A Wi-Fi/VoIP Phone Booth In the Burning Man Desert 214
Brad Templeton writes "I,
(of EFF/ClariNet/rec.humor.funny) along with
Brent Chapman
(Majordomo/Building Internet Firewalls) and the satellite dish of
John Gilmore (EFF/Cygnus/Cypherpunks/etc.)
put together an engaging hack -- a battery-powered free phone booth using
802.11,
VoIP and a satellite IP uplink. This was placed in the desert at
the Burning Man arts festival deep
in the remote Nevada Black Rock playa, exactly where you wouldn't expect
a working phone booth to be. With cheap VoIP people were able to call
all over the world. The reactions of people to such incongruous
technology were great fun and emotional as well. There's a
page about the phone including
details of
building it and
live experiences including totally non-gratuitous photos of naked people using technology. (There, that ought to stress-test my new server!)"
Jerry Maguire (Score:5, Funny)
Mmmm, you had me at naked.
Re:Jerry Maguire (Score:2)
There, that oughta help throttle back the server, at least for somethingawful.com types who might be viewing the page.
Re:Jerry Maguire (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Jerry Maguire (Score:2)
I thought Burning Man photos are not kosher (Score:2)
Frowned on, not quite absolutely forbidden. (Score:3, Informative)
Q. What is the policy on taking pictures?
A. Film and video cameras are forbidden without permission. All video cameras must be registered and tagged. This is to protect the privacy of participants and artists alike. Use Agreement forms for personal video cameras will be available upon arrival at the Gate, the Greeter's Station or Playa Info. If you are considering filming or videotaping for professional purposes, you must have a commercial agreement on file with the Med
Free porn? (Score:5, Funny)
Never underestimate the power of horny nerds.
But I gotta ask... would this lower my 1-900 bills?
Re:Free porn? (Score:5, Funny)
Because one major thing the Internet lacks is unlimited access to free pornography. Just this morning I was thinking to myself: "Self... wouldn't it be cool if some entrepreneur put pictures of naked women on the Internet? Then we wouldn't have to visit those skanky adult bookstores in the seedy district anymore."
Who am I kidding though... if pornography was available on the Internet, how would we keep children from gaining access to it? Our entire society could collapse.
Re:Free porn? (Score:2)
As if... (Score:5, Funny)
As if photos of naked people could ever be gratuitous to Slashdot readers!
Cool (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Cool (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Cool (Score:2)
Another good (but inaccessible) story... (Score:4, Funny)
"GERLACH, NV -- The Burning Man festival, a prominent artistic and countercultural event that draws tens of thousands of people to the Nevada desert annually, is in danger of cancellation this week because "no one had their shit together enough to even make it," organizers said Tuesday. "Jesus Christ, this is pathetic," said event coordinator Ethan Moon as he angrily gestured toward the empty Black Rock Desert basin expanse, known as the playa. "We've been promoting this thing all year. You can't start panhandling quarters for gas the week before the festival and expect to make it here in time, man."
Moon listed some of the most common no-show excuses, among them oversleeping, forgetting to request time off work, faulty van-borrowing arrangements, a shortage of ochre body-paint, and the last-minute realization that transportation to the Burning Man festival requires money.
...Hippies were not the only counterculture group to miss the Burning Man festival. Portland-area Linux user and self-described cyber-conceptualist "Free" Lance Kaegle explained his absence in an instant message from his studio.
"I was organizing this boss techno-art project called 'Off The Grid,'" Kaegle wrote. "We were going to set up computer terminals in various parts of the playa and have people use them. Then we'd feed the binary data from those terminals into this fractals program that [Silver Lake, CA software designer] Ricky [Thomas-Slater] wrote. Those fractals would be sent, on the fly, to a group of exiled Buddhist monks I befriended online. The monks would transform the fractals into a temporal sand painting, the making of which we would webcast live to everyone on the playa."
Added Kaegle: "But I had to stop working on the monk thing to finish up this Pam's Country Crafts web site I'm working on. I really need the money..."
damn you all (Score:3, Funny)
congrats (Score:5, Funny)
Results of new server stress-test: (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Results of new server stress-test: (Score:2)
At 31 it seems to be working fine.
Re:Results of new server stress-test: (Score:2)
But now that I come to it the traffic is indeed heavy but the load average is less than 1, so I am not sure what failed earlier on.
