HighWLAN 139
Big Dave Diode writes "A cool story about what happens when a bunch of bored nerds with a lot of wireless equipment takes a road trip. Intervehicle networking at 65 mph!"
I've noticed several design suggestions in your code.
Pretty cool idea (Score:1)
Escoutaire
Already seen that elsewhere... (Score:1)
Re:Already seen that elsewhere... (Score:1)
Re:Already seen that elsewhere... (Score:1)
Care to rephrase that?
Seriously though, now we're going to have a bunch of pikie nerds roaming the countryside looking for bandwidth.
Great story (Score:1, Troll)
I can't get enough of those stealth ads!
Re:Great story (Score:2)
Re:Great story (Score:1)
Employer paying? (Score:4, Funny)
I was crying by the end of the first paragraph... (Score:5, Funny)
Absolutelty hilarious. I'll go and read the rest of it now...
News for Nerds. Stuff that matters? (Score:1, Funny)
Re:News for Nerds. Stuff that matters? (Score:1)
Re:News for Nerds. Stuff that matters? (Score:1)
Thats old (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Thats old (Score:2)
http://review.lanwahn.at/php-cgi/gallery/view_alb
Heh. (Score:4, Funny)
I guess this falls under "Everything I needed to know about driving I learned from Gran Turismo"...
Re:Heh. (Score:1)
GPRS and pricing (Score:1)
But the main connection to the Internet was the phone and that is expensive in the U.S. If the prices were instead reasonable, they could have used GPRS or something similar. "yous" there on the East Coast could have a better cellphone pricing model [slashdot.org]. A commitment to standards and reasonable pricing for cell phones would be a boon for mobile computing in the U.S.
Re:GPRS and pricing (Score:2)
Traffic Jam (Score:1)
Best Part (Score:5, Funny)
So they had ot use talkd! AUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUGHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!
It's also amusing that they still bothered to use ssh between each other's machines. I say -- any cracker dude who figures out how to snoop on my 802.11b traffic at 85m/h deserves my respect and my passwords!
Re:Best Part (Score:1)
Re:Best Part (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Best Part (Score:1)
Re:Best Part (Score:1)
http://packages.debian.org/stable/net/ircd.html [debian.org]
To "apt-get install ircd" (298.1 KB) at 9600 bps, it would take 254 seconds, that's less than five minutes. They say they spent at least an hour online.
Re:Best Part (Score:2)
Think about the poor wardrivers. If they were on the highway with you, they would have a hell of a time trying to pinpoint the location of your access point.
Re:Best Part (Score:1)
Re:Best Part (Score:2)
Re:Best Part (Score:1)
No they didn't! This is exactly the sort of thing that Jabber [jabber.org] would have been perfect for. I'm not a Jabber freak or anything. Honestly, I think most of the Jabber hype is pretty stupid, most of the time. But, Jabber is practically made for things like this. Several operating systems, and you have (or want, or need...) your own network (and therefore your own server). This is where Jabber really shines.
Honestly, I'm surprised they didn't even think of it.
Re:Best Part (Score:2)
It's also amusing that they still bothered to use ssh between each other's machines.
What else would you use to log into a remote machine over the network?
Surely you don't have telnetd or rlogind running on your machine!
Re:Best Part (Score:1)
Re:Best Part (Score:2)
You were more successful.
umm, yeah... (Score:5, Funny)
Re not only that... (Score:2)
Re:Re not only that... (Score:2)
Re:umm, yeah... (Score:2, Funny)
<rationalizing>cellphones are too expensive, therefore we must set up a wireless network </rationalizing>
[later]
ok, the network is set up, and now getting on the net is the new cool goal, <rationalizing> hmmm, maybe cellphone calls aren't really that expensive </rationalizing>
The sad thing is, I can look at soooo many times when I've done the same thing.
Hmmm. (Score:1)
They were lucky. Otherwise it would be intervehicle accidents and high speed metal warping at 65 mph.
