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Cringely's Bank Shot

Michael A. Lowry writes: "You may remember how Robert Cringely used a couple of directional antennas to get an 802.11b link up across a 10.5 km wide valley. The original Slashdot discussion is here. Well Cringely has done it again. This time, he has set up a passive repeater in an oak tree on a nearby mountaintop to bounce a 2 Mb/s signal around a hill that lies between his house and the acces point in Santa Rosa. Read about it here. Details about the homemade hardware he used can be found here. There's going to be a lot more of this in the near future."

8 of 271 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Tragedy of the commons by Anixamander · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I can't see folks going to this extent on a widespread basis. If thousands of people in one area do start doing this, it will no doubt become the new Silicon Valley, because it would mean there is a critical mass of sophisticated geeks there.

    Make that sophisticated, motivated geeks. I'm sophisticated, but that is way too mch work for me.

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  2. Cringely earns the title "hacker"... by dstone · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...in my book for that stunt. Yeah, he's full of wind and lofty opinions and predictions. But it takes a proper hacker to roll up the sleeves, climb a mountain and a big tree, simply to install a wireless hack.

    He da man.

  3. Need for product durability and stability by Bonker · · Score: 3, Insightful

    When construction begins in a populated area, utility companies, including telco and cable operators, are responsible for coming out and flagging their under-ground wires, pipes, conduits, repeaters, and switch boxes.

    A lot of amature 802.11b hackers are building a utility infrastructure, wether they think they are or not and even if it's for their own private use.

    In the VERY near future, wireless devices like this are going to have to become *very* durable to stand up to long-term outdoor use... and I don't mean having a water-tight battery compartment. A lot of the stuff out there... Pringle Can antennas, anyone?... is homerolled hacks.

    Things like wireless routers and repeaters, however, need to be designed with things like natural disaster, wild animals, and vandalism in mind.

    Ever wonder why public utility stuff is so bulky and hard to get into?

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  4. This is what the term Hacker was invented for by the_rev_matt · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Here's a fine example of someone going out and doing something positive and high profile that takes back the term Hacker and makes it praise instead of critique.

    Mo' power, Cringe.

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  5. Re:Cringely Icon, Please by Enry · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'd certainly rather have him pontificating on /. than Katz. At least Cringley knows that Afghans can't view Divx movies on their C-64s.

  6. Re:Violation of TOS by interiot · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Cringely could probably be identified if someone wanted to try badly enough. For instance, he probably connects to *.pbs.org fairly often, trailed closely by slashdot.org and internet searches for ultra-wide-band related things.

    Granted, that'd take a lot of work, but given the extent to which Cringely is encouraging others to emulate him and cause ISP's everywhere (and his ISP in particular, perhaps maybe even) grief, there might be people who would invest the time.

  7. Re:Tragedy of the commons by Mike+Hicks · · Score: 3, Insightful
    How much bandwidth will any one person have left?
    Heh, a lot more than they have now.
  8. You get together and create a coherent network.... by Colin+Smith · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Rather than competing, all you have to do is co-operate.

    http://www.freenetworks.org/

    The more the merrier. :)

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