Last-Mile Solution For A Rural Land Co-op?
macguys writes "My community consists of about 150 households spread out over several hundred acres in North Florida. We are far enough away from the nearest city that broadband cable and DSL services don't make it here. We're well organized, and used to working together on projects. We have a lot of home based business offices here and high speed access something that many of my neighbors are hungry for.
We've looked at projects like http://www.magnoliaroad.net and know that others have addressed the issue with 802.11b/g/etc.
There is no big problem getting a T-1 to the community. That part is easy. The hard part is distributing the bandwidth among those here who want to participate. Wireless works in places but in general this land is covered in hardwood and pines and the signal drops off quickly.
We have a long history (community is 25 years old) of working together to solve problems. Running copper or coax is not out of the question if we can find a reasonable way of distributing the bandwidth.
Any suggestions are welcome."
Satellite? Start up fees are kind of high, but once you get going, it's not bad:
Satellite dish: $150
Converter box: $200
NIC: $15
Launching your own community based Internet communications satellite: $1,000,000,000
I think what is needed are solar powered tree mounted wireless bridges.
Oops I'm off to patent that.
Yes, farms and condos are almost the same. Farms have cows, some of the people in condos look like cows.
Now, if we lived in a physical universe where there were limit to how long you can run coax cable without loss of signal, or if we lived in a world where there were complex laws regarding crossing roads and boundaries with wires, then questions would be different. I am so glad I live in Slashdot where things are simple.
That type of world has different people designing different solutions for different problems.
Gotta love those transparent hardwood and pine tree's.
Download my free songs!
Land sharks with fricken laser beams on their heads.
Actually microwave would make more sense, and just build some little towers taller than the trees.
Why slashdot? Why not?
IPAC with QoS!! RFC2549!
Cheap, but maybe not that fast...
There also seems to be a reference on slashdot!
Any technology distinguishable from magic, is insufficiently advanced.
you can just run fiber from the most central place to everywhere else
And while we're on the subject of Cheap and Easy options, why not Just Put a satellite into Geosynchronous orbit and just build a land relay station that just uses microwave frequencies? You just call the FCC and they set you up with a license. Then you just need subscribers and you're set.
Build a mesh network by stapling 802.11g access points to the backs of the cattle...
Play Well
lol...I thnk you might have my bunch confused with some other wackos. We're a long way from Orlando in the other Florida. ... but thanks for the after dinner chuckle.
wherever I go, there I am.
Or just use a really hot LASER to start with.
Eve Fairbanks says I drive a hybrid!LOL
The correct standard for this type of application is not 802.11. IEEE 802.16 has been designed specificly for this type of application. A quick read of the earlier responces indicates most /.er are a little behind the times. This is understandable. Prior to the new standard, 802.11.whatever was the only way to go ( by default). Manufacturers and Service providers have been applying it to problems outsides its targeted domain. These entities have been marketing their products/services and thereby obscuring the definition of the domain for which 802.11 is applicable. Now that 802.16 exists, and products are coming to market, implimentors should stop missapplying the older standard and current 802.11 systems should be migrated where appropriate.
I first heard the term from people who were talking about unwiring places in the Caribbean.
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
>If you have any kind of hills
:-)
It's Flordia! I think half the state is below sea level.