Is A Public Wireless Internet Possible? 179
edmz asks: "As of this day anyone with resources can deploy their Web site and be accessible worldwide. Thanks to telcos wanting to charge for use of their infrastructure this might change soon, who knows. But the point is that its possible in this very moment. Now, let's be imaginative and think that in 10 years we will be able to have a truly wireless Internet. What things are being done now as to guarantee that we will have a public and big enough part of the spectrum so that we can broadcast, share and communicate as we do with the net now? Will all of the spectrum be private, and thus, possibly pay per use?" A wireless Internet, when created, will be one of the first major advances of the 21st century. How long will it take before it becomes a reality?
Re:Poor view of wireless communication (Score:1)
Re:My theory (Score:1)
StarBand satellite (Score:1)
Wireless in Southern Illinois (Score:1)
SeattleWireless (Score:1)
see http://seattlewireless.net/ [seattlewireless.net]
Re:Bigger question... (Score:1)
Simple Answer: No, Why? read on: (Score:1)
Lets say your in NYC, and the whole 5 to 6 Ghz (if it were not already allocated to other things) was allocated soley too wireless networking, this means millions of people have to share 1Ghz (= 1Giga bit / second, without error correction, etc...) of bandwidth. This is why home 802.11 have such a limited distance & bandwidth, there just isn't enough room to put everyone, and low power means that most people don't interfere with each other, but put one or more wireless lans together that use the same frequency, and you get errors, etc...
So, if you want wireless networking, you miss out on bandwidth, if you want bandwidth, land-line & optic-fibre is the way to go, this is why I see wireless networking really being for small devices, and the occasional laid-back mobile internet, nothing really special.
Maybe one day, someone will invent a way to not use radios waves (quantum entanglement anyone?), that is when true wireless communications will be as big and as fast as you want, but for now, your all just going to have to share what we have.
PS. If you have any suggestions or questions, I will check replies to this message for a few days.
Wireless - Here's a link (Score:1)
http://www.midcoast.net/wirelessfaq.html
Routing, HTS, and a new currency. (Score:1)
The main issue is that there isn't, currently, a routing algorithm that can do the job. You have a network, half of which is probably mobile, and the sheer number of 'cell changes' causes so much routing traffic that it threatens to take over the entire network. As for optimum-path routes, forget it. For a start, you never know the entire matrix to be able to do any optimization. By the time you've done the discovery, it's changed. The best basis I've come up with for a workable system is the Simulated Annealing algorithm.
Protocols like 802.11 are good for setting up p2p or p2mp networks, but suck at peer2peer. Trust me. There's this thing called 'hidden terminal syndrome' which basically means that the reciever you're trying to transmit to may be able to see another transmitter that you can't, and so while you're transmitting when you think the air is clear, the reciever is actually getting inteference. This becomes a big problem once your density gets high.
We need some new protocols that can adapt much more flexibly, and are optimized for 'global' bandwidth considerations.
There is also the issue of fairness. Essentially, the only way a distributed network can work is if each person contributes more to the network than they take. But how do you stop the assholes from hacking their transciever to give them priority? The answer is a 'digital currency' system that can enforce the quid-pro-quo nature of the network. You get 'points' for passing messages, and can call those points back in when you need capacity. This also gets into the 'web of trust' problem.
IPV6 is the answer to the address problem. I'm certain that wireless networks will be the 'killer app' for IPV6.
I expect to see a first generation wireless net using 11mb/s DSSS cards, basically geeks going point to point with medium wired networks attached.
Eventually, the density will increase, and head towards two seperate critical points: The point of total coverage, and the point of protocol collapse for the first-gen network.
Depending which happens first, and how far between they are (which is even affected by things like the local geography) rides the success of the system. If it reaches coverage before collapse, it will succeed, because it's usefulness will be enough to make sure the painful transition happens.
It would be nice to have the second-gen protocols ready early, but I doubt it will happen.
Having pointed out the problems, the benefits will be incalculable. For a start, it will save lives, since public infrastructure always goes down during a disaster, (cyclone, hurricane, earthquake) right when it's needed. A distributed system is far more resilient.
Later.
Re:Seen Consume? (Score:1)
Re:FCC Creates 3G Wireless (Score:1)
Would we need a public satellite? (Score:1)
Now for true public wireless someone has to have that satellite (or permission to use it),the towers and the hardware to get all this going.Right off the bat my cynical mind tells me this is going to cost some major investment.Of course I am only looking at the one facet of wireless that I am aware of.
We have seen that there is almost nothing truly free when it comes to the nuts and bolts of the Internet.Most free ISP's have gone down or you must pay some price (scrolling advertisements,limited access,etc).I would welcome a truly free,uncensored,open way to access the Internet and be in a really open enviroment but I simply do not see who will foot the bill.
Re:Poor view of wireless communication (Score:1)
Ham radio is orderly because its operators understand and abide by common-sense and practical rules and regulations. Liken the art of ham radio to driving a car. Without an understanding of the rules, many terrible things can happen! That's why we have ham and driver's licenses.
Many people think ham radio has arcane rules and regulations to hinder the uninformed and non-techies from the hobby. On the contrary, ham radio has rules and regulations in place to educate its user community. Listen to ham radio operators communicate for five minutes then compare their demeanor with Family Radio Service (FRS) or Citizen's Band (CB). Ham radio licenses are not difficult to obtain for those who are truly interested in obtaining them. I have had friends study for their tests and learn the material in a week and in some cases a weekend. My wife, my mother, and my father all have their licenses.
The Internet of the future[As I see it] (Score:1)
Nobody uses phones anymore it's all Internet..
The phone companys still exist but only to run fiber optic for back bones and ISPs.
Backbones run the primary network. ISPs provide service to "Commuity network" providers, servers (Websites etc) and "Geeks" who want/need cutting edge technology (optic lines etc)
For most speed isn't a major issue. With radio IPs going from 2 meg to as slow as 28.4k websites usually adjust according to the populare technology of the time. Moores law begins to apply to bandwith as the "standards" are set down by the local Community networks.