Re:Results of new server stress-test: (Score:5, Informative)
I will admit, on a new server, this is a pretty slick trick to stress test the whole system. Just suggest nudie pics available to the /. crowd, sit back, and watch to see if the upstream routers can deal with the loads. It's a far better way to see if your upstream providers have problems than sitting back and waiting till there's real business/money on the line. I've got a new load balanced cluster going live for a client in a couple weeks, probly gonna steal a page from your book here, I've always known the /. test was a good one, never thought to spice the blurb with the hint of nudie pics.
Re:Results of new server stress-test: (Score:2)
-
Voip (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Voip (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Voip (Score:2)
Re:Voip (Score:2)
That's basically when the phone comany does anyway. They have lots of batteries connected to the lines to provide juice for when THEIR power goes out.
Solar VoiP (Score:2)
But I really don't care how they power it - solar, pedal while you talk. gerbils, nukes... I just love the idea of functional phone booths where a phone booth should not be. If it can be completely wireless, so much the better!
And finally, I think Solar VoiP would make a great band name. Feel free toe use it so lo
Re:Solar VoiP (Score:2)
In fact photovoltaics and solar thermal systems like solar hot-water heaters work fine even with fairly heavy cloud cover.
I live in the very cloudy PNW and there are plenty of solar powered emergency phones and other various equipment all over the place. Those little solar powered path lights at home depot work just fine here too even when we're having one of our several week periods of overcast skies.
You do have to upsize your so
Re:Cordless phones (Score:2)
It sure does, you plug it into the asterisk box, so you have a method or routing local calls from the rest of your voip devices....
Re:Cordless phones (Score:2)
Hopefully you know your address at your home before you have to call 911.
I don't think he's concerned about the 911 operator finding locating your address. I think he's talking about the fact that your cordless phone won't work during a power outage. When that earthquake/tornado/hurricane knocks out the power, the last thing you want to be doing afterwards is searching old boxes in your closet for a corded phone to call 911.
The Em
Re:Cordless phones (Score:2)
Not convenient for me (Score:5, Funny)
Do the Math (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Do the Math (Score:3, Informative)
Burning Man Website Down. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Burning Man Website Down. (Score:2)
don't need to read the article (Score:4, Insightful)
Sick Bastard (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Sick Bastard (Score:2)
Google Cache (Score:5, Informative)
non-naked burning man phone pics (Score:2, Informative)
jc
Re:non-naked burning man phone pics (Score:2)
Although the chick in the blue TShirt might as well be wearing paint.
(I'm curious how this website stands up to being slashdotted. :-)
Apparently quite well. Brad's a VERY old net hand, and ran a commercial UPI/Reuters news relay service via NNTP. The man understands bandwidth. I doubt his server could handle the 500 million hits that CNN took September 11 and 12 in 2001,
Douglas Adams, where areyou now? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Douglas Adams, where areyou now? (Score:2)
Am guessing all the telephone sanitizers are busy with their rubber err... ducks? No, just rubber, I suppose
Just asking for trouble... (Score:4, Funny)
CB
cool idea (Score:5, Interesting)
CB^%&*(__.
Re:cool idea (Score:4, Informative)
Re:cool idea (Score:2)
on an aside, great sig line, I agree 100%.
CVB
Emotional reactions to technology? (Score:4, Insightful)
There seems to be too much of a false dichotomy that is present. Either you're an artsy, expressive person or you're one of those technology nerds that is cold to creativity. Maybe the worst nightmare to the artsy extremists is the idea that they don't have a monopoly on aesthetics anymore than the nerds on functionality. Would not the greatest triumph be a blending of beauty and functionality? Of course, harmonization of the two would naturally result in the nerds and artsy types having to meet half-way and *gasp* learn to communicate and appreciate each other.
But then what do I know? I'm one of the only geeks in my CS department that can actually excel at human languages while suffering in my math skills. I picked up basic scheme programming in one or two classes and finished the projects quickly, and beat most of the math people because my brain is more used to switching between fairly starkly different logic paradigms. Going between English and Spanish requires more mental flexibility than from C->Java.
At this point I just don't understand why people who pride themselves on how well-developed their intellects are would limit themselves instead of building on that so they could stay on top. I am just reminded of some of the math nerds, whose coding skills aren't as good as mine, said that a math minor should be a prereq. When I retorted, "fine then let's add a foreign language minor since that would be just as useful for helping programmers think flexibly" they just... shut up.
Nerds, go to a coffee shop when local bands are jamming and maybe take an artsy chick out to a musical or something. Artsy types, try math, programming, anything to gain an appreciation for the value of logic. It'd do so many of you good.
