an issue to work on after the preliminary development stages.
Re:Like all things free... (Score:2)
Sniffing/Security (Score:2)
Re:Tragedy of the common? (Score:2)
Making only certain MACs privileged would still leave the network vulnerable to impersonation of those MACs, which would be visible to the sniffer. This is the same vulnerability that allows cell phones to be cloned. You'd need to encrypt everything to prevent this, in which case it wouldn't be necessary to allow only certain MACs (but it certainly wouldn't hurt anything).
Re:Open Source Ethic? (Score:2)
No, CmdrTaco, it's not "free" as in "bandwidth." (Score:2)
Re:"free" (Score:3)
But "free as in beer" means that the Intellectual Property *is* free. That vapor about which everyone is so worked up, patenting, and suing over is free. The details are out there, for free, is non-proprietary, and open to comment and further development.
The idea behind all this open network development is not so that you, or anyone for that matter, can get a cheaper lunch, it's so that those odd people out there who like burning themselves occasionally with solder might tweak with something that they're not going to get sued for reverse engeneering, folding, spindling, or mangling. Maybe, just maybe, an open development model might eventually come up with ways to make it as cheap or cheaper than commercial service... but that's not the point. That's a potential side effect of people who want to tweak.
So if you don't want to muck around with wiring, schematics, frequencies, climbing up on your roof, network settings, etc... feel free to just buy service from your local carrier. That's why they exist. It's an easy choice.
But the moment you want to start helping out that local carrier, or figure out how their tech works so that you can tweak it for your own benefit... forget about it. Their stuff is neither "free as in speech", nor "free as in beer".
The article didn't say that. (Score:3)
I'm typing on my laptop using a Lucent 802.11b card now, and I can tell you that walls do "clog" 2.4GHz signals. My data rate drops from 11Mb/s to 2Mb/s if I walk out my back door and sit on my porch.
These "community network" folks are pushing weak signals at distances they weren't designed for. Walls would do significant damage to their signal strength.
Re:Tragedy of the common? (Score:3)
Man, it would take a very hand and nerves of steel to accomplish a feat such as that.... =]
Ahem ... look inside your Airport .... (Score:3)
Packet sniffer for JPEGs via 802.11 (Score:3)
Not through walls? (Score:3)
Also, this is not an Apple-developed system. I believe that it was pioneered by Lucent. In fact, I'm pretty sure that Apple's implementation is Lucent's.
Re:Sniffing/Security (Score:3)
Tragedy of the common? (Score:3)
By the way, I'd like to hear more about cruising the streets with a sniffer looking for open networks. How's that done, and what does one do to 'lock down' the network? I've been thinking of putting in a wireless network, but I hadn't thought about this hazard.
Sounds Familiar... (Score:3)
Here I go with a bit of karma-whoring (joke)
Go here [consume.net] to read about a loose coalition of london people trying to set up a similar scheme.
And go here [slashdot.org] to read all the comments from when this subject was last posted on /. just over a week ago.
Ben^3 (wondering whether CmdrTaco et al have goldfish DNA)HAM radio enthusiasts have been doing it for years (Score:4)
It seems to me that rather than trying to take wireless LAN technology which is realy designed for short range in-building networking and fixing it to big external antennas (which is basically what these guys are going), it might be a better plan to take technology from the HAM community and adapt it to these unlicenced bands.
The article is vague, but I very much doubt that these wireless LAN radios have the strong signal handling required to operate well when connected to a large external antenna.
Summary: An interesting idea, but one that needs as much imput from radio expert as it does from computer experts. RF engineering is not as simple as it sounds once you start dealing with a lot of signal over a large area.
G1DGL
"free" (Score:4)
This is hardly free either: "$800 to buy all the components needed to get hooked up". (that's US) + maintenance + time.
Here in Canada I pay 40 bucks (Canadian) a month for ADSL or Cable (I've used both). My adsl connection will actually run 2 machines straight of the ADSL-modem (with a hub) (anyone with sympatico can do this).
So at that rate, this scheme might pay for itself after 2 years, but in 2 years I'll probably have a faster and cheaper connection anyways.
What about the FCC? (Score:4)
A couple of years ago, I became interested in setting up my own radio station so I investigated the FCC requirements for getting a broadcasting license. It turns out that the application fee for getting your broadcast license is several thousand dollars and the associated paperwork takes a team of lawyers to complete properly. Not only that, but the FCC won't even CONSIDER giving you a license if you're broadcasting at less than 100 watts. The equipment for that level of power gets pretty expensive for the average citizen. IMHO, these requirements don't benefit the public at all, it just artificially restricts broadcasting on the public airwaves to the big companies that can afford the price of admission. I suspect some heavy lobbying was involved...
I wonder if the large telecoms and their teams of lobbyists will try to get the FCC to step in on this...
900Mhz / 2.4Ghz IP networks and security. (Score:5)
Like the TacoMan said, many of these networks aren't secured very well.
Half a dozen manufacturing plants that I integrated RF data collection devices for did not use any type of authentication of encryption and relied solely on frequency channels to identify remote RF terminals.
For a few hundred bucks, Intermec and others can provide you with ISA cards to tap into RF networks [intermec.com] and even PCMCIA cards that you can plug right into your laptop.
These devices setup an IP connection that ties a psuedo terminal on a unix server to the ANSI/VT100/etc emulation terminal running on the data collection devices themselves.
Some of the newer models provide a light weight web browser configured for various ports on a unix server to handle the data collection interface.
Almost all (95%+) of the data collection applications that are attached to the other end of these RF terminals are running on critical enterprise servers so that they can be close to the databases they feed.
It always baffled me that the IS tech's would be so lax on security simply because it was 'RF'.
As a side note, eavesdropping on an RF network is orders of magnitude easier than typical networks (ethernet / ATM) and effectively impossible to identify. For a few hundred bucks anyone can make a RF 'tcpdump' with a laptop and RF PCMCIA card that will trap every single IP packet flying over the RF networks.
So, the moral of this story is:
RF entails much more security risk than typical networking. Beware when you implement an RF network, and keep security at the top of your to-do list.
Re:Tragedy of the common? (Score:5)
It depends on what wireless technology you're using, but here in my own private geek compound I run Orinoco (Lucent) Wavelan Gold [wavelan.com] wireless cards in 128-bit RC4 encryption mode.
This is quite easy to set up under Linux using the wireless extensions [hp.com] to the standard pcmcia services [sourceforge.net]. You will have a switch branch in your wireless.opts file that looks something like
;; :). And note it's not the full 128 bits... the version of the drivers I have won't permit that, for some reason that I don't understand. But 104 bits is pretty good.)
# Default Lucent Wavelan IEEE
# Note : wvlan_cs driver only,
# and version 1.0.4+ for encryption support
*,*,*,00:60:1D:*)
INFO="Wavelan IEEE ad-hoc"
ESSID="Secure Network"
MODE="Ad-hoc"
CHANNEL="3" #2.422GHz
RATE="auto"
KEY="1234-5648-9abc-def1-2345-6789-ab"
(No, that's not my actual key
Anyway, you definitely want to "lock down" your network, unless you are into to providing a public access point. Without encryption, it would be like having a hub on my DSL modem that anybody driving by could plug in to...
--Seen