The community networks operators are basicly ham ops.. They do it for prestige. Political canidates, advocates, geeks, and research organisations run thies. Usually geeks but there is the odd exeption.
The community network provider uses what ever he wants but if you want to use something diffrent he'll be more than happy to take a donation of a feed modem for the technology you want to support. To help premote new modems some companys just give away feed modems and suck up the cost in the sales of the user modems.
The community network provider pays for his own ISP feed.
Each community has more than one community network provider so you can usually get an account from whom ever you like. Most community network providers however use the user banlist.. It dosn't matter if a community provider agrees with the other providers policys a person who blatently ignores policys is going to have a hard time getting a new feed.. In the same rule a community network provider isn't going to be taken very sereously if he isn't reasonable with policy enforcment. In short spammers get stuck paying for expensive ISP accounts just to spam.. and many ISPs honner the community network bandlists.
It isn't nessisary to get a direct feed to the community network.. It's normal for the community network to be distributed in a maze like fassion with everyone pulling feeds from nearby rather than the far away community network provider. However the provider still gets finnal say even when someone isn't directly connected but is far off on his downlink.
"DICKtator" Community network admin basicly just lose users to a more reasonable provider.
The community network feed is free to anyone (as a rule) Charging a fee sets you up for a fall when someone else provides same service for free.
Community network admin who charg a fee are dispised.. seen has half dictator and half spammer. (Spammer becomes anyone who abuses the network for proffit rather than todays UCE.. and dictator is someone who abuses position... so a Spam Dictator is someone who abuses position for proffit)
The community networks have problems. Using microwave technology the signal can be messed with. Most modems use high grade point to point mutation encryption but not allways. The biggest issues are the guys running the networks. Not everyone is in it for the technology and some agendas. Occasionally a community network provider will ban all porn sites.. Or will block a certen game or protocal.. It usually works out in the end that people just switch to someone else ASAP.
The fun part is the package point to point signal. Usually some idiot figures out there is a packet feed and puts something matalic in the way. So most people go with brodcast style modems.
Occasionall it'll happen someone will BAN an operating system or REQUIRE an operating system.. Users of operating systems not allowed on the network tend to protest the community network. It's a matter of pride to them at this point. They could switch but the whole idea that someone is trying to pull this is just bad enough..
In my view community networks are not a matter of if.. but when... I set my story far enough into the future that I feel it's safe to assume community networks are a well established fact.
Also in my story the workforce realitys has changed a bit. Most manual labor jobs are automated. High end repair, invention, and art are about the only manual labor jobs left and thies are really skill jobs.
Accually all jobs are skill jobs.. Not quite push button but it's a lot easyer. The ludites are people who refuse to have wearable computers.. however it's hard to spot this as busness managers, and anyone who worrys about apperence refuses to use wearable computers. That sensor over the eye is just "just horrid" (according to style and fassion experts)
Everyone makes good money...
The biggy issue of the day are "work-a-holics" not the real people but more the people who wish to work past the normal retirement age of 35. It's seen as horrid. People are expected to retire when they have acheaved a level of wealth that they can live comfortably to the old age of 104 years (few ever make it that far.. It's just the far extream just in case.. most people don't live past 92)
Anyway the whole idea here is that everyone has technical skill.. Everyone is on the network.. the people who worry about bandwith are the Servers, Community network providers (CNPs), ISPs, Backbones and the phone companys (who run the optic cable)...
Phone companys still bill using postal mail and still refuse to use electronic check..
Amazon.com, Etoys.com and many other "DotCom" websites are lampoon websites.. "Back in the DotCom days thies websites were the home of companys who never really did figure out how the Internet works.. they died in the late 1990s and early 2000s.. Today they exist as monuments to sillyness.."...
Sevral protocals are used.. gopher is alive and well.. the protocals of choice for e-commerce are Com-E (A pun) Short for Commerce Electronic and Telnet... The web is usualy just legacy stuff.. older data.. archives.. It would be an unjustifyed hassle to move to newer technologys.
The real limitation is the FCC.. They set the rules for what radio bandwiths can be used for the Internet.. They refuse to admit the death of the TV industry (they keep introducing TV standards in the microwave signal range).... In a bit of irony AM radio is alive and well...
Millitary signal for unknown reason is de-alocated by the FCC and has been freed up for community networks.. Conspericy therarists wonder.. Most people just think they have some new technology they are keeping secret.. It'd probably get found out sooner or later but.. It seems community network providers would rather it be later... They don't want the FCC to take the bandwith away...
Re:Of course not... (Score:1)
There is no should or shouldn't about it...
Free ISPs are hamppered by that wire... it's an additional cost.. Many free ISPs exist.. banner ads and just hobby systems.. But as a rule they don't last long due the costs imposed by that wire.. or fiber optic.. or any phisical connetion.
Free ISPs will not be so limited with radio IP.. One antanna for all the connections.. and only a one time fee for the antanna.. Maybe a yearly FCC liccens.. But the cost to serve 5,000,000 people is the about the same as the cost to serve 5... Not counting additional equipment and maintainence on same.
"Should"? Well.. It can be... it dosn't have to be... people are perficly willing to pay for it and will continue to do so for as long as there is no free alternitive...
Re:Never happen (Score:1)
This being true of some companys a real capitalist finds proffit in feeding the poor...
(Todays proffit modle for poverty is as advertising.. "We feed the poor" "We give computers to the poor" - Microsoft, "We protect the environment" - Exxon... Not only the most evil but all companys use this.. the most evil however don't have much of a choice).
VA Linux makes money selling computers with Linux preinstalled.. WC-CdRom sells CDs loaded with free software (anyones free software). I think RedHat missed the boat with focusing on selling a distro.. Caldera with certification, support and enbeded systems has a better grasp of how to proffit from a distro.
Many companys would see public bandwith and an advantage not a disadvantage and would loby FOR it if anyone lobbyed against it...
More than likely it'll happen under there noses... Companys who try to get stuff banned aren't paying attention to trends.. It's happening now but won't materealise for 10 to 50 years from now. During than time it'll cement itself. Politicians will come to depend on it long before corpratism catches note... Try lobbying to Senitor Please that free bandwith must go after he wins an ellection using it...