Re:Emotional reactions to technology? (Score:2, Informative)
Mod Parent -1 Insecure Prick (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Emotional reactions to technology? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Emotional reactions to technology? (Score:5, Insightful)
I play in a band, and I'm the only technical person in it. However, the rest of them take PRIDE in the fact that they cannot, or rather, will not - do math or science.
On the other hand, almost all the technical people I've seen make a conscious effort at *something* artsy or the other (languages, music, painting, dramatics, martial arts, etc) - something or the other, at the very least. And they are seldom proud of the fact that they cannot do artsy stuff - I've always wished that I could paint or do dramatics.
That is a kind of defeatist attitude, especially since communiation has to be two way - it does not help if only the geeks made an effort to get into arts, there has to be cooperation from the other side, too.
Re:Emotional reactions to technology? (Score:3, Interesting)
A fair sample of the CS people I know have a minor in humanities.
Myself, I play music and have a german minor.
German English requires shades of meaning that are inexpressible in code, thats for sure!
Which is an interesting thought WRT AI, but I digreess.
Your point seems to be more correct than not.
Re:Emotional reactions to technology? (Score:2)
Give me a fricken break!
No solar power? (Score:4, Insightful)
Preamble: I'd rtfa but the site is /.'d right now. I'm suprised to not see any mention of this thing being solar powered with a decent rechargable battery system attached.
Call me crazy, but a wireless based phone booth in the middle of a desert just begs for solar power, then it's truely a portable, viable option for these types of gatherings, plus public beaches during vacation season, etc. Heck the department of natural resources could put them out on hiking trails and bring them back in during the winter
But all that would require the thing to not require an electricty plug where ever you needed it. If you're going to go through the trouble of providing 120volts whats the point?
Re:No solar power? (Score:5, Informative)
So a solar panel could have been added but it would have been out of place on the image I wanted to create. Indeed, one way to do the panel would be just a bit more powerful than the phone needed, so to recharge the battery a bit, and then just die when the battery ran out, and start again at dawn.
A traditional (superman) booth could have a panel on the roof that nobody would see, though a horizontal panel is not as efficient as one tilted to the latitude.
Re:No solar power? (Score:2)
Re:No solar power? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:No solar power? (Score:2)
Maybe they had more of a point 15 years ago when most of them were being installed (at great expense I'm sure due to the newness of the technology), but they are hardly a necessary service, and now they're practically useless. All I'm asking is, were they really worth the money?
Re:No solar power? (Score:2)
Maybe they had more of a point 15 years ago when most of them were being installed (at great expense I'm sure due to the newness of the technology), but they are hardly a necessary service, and now they're practically useless. All I'm asking is, were they really worth the money?
Actually, a long time ago - these were all
A Phone booth in the Middle of nowhere? (Score:2, Interesting)
A satellite/wi-fi booth seems cool, but somehow lacks something the old wired booth had.
Re:A Phone booth in the Middle of nowhere? (Score:2, Funny)
Yeah...duh...wires?
My cheesy personal experience with the booth (Score:3, Interesting)
how did they get the bandwidth to work??? (Score:3, Interesting)
I am only familiar with the Hughes Directway system and that has such a slow round trip that I doubt it would work for VoIP. Often times the uplinks are slower that a 14.4 modem on a bad wire... Are there better products on the market? I didn't see any mention of what they used. There was a cursory explaination that he tweaked the equipment to work with slower speeds, but how!?
Does anyone know of a more reliable sat connection than the directway? Maybe something that uses Low Earth satellites rather than geosyncronous... or pose the threat of burning flesh of anyone walking in front of the transmitter?
Re:how did they get the bandwidth to work??? (Score:5, Informative)
Next up: Man sees "Aero Plane"; Soils Trousers! (Score:2)
Seriously though, it is kind of a neat achievement, I just think that the potential for a very ironic phone call to the fire department could erupt at any moment..
Cheap? (Score:2, Interesting)
I'm sure the VoIP solution could be cheap to implement, but what about "...and a satellite IP uplink.".
I think this last bit would make the cost of this solution go up a little, wouldn't it?
Cell-phone like 802.11 phone (Score:2)
Anyone know what he is talking about? I looked around but cannot find anything like what Brad describes.
