Differences between revisions 6 and 7
Revision 6 as of 2003-02-28 16:34:01
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Editor: DonPark
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Revision 7 as of 2003-02-28 16:53:03
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Editor: DonPark
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The core of a HotZone is a unix server with routing capabilites and at least one network interface. A HotZone can be expanded at the layer 2 level with repeater access points. The core of a HotZone is a unix server with routing capabilites and at least one network interface connected to a radio/air interface. A HotZone radio coverage can be expanded at the layer 2 level with repeater access points.
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The implemenation of a HotZone today (28Feb2003) is powered by a soekris box with either a pcmcia radio or an ethernet connected AP. There is the option to extended the coverage at the layer 2 level with single or back-to-back DWL-900AP+. The implemenation of a HotZone today (28Feb2003) is powered by a soekris box with either a pcmcia radio or an ethernet connected AP. There is the option to extended the radio coverage at the layer 2 level with single or back-to-back DWL-900AP+.

The Mach Node Slum is my take on a wireless cloud build-out. (DonPark)

The Mach Node Slum is a network of HotZones.

A HotZone is an area of wireless coverage larger than a HotSpot.

The core of a HotZone is a unix server with routing capabilites and at least one network interface connected to a radio/air interface. A HotZone radio coverage can be expanded at the layer 2 level with repeater access points.

The implemenation of a HotZone today (28Feb2003) is powered by a soekris box with either a pcmcia radio or an ethernet connected AP. There is the option to extended the radio coverage at the layer 2 level with single or back-to-back DWL-900AP+.

A HotZone is linked to another HotZone by participating in the same VPN. All HotZones communicate via IPv6 only, using IPv4 tunnels where necessary.

MachNodeSlum (last edited 2007-11-23 18:00:55 by localhost)