Re:Would we need a public satellite? (Score:1)
I admit I'm living in the middle of the of a city.. so I have access to brodband.. But prefer wireless...
Here they relay of short range relays... This works well and fine for us..
I understand why you need satlight access.. It's a very diffrent reality.. I'm close enough to a telephone pole to get a radio signal from it... I'm also close enough to get a wire... the wireless has some advantages and is cheaper...
There isn't a node on each pole.. Instead it's on one of every 100 poles.. Within a mile of each other (thats the range as I understand it)..
If a pole is nocked down (by a careless driver for example) as long as there is annother node to replace it the connection remains.. the phone lines are cut...
Not a great help for you.. The range isn't there..
However it is doable using HAM technology but it's dial up speeds (or slower) not quite what you want...
Re:Bigger question... (Score:1)
They don't have much say in the matter...
Re:What is with this anti-government sentiment? (Score:1)
I would much rather have someone spy on me that I could sue if I cought them doing it...
Yes companys will find some excuse for it but as soon as someone dose someone will file a class action lawsute (There is an industry of filing lawsites for people.. today they need to get the persons permition before filing.. I'd join such a lawsute..)
You really can't sue the government... (You can but... they'd just pass a law making it legal and do it anyway)
There isn't much anarcy in busness.. Government regulation and capitalism both rule busness.
On the asside... public wireless internet would mean.. radio carrier.. Government, Corperations, Hobbyists, 31337 hax0r d00ds, centient ants, and Alien fungus on weather ballowns will all tap the signal...
Re:Well.. (Score:1)
Tesla couldn't get a backer for his proffitless venture..
Linus never bothered with backing and just wrote code..
If we wait for someone to back a free wireless it'll never happen... if we do it ourselfs out of our pockets it'll be posted on Slashdot hmm 3 times?
Will it be done? No.. That implys a start at a future date.. It's allready happening.. The start is in the past...
Re:What about security? (Score:1)
Re:Well...in some way... (Score:1)
Re:What about security? (Score:1)
Real Project: "Verfunknetzung Thüringen" (Score:1)
Remember the old mailbox-nets like FidoNet? That exactly the same thing: Private information infrastructure.
Re:Cybiko (Score:1)
> badass little toy for $99. Plug it into your computer and you can serve as an Internet gateway (CyWIG)
> for any other Cybiko in range.
> Anyone else have one of these yet?
Mine is still in the mail, but I have already grabbed the dev kit. Uses C with a few added functions to do message passing and detecting other machines. One could easily make a telnet prog, using the connected one to do NAT. Don't think there is enough room for linux tho:}
MiniPlug: You can get it from the site for only 89 with the code CA8611.
If you hate spam read this (Score:1)
please join the cause
Re:Spectrum is a scarce resource (Score:1)
Re:Bigger question... (Score:1)
Cheap hardware? (Score:1)
Too easy to DOS, wouldn't it be? (Score:1)
----
"Here to discuss how the AOL merger will affect consumers is the CEO of AOL."
I love my Ricochet modem (www.metricom.com) (Score:1)
that's just my 2 cents worth.
Re:What is with this anti-government sentiment? (Score:1)
Telecommunications Act of 1996. Enough said.
Parallel network - good idea (Score:1)
--Josh Adams
The problem)sic) lies in non-apathy... (Score:1)
--Josh Adams
Re:I hope this doesn't spawn lots of anti-FCC post (Score:1)
In 10-20 years' time when analogue is switched off however, who knows which channels will be chosen for wirless comms.
Re:Must have a network to connect to (Score:1)
Recently in the UK there has been a big scramble by ISPs to cut prices, fueled by massive public demand. First, they started cutting calls down to local rates wherever you were, then they did away with subscriptions, then they gave you free off peak access, and ultimately they have been driven to 24/7 free access for a subscription charge. Companies have been falling overthemselves to lower the prices to get more customers.
the same goes for wireless internet. Personally I think that it is an inevitability. But who's going to pay and where are we going to get the addresses from?
It won't happen soon, we need to wait for wireless LANs and the like to take off. Companies will then be looking for areas to expand to, and people will be saying "I can walk around my office with my laptop on a network, why not on the train?". Once big companies see that urge, they will act. Companies will put money behind IP6 (I am assuming only from hernick's that this is necessary) and make it work.
It's simply too early for this technology. Wait 10 years and something will have cropped up.
Are we talking about truely "wireless internet"? (Score:1)
If "everybody" (your desktop, laptop, Sega, toaster, etc) went wireless (possible in 10 years?) this could really be a question needing answered somewhere down the road.
Cybiko (Score:1)
Anyone else have one of these yet?
--
Re:Poor view of wireless communication (Score:1)
You obviously haven't heard about cryptology. Secure connections are impossible to interpret externally. You can always increase the difficulty of understanding encrypted data, by adding bits/etc.
Broken Premise (Score:1)
There will never be "a wireless Internet". The Internet will always be a rich amalgam of technologies, wireless being one. Wireless has advantages and disadvantages and it will be applied where it has substantial useful advantages, but that isn't everywhere or even a large percentage of everywhere.
In order for the Internet to function and to provide the kinds of things we're used to it providing, there will necessarily be diversity in access technology and there will be methods of connecting one to another, as there are now. So whatever portion of the Internet is wireless, now and in the future, noone will know or care. All that matters is that packets get through.
What portion of the spectrum is open to the public really doesn't matter IMO. It is important to have the spectrum open to public use, but not because we all need wireless Internet. The two ideas aren't related. (In other words, having the some portion of the spectrum open doesn't yield wireless Internet).
That said, having wireless _access_ to the net is really good and should be widely available for cheap. Ricochet provides an excellent example of this (see www.ricochet.net [ricochet.net]). But this is unrelated to either the notion of "a wireless Internet" or to public access to the EM spectrum.
Spectra and the like ... (Score:1)
The frequencies and technologies are already available to implement most of this technology, but with the reallocation -- at least in the US -- of much of the current spectra reserved for television around 2008 (my date may be off) entirely new slices of frequency will probably be made available for general use.