Brad, I know you are lurking on these pages
Re:Cell-phone like 802.11 phone (Score:2)
Gratuitously, Oliver Twist in Nevada (Score:2)
old news.. (Score:3)
Re:old news.. (Score:2)
Burning Man (Score:2)
While on the surface it would appear that Burning Man is a week long party where people walk around naked, that is only the surface and anyone who one experiences this level is missing out.
No vending is allowed at the event, except for ice and coffee in center camp. There is something called the gift economy where ev
Re:Burning Man (Score:2)
The issue is latency, not bandwidth (Score:2)
The issue, however, is LATENCY. With minimum 500ms round trip times (250ms up to the geosynchronous bird, 250ms back down), it could be very annoying to talk over such a link. It'll work, but the feeling of interactivity between you and your conversational partner will simply be missing.
Have you ever heard NPR reporters in the m
How about next year? (Score:2)
How about a mockup of a typical fifties American living room with a couch, a couple of easy chairs, a black and white TV playing Leave It To Beaver, and a coffee table with a fifties style black rotary dial phone that really works. All the electronics including power would be in the phone and the table, invisible. Now that would be
Re:How about next year? (Score:2)
Re:Nice but, (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Nice but, (Score:5, Funny)
Working on AI nanotech, are we?
Hospitals do not make changes on a whim (Score:2)
If something like a little WiFi+VoIP causes an piece of equipment to stop working then the equipment needs to be replaces/reengineered, because WiFi is here to stay and VoIP is gaining momentum, so it will have to be done sooner or later.
What you might not realize is that hospitals routinely use equipment for a very long time; a 20-30 year lifespan is not unusual for certain types of equipment. The mission of the hospital is to use what works, and they tend to rely on time-tested tools and technology.
Re:Hospitals do not make changes on a whim (Score:2)
Re:Nice but, (Score:2)
Re:Nice but, (Score:2)
Re:Nice but, (Score:2)
Still I think leads typically are shielded, I wander down the hall and look.
Eventually they'll have to be more robust!
Re:I wouldn't call that a phone "booth" (Score:4, Informative)
Re:VoIP's problems (Score:2, Interesting)
I think you have too much invested in telco stock, I would suggest diversifying your portfolio.
Re:VoIP's problems (Score:3, Insightful)
Mad-Libs for trolls. Nothing to see here, move along.
Re:VoIP's problems (Score:2)
OH NO!?! (Score:2)
i'm so glad my LANDLINE had those problems fixed eyars ago
*cough*
Re:Oh boy. I wish I had that excuse (Score:2)
While I do applaud the engineering, there were other art projects which would appeal even more to the ./ crowd. I could go on forever. One thing I did see that was interesting was a giant (maybe 6x6 feet?) colorful LED matrix. Each 25x25 LED section of the matrix had it's own ethernet connection, which fed into a large switch. A computer program (a java program written on a powerbook in emac
Re:Oh boy. I wish I had that excuse (Score:2)
Re:Oh boy. I wish I had that excuse (Score:2)
And I am also chairman of the EFF, a free speech group you may have heard about in
Re:Oh boy. I wish I had that excuse (Score:2, Interesting)
We'd love to contribute to the EFF. The bad news is
that until a while back I was homeless and out on
the street. Sorry. Still broke.
I'm still struggling to come to terms with being able
to laugh about it.
Wish you well.
Re:Great, cater to the lowest common denominator.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Did you even bother to check out the linked pages? He's not promoting an inaccurate view of the festival at all -- quite the opposite, in fact.
Re:Great, cater to the lowest common denominator.. (Score:2)
With the seeming increase of jerks at the event lately, I guess I got a little knee-jerk.
Re:how BM has changed... (Score:2)
But free of Technology? What Burning Mans have you been to? Burning Man is crawling with technology, it's in love with technology, and has been the 7 times I have been.
Re:how BM has changed... (Score:2)
MUCH less than the past.
"But free of Technology? What Burning Mans have you been to? Burning Man is crawling with technology, it's in love with technology, and has been the 7 times I have been."
It's been before that... before the thing turned into a frat boy $350/ticket money pit. Oh well.
Re:how BM has changed... (Score:2)
Burning Man changes every year, and while the old one is gone the new one isn't so much worse or better but different. I like the marriage
i -heart- preview (Score:2)
Re:i -heart- preview (Score:2)
Wah
For those of you who think this is "bad" and "censorship" remember that there are many people who would like to see cameras banned entirely from Black Rock City. The current rules are a ballance between privacy and artists reproduction rights and having the sleazoids who make "Girls Gone Wild" videos shove ca