Yet again.... (Score:3, Funny)
god, it's beautiful.
Re:Yet again.... (Score:1)
Let's face it: they just wanted to access their pr0n while on the road.
Re:Yet again.... (Score:2, Interesting)
at 9600 bps?
Come on, Captian Janeway......
Re:Yet again.... (Score:1)
Nationwide? (Score:5, Insightful)
This probably wouldn't work very well in rural areas or at night when few cars are on the road, but could likely be effective near large cities. And of course, the idea could be expanded to individuals walking, ala Neil Stephenson's "Snow Crash" network.
Re:Nationwide? (Score:1)
Re:Nationwide? (Score:2)
Re:Nationwide? (Score:1)
and each car could tell it's destination. This means
that traffic jams could be predicted even before they
happen.
But an audio interface is probably a good idea.
Re:Nationwide? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Nationwide? (Score:2)
Re:Nationwide? (Score:2)
Silly!
Re:Nationwide? (Score:2)
GPS data would also allow for constructing the network based on position as well as direction, allowing each node to locate the best choice for the next hop.
Re:Nationwide? (Score:2)
substantially more expensive than a GPS
Not really - your GSM phone has to cope with the effect of travelling toward/away from a base station and will compensate when transmitting for this. It is practical and cheap.
GPS data would also allow for constructing the network based on position as well as direction
But would incur a penalty of needing some central server to process positions and generate routing information - quite impractical if the system is to scale to x million cars.
Partly impractical (Score:2)
Unfortunately, the amount of routing information that needs to be exhanged in ad-hoc networks increases exponentially with the size of the network and the rate of change in the network topology (mobility).
You're right in that utilizing location information could be used to optimize the routing protocol, and people are working on this, but it sill presents a formidable scalability problem.
Re:Partly impractical (Score:2)
Re:Partly impractical (Score:3, Insightful)
You could use the SuperPeer concept from p2p software. Certain cars could auto-negotiate (sorry for the pun) to be the preferred paths for vehicles around them.
Moving on, I couldn't guess at how you'd make it work, but you could have seamless hops, so you could produce wireless "conduits" out of a sequence of cars. When a car moved out of range or another was preferred, the "conduit" could change a node without interfering with the communications.
A tree structure would probably work best here. Have the "trunk" nodes near physical access points, the "branches" move away from the trunks out into traffic, and the "leaf" nodes are the end communicators.
Of course, It would probably be best to have a number of these wireless "trees" covering the same area to reduce lag and signal loss. Each access point could define it's own channel, and be spread out so each channel is far enough from the others.
Of course, maybe I'm insane.
Re:Nationwide? (Score:4, Funny)
Think of the traffic law enforcment implications; every one is blindly shouting out their speed and position. State patrol could have a field day!
Re:Nationwide? (Score:1)
So, it isnt as good an idea as it seems at first sight since bandwidth might be quite bad.
Re:Nationwide? (Why not a compass vs. gps) (Score:2)
Re:Nationwide? (Score:1)
Obvious use - Voice (Score:5, Insightful)
Granted CB or other no-license radio is cheaper, and easier. But it still would have been secure, high fidelity and fun.
Re:Obvious use - Voice (Score:1)
Re:Obvious use - Voice (Score:3, Interesting)
Also Voice over IP is as good as your bandwidth.
With their WAN they could VASTLY exceed the sound quality of any Cell phone. If they could stream MP3s, all they had to do is encode MP3 realtime from an external Mic and Voila, Voice over IP.
That's Affirmatory, Good Buddy (Score:2)
VoIP would have spared them the jargon, too. No need to remember silliness like 'breaker one five' and 'ten four good buddy', as well as some of the more silly mutilations of common english words in a (mostly failed) effort to make them sound more official, or technical (an example of such is in the subject line
Course, if they were going 95 instead of 65, they would want to know where all the 'bears' are hiding...