Of course the above statement altruistically assumes that lobbyists won't manage to bribe and cajole their way into the House Telecommunications Subcommittee meetings and railroad the "deliberations" of its money junkies towards assigning vast tracts of "publically-owned" frequency pasture to obscure applications that only have relevance to some megacorporation in Timbuktu. :)
But hey, a guy can dream, right?
Spectra and the like ... (Score:1)
The frequencies and technologies are already available to implement most of this technology, but with the reallocation -- at least in the US -- of much of the current spectra reserved for television around 2008 (my date may be off) entirely new slices of frequency will probably be made available for general use.
Of course the above statement altruistically assumes that lobbyists won't manage to bribe and cajole their way into the House Telecommunications Subcommittee meetings and railroad the "deliberations" of its money junkies towards assigning vast tracts of "publically-owned" frequency pasture to obscure applications that only have relevance to some megacorporation in Timbuktu. :)
But hey, a guy can dream, right?
Re:A few problems that I can see... (Score:1)
Many parts of the electromagnetic spectrum aren't very good for you, or other living organisms. If EVERYONE were using microwave there would probably be a decrease in the bird population, and trees might start dying, more people would get cancer (if we still used lead paint and stayed indoors we might be ok).
Also think of the lag, going from wireless to hardwire isn't terrible, but going from wireless to wireless to wireless to wireless to wireless...and then back again could get ugly.
As for other problems, someone could start broadcasting noise on every frequency they cared to, and it would probably be a harder to find them if there are others trying to use the same frequencies at the same time.
IPs are and issue but think of what happens if we ever run out of MAC addresses? (probably won't happen too soon, but if we're looking very far in the future....)
These are all valid points to address, but they are not insurmountable, and from my possibly-flawed understanding of the current state of bleeding edge most of them already have decent solutions in development.
Actually I always wondered what a maser attached to a C band satellite antenna feedhorn would do as it tracked from position to position along the Clarke belt, but I digress. :)
Re:802.11 based access ... (Score:1)
Whoops ... I apologize for making an assertion regarding range based on anecdotal information. The Lucent sales rep says 30 miles -- but I am scouring Lucent's site for anything that even comes close to that.
Basically to extend the range of either BreezeCom [breezecom.com] or Lucent Orinoco [lucent.com] technology you need a reflective external antenna that has been aligned to point directly towards the central omnidirectional antenna.
One provider claiming to be nearing a working 30 mile range is MidCoast.net [midcoast.net]. From other sources, including ISP Planet [isp-planet.com] the more typical cell size is based on line-of-site, approximately five miles with optimal base antenna placement.
Again I offer my apology for posting anecdotal information.
Re:802.11 based access ... Other digressions. :) (Score:1)
The 30 mile range I suspect is based on parabolic antenna to parabolic antenna transmission. 512 users as I recall is the limit for the Orinoco equipment.
Thanks for the pointer to Nokia. :)
Re:This would need a dramatic leap in technology (Score:1)
802.11 based access ... (Score:1)
is being deployed by many ISP's across the United States as the technology becomes more robust, with the ability to serve up to 512 users per antenna/cell at a distance of up to 30 miles with appropriate amplification.
In areas like mine where telcos are slow to deploy digital services and cable access is perpetually "18 months away" wireless 802.11 provides a relatively high-speed low latency connection compared to MSN/Gilat's access. The provider I am working with plans to provide a fixed IP address with a minimum 1.5 Mbps down and 384 Kbps up for $49.95 a month to subscribers within the equipment's five mile range. The theoretical limit of 802.11 currently maxes out at 11 Mbps bidirectional -- Lucent tells us 24 Mbps is on its way.
Unfortunately 802.11 technology is neither inexpensive, nor is it completely immune to terrestrial interference.
I suspect providers can look for the quality of wireless technology to improve dramatically in the coming decade as wireless technologies mature. I do not recall the name or the source of the article but as I recall in one or more major North American cities a company is now looking to provide a dialtone in competition to local POTS via a wireless antenna attached to the subscriber's rooftop. As I recall, the truly wonderful thing about this technology is that each antenna also acts as a repeater for the service.
Imagine something like this paired with 802.11 that allows an ISP or connection provider to extend their range with each install ...
<gloat> In any case the geek in me suspects that roaming through my home town at 1.5 Mbps with a PDA will be quite sweet. I'll let everyone know in a few months. :)
</gloat>
Re:802.11 based access ... Other digressions. :) (Score:1)
It's not a question of IF wires disappear ... (Score:1)
It's a question of when.
With Bluetooth and like technologies in the not-too-distant future a device the size of a wrist watch will hold the equivalent of a PDA -- which will probably network somewhat seamlessly with its surrounding devices. Such a device might enable the strokes of your electronic pen to be stored in your wrist assistant's memory, or to be mirrored by a nearby printing device.
Your body's ability to act as an antenna for RF might allow a scenario similar to the commerical where the shady-looking young fellow is watched by other shoppers as he stuffs items into his coat, only to be stopped by the store attendant as he is leaving "excuse me sir, you forgot your receipt."
As an extreme extrapolation of possibilities, your wrist assistant might be programmed to hold reality interface settings that determine the level of interaction "smart" devices in your immediate environment choose for you.
As an example of what I am talking about, imagine visiting a foreign city for the first time. Upon stepping out of the airplane you set your reality interface to "novice" and into the air say "I need to get to a moderately-priced hotel."
The watch decides it does not have the information you require and so connects to a small transceiver located in a a nearby "smart" traffic sign. It sends an agent out into the local network to find an answer to your question. The agent replies with the pertinent information. After saying "confirm my reservation" your watch messages the hotel, supplies your personal information, and allows the funds for the room to be transfered from your bank account to the hotel. Because your assistant is set to "novice" it inquires whether you wish to walk the 3.5 kilometers to this location, or hail a taxi.
You tell it to secure a taxi, the cab is notified by electronic message, arrives in front of you with your destination pre-arranged, and is paid without you ever having to reach into your pocket or speak a word in the country's language.
