← Revision 12 as of 2002-02-03 14:38:36
Size: 5060
Comment:
|
← Revision 13 as of 2002-02-03 14:41:28 →
Size: 5126
Comment:
|
Deletions are marked like this. | Additions are marked like this. |
Line 29: | Line 29: |
'''Sam's Clif Notes''' Sam Churchill, here. I took notes and pictures at the meeting and will post them here soon. As Adam notes, Jim Binkley described characteristics of Mobile IP. Here's a bit more about Clif Cox. |
|
Line 30: | Line 32: |
Sam Churchill, here. I took notes and pictures at the meeting and will post them here soon. As Adam notes, Jim Binkley described characteristics of Mobile IP. | [http://www.efn.org/~clif/ Clif Cox], who founded the [http://www.efn.org Eugene Free Network], displayed his $2000 Pelican Brief: a Cisco AP with POE injector, 1 watt amp, a timeout mechanism and other goodies stashed in a Pelican case. It looked similar to the pole-mounted units that Matt Peterson has created. |
Line 32: | Line 34: |
I talked at some length to [http://www.efn.org/~clif/ Clif Cox] who displayed his $2000 Pelican Brief: a Cisco AP with POE injector, 1 watt amp, a timeout mechanism and other goodies stashed in a Pelican case. It looked similar to the pole-mounted units that Matt Peterson has created. Clif lives in Eugene and has been involved in the big hippy party, [http://sdots.com/eugene/ocf2.html the Eugene Country Fair], for many years. About four years ago he "unwired" it with Richochet radios. He found a nearby farm house who was willing to share their phone and relayed the signal to the Country Fair bouncing off four radios with two radios in trees. A laptop would have two serial connectors (PC card serial adapters provided a second port)relayed the signal. The wireless network used the STRIP protocol from the MosquitoNet project. | Clif lives in Eugene and has been involved in [http://sdots.com/eugene/ocf2.html the Eugene Country Fair], for many years. About four years ago he "unwired" it with Richochet radios. He found a nearby farm house who was willing to share their phone and relayed the signal to the Country Fair bouncing off four radios with two radios in trees. A laptop would have two serial connectors (PC card serial adapters provided a second port)relayed the signal. The wireless network used the STRIP protocol from the MosquitoNet project. |
LuckyLab : 30th January 2002BR
Thanks to everyone who attended the January meeting, and a special thanks to Jim Binkley for his presentation on MobileIp. In case you missed it, his website can be found at http://www.cs.pdx.edu/~jrb/.
Feel free to add and edit these notes as many ears make a better listener!
Scribes: ChristianSeppa and SamChurchill
Focus Meeting
- The move toward Ghetto Space appears to be taking steps forward although no space has been obtained yet. A core group is willing to front the cost and sign the papers. Group members expressed support for such an idea by agreeing to kick in 5-10 bucks a month each toward such an end.
- Pioneer Square node is up and running! Test it out and provide feedback as it is our first high-profile node!
- Action Item: Propaganda person is to determine the legal status of the PTP logo.
- PTP in the press: New article in Red Herring? Portland Business Journal? Someone please confirm/update these reports if you have more info.
Linux image with NoCat HostAP etc. now ready! Linux bootable CD/Floppy w/ Host AP and NoCatAuth pre-installed approching readiness. Sylistic image with HostApMode drivers and NoCatAuth reported to be ready.
- All other SIGs resoundingly quiet this month.
General Meeting
LucasSheehan unveiled "TheSign" and received many kudos.
- A wide assortment of patch and yagi anteannae were on display.
- Intel donates 2 APs for PTP to install in needful locations.
We still need offical statements of cooperation from EasyStreet.
- Possible affiliation with Boingo raised. The question: Should PTP nodes be listed in their database? Not a great deal of consensus reached on this topic.
Sean (EliabHelon) and DonPark will now be watching over the maps database. The title of Map Bitch remains unclaimed.
- Cliff Cox, John Harvey and Robert Kelley showed up to do some show-and-tell about their mobile-ap-in-a-pelican-box, wap11 phones, and a summary of wireless activities in Bhutan and at Burning Man.
The location, date and time of the next meeting is always available on the MonthlyMeeting page. We also have archives of the MeetingNotes from all past meetings.
--- Sam's Clif Notes Sam Churchill, here. I took notes and pictures at the meeting and will post them here soon. As Adam notes, Jim Binkley described characteristics of Mobile IP. Here's a bit more about Clif Cox.
[http://www.efn.org/~clif/ Clif Cox], who founded the [http://www.efn.org Eugene Free Network], displayed his $2000 Pelican Brief: a Cisco AP with POE injector, 1 watt amp, a timeout mechanism and other goodies stashed in a Pelican case. It looked similar to the pole-mounted units that Matt Peterson has created.
Clif lives in Eugene and has been involved in [http://sdots.com/eugene/ocf2.html the Eugene Country Fair], for many years. About four years ago he "unwired" it with Richochet radios. He found a nearby farm house who was willing to share their phone and relayed the signal to the Country Fair bouncing off four radios with two radios in trees. A laptop would have two serial connectors (PC card serial adapters provided a second port)relayed the signal. The wireless network used the STRIP protocol from the MosquitoNet project.
About three years ago he teamed with John Gilmore, [http://www.wired.com/news/print/0,1294,38521,00.html the cypherpunk co-founder of the Electronic Frontier Foundation], who paid for the satellite dish and service from [http://www.tachyon.net/ Tachyon]. John also wrote the book on [http://shop.barnesandnoble.com/booksearch/isbnInquiry.asp?sourceid=7354618&isbn=1565925203 Cracking DES]. The 2-way satellite link can provide 256K up nearly anywhere. About 3 years ago they used in at Country Fair and it has been a backbone at Burning Man the last few years. [http://www.eugeneweb.com/~bm/ibm.html The satellite runs at 2 Mbit/sec downstream and 300 Kbit/sec upstream]. The wireless network runs at 1 to 11 megabits/sec (each link runs at 11 if it can, and automatically steps down when that fails). The wireless network should cover the entire Playa area, and be usable from roaming laptops as well as in camps.
Clif also showed some SpectraLink phones. These are cordless phones that use 802.11b. Both Proxim and Symbol make them. The best use H.323 protocols and DSSS. Frequency hopping phones are also available. Cliff is going to provide wireless service to Bhutan, about 60 miles east of Nepal this year. The government wants to provide communications services in outlying areas so they are setting up point-to-point telecommuncations towers, linked via 802.11b and 2-way satellite dishes. I'm not sure whether the Tachyon will be used for the Bhutan uplink or not. BTW, Clif took me outside and showed me a hotter rod than any seen at the Portland Auto Show. He had a 2-way Tachyon satellite system stashed in the back of his car. The dish was so oval it looked like a surfboard. I'm stoked.
Photos and more later. - Sam Churchill
and John Gilmore created the