Re:That's Affirmatory, Good Buddy (Score:2)
Well, 'affirmatory' (and similarly mutilated words) are a joke, I agree. I do not know the current state of CB-culture, if you will, but as a child I heard the word 'affirmatory' (and numerous other, similar bastardizations) quite often on the CB, being used in all earnestness.
The mockery was, at one time at least, very justified.
Last line of the movie (Score:5, Funny)
"Some called me lame, some called me cool, but they all called me geek."
Final theme music, roll credits.
Geek Movies (Score:1)
This is good stuff (Score:2)
Re:This is good stuff (Score:2, Offtopic)
Re:This is good stuff (Score:2)
Where's the danger? Can't people read? (Score:3, Informative)
"Meng rode with me in my Hyundai Tiburon acting as communications officer and uplink controller."
"Communications officer"? (Score:1)
Metricom Ricochet (Score:1)
Prior art... (Score:5, Insightful)
Dave did his PhD thesis on the idea of routing packets between a bunch of wavelan cards moving all over the place. If you play up the military side of it (imagine every soldier/tank with wavelan, routing packets between them!) DARPA likes to fund this kind of stuff.
Anyways, the most fun was had when Dave and his colleagues rented a fleet of cars, put a wavelan equipped laptop in each one (since this was a while ago, they were using the original 2Mb wavelan, not this 802.11b stuff), and were driving all over Pittsburgh trying to see how well packets would get through between cars....
Re:Prior art... (Score:2)
Phone companies... (Score:1)
"800-lb. guerrillas" as the article states...
This nitpick may be minor, but it really does make a world of difference in the semantics.
Re:Phone companies... (Score:1)
YAWIAR.
Why not do something TRULY useful with it? (Score:1)
Great way to start the morning (Score:1)
It's so casual but when you stop to think about it... d'oh!
I am a big fan of creative people, no matter what industry or field and this is a perfect example of creativity in the geek world.
Oh no! (Score:1)
Why not Email or IM (Score:1)
Morons still used the cell. (Score:1)
Could be Amtrak's Killer App (Score:1)
Did similar in '99 (Score:1)
Apple's Software base station (Score:1, Informative)
Turn on personal web and file sharing and put a 1 hour mp3 mix on your web folder. Have the other guy on a pc or mac in the other car, plug their audio output into their car stereo and you have audio streaming over wireless from car to car.
Why throw a linksys into the mix when you don't need it?
Re:Apple's Software base station (Score:2)
War Driving (Score:1, Funny)
I'm finding myself terribly amused by all the other people with laptops they must have passed during the drive, who suddenly found themselves with internet access.
I always thought that the point of War Driving was to find 802.11 sources on the open roads, not be one.
Maybe we need to refine the definition a bit. I guess the old way could now be considered "Defensive War Driving."
Roaming FM Station (Score:1)
LPFM (Score:1)
ironically, we attended the LPFM talk at the con itself, which was pretty good.
Very interesting... it's been done (Score:4, Informative)
Amateur (Ham) Radio Operators have been communicating via packet radio for something like twenty years. Since ham radios are used, the range is measured in miles rather than feet. The only drawback of that system is that the speed is limited to 1200 baud -- though higher baud rates are used on some of the higher bands. In fact, some hams use tcp/ip as their protocol (originally, packet radio used ax.25).
For more information, check out news:alt.ham-radio.packet.
Digital radio communication is actually much older than even packet radio. Technically, morse code is a digital medium. Somewhat later, baudot code was used, and hams communicated via RTTY (Radio Teletype). I'm not sure when the first RTTY station hit the air, but I suspect that it was in the 1940s or 1950s. Later, ASCII was used for RTTY, which had the advantage of lower-case letters and more characters.