Of course any access terminal you step up to will not only greet you in your desired language but will recognize you and conform to your personal preferences.
In your own city a setting of "expert" means that street signs do not provide verbal cues as to your location, and you are not nagged by local ordinance announcements as you commute between locations.
This is on its way -- it's a question of when, not if such technology becomes affordable and widely deployed. I would suspect we could see it in as little as twenty years, but surely within a century I believe such an experience will be commonplace.
Re:This would need a dramatic leap in technology (Score:1)
This is a fun thread, Bill. :)
I suspect within twenty years we will have small distance-limited data-carrying nodes connected by wire/fiber to backbone carriers.
You talk about a home-by-home deployment of shared-node transceivers. Ten to twenty years from now if current trends proceed the average home will either possess or be within range of such a device.
Regarding compression technology and embedded processors -- I am not talking about throughput -- I am talking about compression. If I take a newspaper and compress it, it will take less time to transmit, allowing another device more time to use the same frequency. Unless I misunderstand your argument I suspect you are thinking in analog terms, but with digital compression technology we can make one byte count as ten, or twenty, or even fifty, effectively increasing by a factor of ten, twenty, or fifty the total amount of data (depending on type) that can be carried on an available frequency.
As an example the current DiVX compression scheme allows video to be compressed to extremely small files, hence decreasing download times by a factor of ten. In effect this increases apparent bitrate. in regards to compression processor power does have a role in more efficient utilization of available hertz/bps.
As for satellite systems, in higher-end RCA televisions DSS decoders are now built in. At least in the United States many DBS decoders are given away free with a purchase of programming. I bought mine at Radio Shack for $49.95 -- cheaper than a medium grade outdoor VHF antenna.
Regarding upstream data according to current Internet models the amount of data sent by Joe Q. User upstream as he surfs the web is trivial compared to the amount of data he receives. There is no need for a web pad to offer 1.5 Mbps of data per second upstream. Conversely there is no need for an electronic pen to grab 1.5 Mbps of data downstream. If you incorporate handwriting recognition technology into the electronic pen all it needs to do is keep up with the number of characters per second the wielder is capable of writing ...
We do not yet know what devices might be a part of a ubiquitous network, but I am certain with a combination of high speed channel hopping, compression, and proper prioritization/queueing of packets such a network will be possible.
-Joe G.
Re:802.11 based access ... Other digressions. :) (Score:1)
The ISP I am refering to is in a small town in Ohio. :)
The sweet part of the setup is that the primary antenna is on a tall building on the highest spot in town, within line of site range of the entire business district. If Lucent's Orinoco performs as advertized I cannot wait to see what roaming is like. There's so much potential (positive and negative) in having city-sized areas covered by a TCP/IP WAN.
I prefer to focus on the positives at this point in time, and deal with the negatives once the system has actually been deployed. <g>
Re:802.11b logo (Score:1)
This search [ieee.org] at IEEE.org [ieee.org] yields all of the draft specifications for the protocol, but there does not appear to be an 802.11.org. :)
Re:Is that a tumor in your pocket or your PDA? (Score:1)
I had a previous comment to another post regarding RF that is pertinent here:
Any electromagnetic field emits RF. Being a digital slave I do not want to live without the benefits todays' technology can bring.
Since the only way to eliminate RF from our lives is to forgo electricity, I'll gladly accept the current low risks for the benefits they entail, even if that means that I might be in the 0.001% of persons who could have the odd malignant tumor triggered by my cordless phone.
I could also be one of the 0.001% of creatures exterminated by an asteroid strike, or the 0.001% of creatures struck and killed by frozen falling airplane sewage ...
The sun generates copious amounts of harmful radiation and kills more people per country per year than have been killed by every poorly-shielded electronic device in existence since electricity was first harnessed, but I haven't heard anyone talking about banning it ...
(yet)
We can easily make a "pseudo-ubiquitous" network . (Score:1)
We only need a protocol that can flexibly recognize what is "local" and what is "remote."
When we have such a protocol then we can simply extend the current infrastructure to include devices that participate in our ubiquitous local network in a fashion similar to IP Masquerading or connection sharing ...
The whole Internet does not need to know every device sharing the IP addy at your.connection.mondo-highspeed-net.com. Every device sharing the IP addy at your.connection.mondo-highspeed-net.com need not speak to the whole Internet. :)
The hard part is making certain that your George Jetson videophonebookpad uses YOUR connection and not your neighbor's, and knows whether or not when it is out of range of your home network it is allowed to connect to the NetWorkAtLarge.
Re:This would need a dramatic leap in technology (Score:1)
I think what will make a ubiquitous wireless environment possible is an increase in the processing power of embedded systems.
We will obviously not have more frequencies available, but I suspect we will be able to use alloted frequencies more wisely, and possibly devise some more robust low power transmission schemes.
Remember how large "wireless phones" were in the early 90's? Remember how terrible the sound could be? Look at how small they have become, and yet their sound has also generally improved significantly.
We have not dumped more wattage into cell transmission technology. We certainly have not dramatically increased the amount of alloted frequency available to place a single cell call. What we have done is to employ technologies like realtime compression and high-speed channel switching/frequency hopping. :)
On a similar note we now cram two hundred plus channels of high quality video into the same amount of bandwidth used by twenty analog video channels -- using advanced compression technology. The set top DSS boxes used to weigh five kilograms and cost several hundred dollars. Now they weigh under a kilogram and cost less than fifty.
Technology marches forward. :)
Re:Like TV and Radio (Score:1)
Any electromagnetic field emits RF. Being a digital slave I do not want to live without the benefits todays' technology can bring.
Since the only way to eliminate RF from our lives is to forgo electricity, I'll gladly accept the current low risks for the benefits they entail, even if that means that I might be in the 0.001% of persons who could have the odd tumor triggered by my cordless phone.
I could also be one of the 0.001% of creatures exterminated by an asteroid strike, or the 0.001% of creatures struck and killed by frozen falling airplane sewage ...
Re:Like TV and Radio (Score:1)
Good old Sol also emits cancer-causing energy, but I do not see anyone working to regulate it other than Coppertone. :)
Re:Like TV and Radio (Score:1)
Heh, with a wireless ubiquitous network the advertisements could follow you around through your day to day life, customized to your known preferences.
