Slashdot Mirror


802.11b Urban Network - 3 sq km!

wireless junkie writes "NZ Herald has an article about a 3 sq km wireless network. Roaming, seamless handoff, VoIP, and its only the demonstration network. 100 sq/km coming soon (according to the RoamAD site) MiniStumbler on an iPaq shows a whole heap of signal on and near downtown Queen Street. All I want for Christmas..."

3 of 182 comments (clear)

  1. sq/km? by Imabug · · Score: 3, Interesting

    what kind of unit is a sq/km?

    seriously now...this sounds kind of neat. cellular WiFi in a sense.

    i wonder what kind of interference it would cause to other devices on the same frequency (other WiFI devices not associated with their network, cordless phones, etc).

    and wouldn't this make drive by hacking easier? heck, you don't even need to drive by.

    I wonder how bandwidth changes with distance from the transmitters.

    --
    "For I am a Bear of Very Little Brain, and Long Words Bother Me"
  2. Re:Off Topic Question about New Zealand by nightsweat · · Score: 3, Interesting

    http://www.immigration.govt.nz/migration/index.htm l Score your chance to migrate to New Zealand. If you have IT experience and a degree, you're pretty much in.

    --

    the major advances in civilization are processes which all but wreck the societies in which they occur - A.N. White
  3. Citynets by bwt · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Pretty soon people will be able to set up a CityNet: imagine everybody gathering together on a common IP subnet just like your home LAN except that it's multiple people who show up anonymously by simply setting their IP to within a particular submask.

    This has got to be the RIAA absolute worst nightmare. With the Internet if you set up a service that an anonymous person can find and download files from, then so can they and they send you a C&D letter. With multi-user anonymous LANs, not only would they have to have a presense in each city, but even if they do, once they know that IP 198.168.31.331 is trading the whole Metallica collection, they have no way to track you down.

    Medium range wireless offers an opportunity to remove, at least locally, the last barrier to a truly free internet : corporate/government regulation of the backbone.