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Wi-Fi Warsailing In The Netherlands

Roland writes "The first war-sailing event ever, AFAIK. A community based WiFi network in Leiden, the Netherlands, WirelessLeiden hold a warsailing event [Dutch links]. The war-sailing event was meant to show that WirelessLeiden is more than just a local city network. On this map you can see that 75% of the route was covered by WirelessLeiden. Vic Hayes, the Father of WiFi, was a keynote speaker during the war-sailing event. He gave a talk about how WiFi was developed. A couple of spin-offs gave presentations, namely AnyWi and KoGeRo. FYI: WirelessLeiden [English Link] has rolled out a free WiFi network covering almost the whole city of Leiden, 100.000 inhabitants, 49 nodes with 30 more to be build this year. This is the NodeMap of WirelessLeiden."

5 of 111 comments (clear)

  1. How? by BlindSpy · · Score: 5, Informative

    Thats awesome but: "The war-sailing event was meant to show that WirelessLeiden is more than just a local city network." how is it more than just a local city network?

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    Whoever dies with the most toys wins.
  2. Re:Stupid Question by BlindSpy · · Score: 5, Informative

    I'm guessing its wardriving but on boats ;-P Wardriving is driving around and looking for hotspots (places you can connect WiFi).

    --
    Whoever dies with the most toys wins.
  3. Re:sailing? by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Sailboats can move by river current also. In fact, on rivers, the main way that a sailboat gets power is like a kite- the tension between the wind on the sail and the current on the dropboard. This, given proper angles between the two, can even be used to sail a sailboat UPSTREAM, though you've got to do a lot of tacking to do so.

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    SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  4. Re:There's a big difference by mabinogi · · Score: 4, Informative

    I was always under the impression that war*ing was not about maintaining a link, but about locating hotspots.

    Didn't it start with "warchalking" where somone would put a chalk mark on a wall or footpath or something indicating that you could get wireless access from there?

    From what I understand, these war driving / flying / sailing events are about producing a map that someone can use later to find the locations.

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    Advanced users are users too!
  5. Re:sailing? by kavachameleon · · Score: 4, Informative

    A sailboat (barring a motor) can't go straight upwind. A modern racing rig can get within a point or two, but most can't even get near that. Figure on 45 degrees off of the wind as maximum upwind performance. But anything else and she's good. Although it's interesting to notice that a straight downwind is not a sailboat's fastest point of sail.