When you are within range advertisers could specifically target you with ads calculated to grab your attention -- displayed on public access surfaces ...
Amateur radio (Score:1)
Re:My theory (Score:1)
Is that a tumor in your pocket or your PDA? (Score:1)
Re:What is with this anti-government sentiment? (Score:1)
#2) Corporations are not natural people. They exist only in the legal fiction (laws) created by the State. Without s State, you can not have a corporation. So you can see your post does not make much sense to us Anarchists.
#3) Businesses does not force you to do things at the barrel of a gun. Governments do. Businesses that do, are government. It's obvious which one you stand more to lose to...
#4) Man has not 'flocked' to government. He has been forced into it by other men. I don't see any of us having much of a choice, now do we? (Also Historically the minimal and governmentless societies have been the most peaceful. (IE Celts vs Romans)
#5) Anarchism is not justified by the ideal that men are basically good. It is justified that men are bascially evil, and it is exactly those men that should not have priviledge over other men. (In plain english. It's those same scumbags that make up the govenment...only a HIGHER percentage)
#6) It is time for the aristocracy (governments) of the world to step aside and let men live free. They do nothing for you, only to you. Only the 'house nigger mentality' can justify otherwise.
Old /. Wireless Network Stories (Score:1)
5 GHz Wireless Networking With CMOS Transceivers [slashdot.org]
and
Aussies Put Old Pay-TV Dishes To Use -- As A LAN [slashdot.org]
Those who don't read
Once again doing my part for the free exchange of information.
All comments Copyright 2001 Electronic Frontier Foundation
Re:Simple Answer: No, Why? read on: (Score:1)
This is not true. Theoretically you can have an infinite transfer rate in a given bandwidth, it's only constrained by the noise. For example, a standard phone line is 3 kHz, yet we can get 56 kbps through it.
when will this be possible? (Score:1)
Is it worth the cost? (Score:1)
Sprint Broadband Direct, a beginning? (Score:1)
http://www.sprintbroadband.com/index.html
Derek
Deployment in Australia (Score:1)
A hurdle, but not insurmountable. I suspect that if enough Aussies got together and formed a public wireless network consortium (run as a business), paid membership fees, and with this income became a licenced telecommunications provider, we could do something.
And that something of course would be for every member to run a little 802.11 (or whatever, but we pick that 'cause it's standard!) base station and hopefully have enough people to provide decent coverage. And then you probably need some backbone links between base stations (and some very good routing engineers!)...
(I know this is being done on a limited scale in Canberra and other places, however I suspect these things are not 100% within the law and will get stomped on when it pops up on the radar screens of our bureaucrats.)
Of course, you need accounts and such to actually run the business, but hopefully not many.
Am I crazy? Anyone interested?
Re:I hope this doesn't spawn lots of anti-FCC post (Score:2)
Re:Seen Consume? (Score:2)
It'd be really cool when the 802.11 Springboard module comes out for my Handspring Visor, imagine walking around the city, and being connected in various places.
I'm thinking of buying an Apple Airport for home, maybe I'll set mine up to let anyone with 802.11 use it. Anyone in and around my apartment building will have access...
---
Re:Poor view of wireless communication (Score:2)
One word. Three syllables. Rhymes with "depiction".
Re:Is that a tumor in your pocket or your PDA? (Score:2)
Is what any study has shown on the effects of RF on the body. WHile I too am an EE, and yes I am not to keen on 2.4Gig Hz waves going through the air, the use of a cell phone has shown no correlation to brain cancer / tumors.
HOWEVER: They have done studies that show that the cell phones DO heat the brain, but only to levels that are considered NORMAL. Of cource this is NORMAL for someone doing heavy thinking, like working a crossword, or similar though intensive stuff.
Personally I think it will be at least 10 years before we know the effects of these waves on our bodies. Look at how long it has taken them to show a relation between smoking and enphazema(sp). People thought (in the 1920's) that smoking was 'good' for you. Now we know that it is not healthy for you. It has taken us many many years. Maybe in 10 years we will know enough about bio chemistry and bio electricity that we will be able to make any determinations about that.
I don't want a lot, I just want it all!
Flame away, I have a hose!
Re:Seen Consume? (Score:2)
I would _hate_ having to use the net on a current PalmOS machine. Horrible little things - and yes, I had a Palm III for 6 months or so.
That screen is tiny - far too small to use for the web and really too small for e-mail as you can't fit 72 characters per line onto it.
Graffiti is really, really inaccurate and slow IMO - after all that time I still found I was only getting 80ish% accuracy. If it can't get into the high 90s it really isn't good enough. Maybe I just wasn't any good with it but seriously, this is with practice and real attempts to get better. I just found their topology seriously suspect - e's and s's got interchanges with alarming regularity. I actually spent a while experimenting with the training tool (so it'd render the character onto the screen) and was horrified to see what results it was coming up with. Also, that silkscreen design is just cheap 'n' nasty I'm afraid. Even if the screen area was permanently dedicated to input, making it rendered rather than fixed would help as you could use the keyboard without penalty, or get on-screen feedback as to your attempts. Seriously, having the system draw your characters under the pen helps. Try a WinCE machine to see what I mean.
I've currently got a Psion 5, which I love. A screen big enough to work on (640*240) and a keyboard I can use at nearly the same speed as a normal desktop. Yes, it's larger, heavier and more expensive. But it still fits in my jacket pocket (always felt a little silly with a Palm in a shirt pocket), doesn't noticeably weigh me down and, in all honesty, was worth the extra money. It's a better machine which allows me to do far more. For example, I've regularly taken live meeting notes on this. I tried on the Palm - just wasn't possible. With the Psion, works beautifully. I've written fairly long documents on it before then printed them off via the host PC and the sync cable - no conversion needed.
I'd have to say my honest opinion is that Palm succeded mostly by being just good enough and still relatively cheap. Good enough to make people at least try one without rejecting it from the spec sheet, cheap enough for people not to have to consider the purchase too hard and just buy the things. It's really not up to it, though, and I honestly can't see myself ever going back to a PalmOS box now I've had a play with a Psion. Got colleagues thinking about making the switch, too...