Packet Radio became popular in the 1980s, and the innovative hams used it for emergency communications, bulliton boards, email, and vehicluar communication. Some attached GPS units to the TNCs (Terminal Node Controllers), so a central station could track several mobile units. This turned out to be very useful for "fox hunting" (searching for hidden transmitters), and the more serious searches for emergency locator beacons and for illegal transmitters.
The police have been using a form of packet radio for at least ten years, and probably for a whole lot longer (I saw one ten years ago). Rather than calling your license number into the dispacher, they can type it into the terminal and get a direct text reply.
The military also uses wireless digital communication. They used RTTY way back in the ancient times when I was serving (no, we didn't use flintlock rifles). I used to repair the encryption devices that secured the links.
The author expressed some doubt about securing a wireless link, but I am confident that any communication that the military is currently researching is well secured. They have been using crypto gear for a very long time. Rather than take a chance on being accused of divulging classified information, I will just suggest that you type "comsec crypto" into google and surf from there.
The point is that once you encrypt the data, you can send it over any channel you like without fear of eavesdroppers.
Incidentally, hacking the 802.11 box to produce more power is almost certainly illegal. The FCC takes a dim view of unlicenced people modifying type-accepted gear.
I haven't researched the issue, but I believe that a ham can legally modify an 802.11 box. I am quite sure that it is legal if the operating frequency is moved to one of the ham bands (I don't recall if it is already in a "shared" band). Doing so will create other issues that I won't bother to get into right now, though.
One final word of advice: Move the antenna OUTSIDE the vehicle. It'll work a whole lot better.
Inspired. Will do it in Guyana with Satellites... (Score:1)
But since we'll be some distance (!) from a cellular network, we'll have to use satellite dishes. They'll be mounted on top of the trucks and will give us somewhat more bandwidth than a cellphone. If this come's off, I'll post to /. from Dadanawa Ranch [wilderness-explorers.com].
Now,I'll need a bit more than 150 watts of AC power to get all this running. Maybe a small diesel genset atop the truck...
Re:Inspired. Will do it in Guyana with Satellites. (Score:2)
Ever consider one of these [galaxymall.com] for your project? There are lots more, but if you could hack one of the DISH/DirecTV dishes with Internet access that will gyroscopically keep it pointed at the bird, you might be on your way.
Re:Inspired. Will do it in Guyana with Satellites. (Score:2)
Oh, the movie quotes to apply (Score:2)
or
"If we drop below 50mph the hub will explode!"
even simpler... (Score:2)
2 + iBooks with Airport cards - stow the base station hardware and the inverter and drive for 6 hours a day MAYBE needing the lighter direct power adapter outside of that. Stay within a dozen car lengths.
I'm wondering what made them leave the 19" CRT at home...
Re:even simpler... (Score:1)
Apple Airport / Bluetooth (Score:1)
But i was wandering whether you could just do this with 2 Macs with Airport cards inside? or heck, 4 macs with airport? or do u need a hub? I understand that it possible to do this with only 2 macs, but can anyone correct me if i say its possible with >2 Airport cards?
Also, what about Bluetooth? Also, on mac, the bluetooth adapter can enable 2 macs to also communicate/share. I got that from the article I read off their website some time ago, so the facts might be wrong. hehe. :)
Re:Apple Airport / Bluetooth (Score:1)
Surfing at 80 (Score:1)
I'm going to try this on my next roadtrip. I keep my NB plugged into the car when I do my daily 32 mile commute. It's a nice way to pass the time in brutal afternoon traffic.
Should have gone with the cable.. (Score:1)
Well.. It would be nice if... (Score:1)
How about a wireless server in a school bus? (Score:3, Interesting)
It was originally a p90 with 48 megs of ram and a crossover cable to the basestation. I would have loved to use a SBC with a wireless card and a laptop drive for better size / power usage, but I didn't have the time for a custom hacked job, which I didn't want to have to support when I graduated.
Re:Nice Hack...but Stupid to endanger others (Score:1)
Oh get off the pot! (Score:1)