Try a Psion, then see if you can go back to the Visor.
Wireless in England: Its a no-go (Score:2)
The cost to deploy such a network, even over an area as limited as England, was extremely costly. The revenue opportunity looked poor. A flat rate model or a usage based system wouldn't bring in the dollars to make it profitable.
Then, you add in the factor of competition, and there's a great deal of risk. And there's the known risk of the technology they used becoming outdated.
Its just not something big business will go after anytime soon -- and big business is the only one with a scale to do it... except for the government.
We'll see. (Score:2)
We'll see. People are trying to cons up various wireless Internet access schemes using 2.4 Ghz. If it can be implemented, fine enough. But if everybody tromps on everyone, then perhaps you'll allow as how public assets can be misused?
-russ
Plenty of spectrum if we were allowed to use it (Score:2)
Re:Seen Consume? (Score:2)
The hard problems still to settle are
how to negotiate access point intercommunication - will it be IPIP, IPSEC, PPTP, mobileIP?
How to perform routing? OSPF over VPN's? Mobile IP tangles?
When cooperation gets beyond tech egos, and decisions made mean ubiquity of connection, it might just have a chance.
coward@free2air.net
Already in UK (Score:2)
It's not that cheap, and 500Mb isn't even enough to download a decent Linux distro. Also, the coverage isn't much yet, but they are increasing it.
Anyway, the UK government has allocated a vast swathe of the 35Ghz microwave band for wireless Internet, of which, AFAIK, tele2 is the only licencee. It was a bit of a flop.
I wouldn't settle for anything less than the hard-wired stuff (I have an NTL cable modem myself. Very rare in the UK). Cable modem has much potential (>10Mbps downstream. That I want to see).
Russ
sf lan (Score:2)
Bandwidth is the limit (Score:2)
Unfortunatly, the laws of information theory place an upper limit on how much information can be transmitted within a given section of the radio spectrum.
True, you can improve things by putting up more towers and transmitting over shorter distances, or possibly point to point links, but there really isn't much available spectrum LEFT for new services, with the exception of the analog TV signals (which the TV stations seem very reluctant to give up).
Also, the trend has been towards commercial allocations, based on auctions, so that any spectrum opened up for wireless communication won't be free to use, because those who bought the rights to that EM real estate are going to want to make money on their investment.
Nicholas C Weaver
nweaver@cs.berkeley.edu
Re:Seen Consume? (Score:2)
PDXwireless.org Community LAN (Score:2)
Re:Seen Consume? (Score:2)
OK, I'm far from an expert on 802.11, it suits my purposes (no cables runing through the flat) but I feel the guys in London doing the community wireless network must have to do some hacking to get long distance out of 802.11?
If anyone is in the center of Amsterdam (Rembrants plein area) and has 802.11, feel free to try and reach my box, NAT is enabled, the network name is "dolphin", encryption is disabled. Chose an IP address in the 192.168.0.128/25 range (I'll keep the lower half for my machines). The mask is /24 and the gateway is 192.168.0.1.
I seriously doubt that you'll be able to reach it but its there if you want to try it and you never know?
Re:I hope this doesn't spawn lots of anti-FCC post (Score:2)
But what you'll notice in areas like Miami is that because of piracy the legitimate stations are forced to boost their power to overcome the interference. Then instead of having 24 hr. Desi Arnaz at 98.1 you get him bleeding from 97.3-98.7. The pirates then try to cut through the bleeding, other stations complain about picking up The Mambo King in Atlanta, and the whole thing just turns into a ridiculous mess.
And your point about HAM packet transfer just proves my point. The group who is doing the most with this is l0pht, and who are they? That's right, a bunch of hackers with very questionable morals and motivations.
Thanks but no thanks. I'll take a little government regulation here any day.
Wireless Broadband (Score:2)
One of these delivery methods is powerline broadband. I won't go into detail on this since this about wireless. The second, of course, is wireless broadband. Fixed Wireless broadband is already being put into use in a few areas and looks like it will quickly gain in popularity for residential use because the cost of equipment and delivery is competitive if not less then other forms. The primary reasons for the reduction in cost for delivering wireless service are 1) you do not have the cost of using the phone company for the "last mile" of delivery to the user, and 2) the frequencies being used, in the U.S. at least, are open for use by anyone.
PrairieInet [prairieinet.com] is one ISP that is already offering fixed wireless broadband for both home and business use, in a rural area, and at rates competetive rates. malibu Networks [malibunetworks.com] is another company that is working on delivering fixed wireless broadband. The eZine ISP Planet [isp-planet.com], which is a online periodical for ISPs, has a new section [isp-planet.com] dedicated to wireless service which includes articles on how to setup a wireless ISP.
Overall it looks to me like Wireless Broadband is one of the up-and-coming internet technologies. This may be something to really look at if not jump into soon.
Bigger question... (Score:2)
If anybody's interested in helping, mail me.
___________________________
_______________________________________
% fortune -o
The major advance would not be the wireless (Score:2)
Re:too greedy (Score:2)
And you're wrong, anyway. On January 9, 1997, the FCC issued a rulemaking establishing the Unlicensed National Information Infrastructure (U-NII) band. It provides unlicensed (i.e. "free") use of 300 MHz of spectrum at 5.15-5.35 GHz and 5.725-5.825 GHz.
Some products do exist for use in this band, bur ironically, they are about as far from the "spirit" of the band as you can get. Last year I installed a Wavespan (brand) point to point microwave link in the U-NII band. It carries 20 Mbits/sec plus two T1 circuits over a 1.2 mile span. Cost? Around $60,000
So the frequencies are there. Anybody want to develop "free" radio hardware for the "free" band?
... thought not....
Seen Consume? (Score:3)
It's interesting, to say the least.
See the consume.net site [consume.net] for more info. If it works, this might be a good model for replicating across other cities.
-- Yoz
Intercontinental links (Score:3)
I suppose the recent launch of the amateur ham radio satellite gives some hope, but personally I've gotten used to ~300 ms Oz-US ping times and I'm not really keen to give them up :)
Re:Wireless Broadband (Score:3)
Phone companys controll phone lines, DSL, ISDN, and OCR-*
Cable companys control well.. cable..
While deregulation is being used to open up thies markets in the United States the rest of the world has issues of thies monopolys using position to CLOSE UP the ISP market...
The UK could use a wireless ISP to bypass BT for example...
My theory (Score:3)
Just give it time....
-russ
More towers (Score:3)
Best option for wireless (Score:3)
Using blimps to be able to cover a very large diamater (300 - 600 km) of high bandwidth wireless internet!
Check out their site:
www.platforms-intl.com
Cd
I hope this doesn't spawn lots of anti-FCC posts (Score:3)
The problem with keeping wireless free to the masses is limited spectrum space. Thankfully the gov't in the US realized how problematic this could be many years ago and created the FCC to regulate the airwaves.
The net as it is now is virtually unlimited in growth potential, and we can lay as much fiber as we want without interfering with each other's communications. This is not the case with wireless, as evidenced by all the problems radio piracy causes.
Imagine if the wireless data spectrum were being polluted in much the same way that AM & FM bands are these days. Dropped connections, interference, and eavesdropping would be so rampant that nothing useful would ever come of your wireless gadgets. Instead of reading your email you might unexpectedly have a kiddie porn image pop up on your PDA. Instead of that report going to your boss it might end up in the hands of some 15 year old wireless hacker who will send it to your competition.
So if any of you are thinking about advocating opening up the airwaves to the public, I advise you to seriously consider the consequences first. Maybe having most of the spectrum allocated to large, pre-existing corporations isn't the best in the interest of freedom, but the anarchy of having a handful of geeky HAM dweebs trashing our data communications is simply something to be avoided at all costs!
Re:I hope this doesn't spawn lots of anti-FCC post (Score:3)
As I said, I Am Not A HAM, so I am not sure I am right on all of the details, but the ARRL [arrl.org] site should tell you everything you want to know. Might be a good read for everyone interested in wireless internet.
Also, this [arrl.org] whitepaper outlines some of the ARRL's plans to allocate data channels within their own bands. Perhaps there are some good ideas in there on how to deploy a wireless internet over a larger scale?
Poor view of wireless communication (Score:4)
This is much like your TV, which has many channels sent to it, but only shows you one at a time.
Have you ever used Ham radio? Do you know Ham operators? Those ``geeky HAM dweebs'' are much better-behaved than your typical AOL user. When someone starts acting inappropriately, it's the Hams who find her first and report her to the FCC.
Do you quite understand what you're saying? By your same logic, the US government should control all the networks because otherwise geeky computer users might be able to trash our data. Sheesh. Just because something is wireless doesn't make it inherently less secure. Wireless communication is just another way to transmit information... instead of transmitting over a wire or a fiber line, you're transmitting through the air. People can snoop your data, yes. But this isn't much different than wires today... especially consider Ethernet, where everyone gets everyone's traffic by design!
Having public communications channels isn't the end of the world. It is nice to have the FCC to have set frequency ranges set aside for different purposes. But I think you don't understand wireless communication or HAM radio operators at all.
Related story on InfoAnarchy.org (Score:4)
Must have a network to connect to (Score:4)
There is a need for a network to connect to, that wouldn't have those address limitations. Something based on IPV6 would fit the bill. From that IPV6 network, you could open tunnels that'd lead to the IPV4 internet. Perhaps even request a real, tunnelled IPV4 address from an IPV4 provider somewhere.
There is the 6bone ( www.6bone.net ) that has been starting to create an IPV6 network. But it's not progressing. There is no content or services on the IPV6 network, so nobody will go there. A chicken-and-egg problem. If the 6bone or some other IPV6 network grew, it would solve one of the major impediments to a wireless internet.
That and micropayments. Micropayments remain something that would enable a lot of services to be offered. There are a couple of interesting systems.. www.e-gold.com is one. It allows one to purchase gold, kept in trust by the e-gold corporation. You can give any amount, no matter how small, with only a 1% transfer fee (0.50$ max). The problem is that getting money into an e-gold account is going to cost you at least 4%, probably more. And there is a 1% per year maintenance fee. So the system still is pretty costly.
www.standardreserve.com does things a bit differently. Perhaps in a more useful way. And then there is www.mojonation.net which promises to also create another virtual currency, but which is aimed at file sharing. However, the possibilities of such a virtual currency do not end there.
If you had an easy-to-buy, easy-to-trade virtual currency, that allowed micropayments among other things, and that had some popularity, that would enable many things. A wireless network ran by people in their homes would be one of them. Reflectors, tunnels, lease of addresses, and other network services further enabling a new network, they could all prove interesting to run, as you'd charge for their use. A minor fee, yes, but still a fee. Mojonation aims to do that. Combine the goal of mojonation with working software (instead of pre-pre-alpha quality mojonation software) and valuable e-currency such as e-gold (100% backed by metal).. And you'd have something truly interesting.
I imagine a parallel network developping along the internet. Any geek in his home, with a 30$ transmitter, could setup an access point. He would charge small sums for each KB transfered and sent through a tunnel, via the internet, onto that new network.
Dreams...
Re:Poor view of wireless communication (Score:4)
I have to strongly disagree with you that wireless communication is just as secure as copper or fiber. Somebody on a land line can easily be physically disconnected from the network. You absolutely can not prohibit someone with a scanner from eavsedropping on wireless communications. If we open this up to just about anybody with a transmitter there will be serious problems. At least with large ISP's controlling the flow there is always somebody with a fair amount of knowledge who can offer some protection to those who just need the communications but don't have the knowledge of security to protect themselves.
The only reason HAM is fairly orderly now is because of the steep learning curve to use. It locks out those who might cause problems, either intentionally or accidentally. If wireless is available to the masses without decent liscensing requirements then that barrier to entry is removed and all hell will break loose. This is what happened with the net & AOL, if you remember.
Some means of communications, like wireless, are simply too dangerous to be opened up to the public at large.