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Build Your Own Solar Powered Hotspot

hode writes "Popular Science has a how-to article up on turning a backpack into a portable, solar-powered Wi-Fi hotspot. Possible uses include providing Wi-Fi access for a road-trip caravan." From the article: "Its secret ingredient: the Junxion Box. Plug a cellular-network card into the book-size open-source-based device, and voil--instant Wi-Fi hotspot, with speeds averaging around 700 kilobits per second. To power the box, I wired it to a 1.2-amp-hour battery and dropped both into the Voltaic Systems backpack, which has a built-in solar charger."

11 of 144 comments (clear)

  1. 4 Watts? by USSJoin · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Well, if it takes 4-6 hours (from TFbackpack) to charge a cell phone, is the box going to be charged in real time from this backpack?

    I guess I think that you wouldn't need the backpack to provide Wi-Fi to a caravan, as mentioned in TFA, and if you can't charge while hiking....

  2. A glimpse of the future in Personal Area Networks by Sv-Manowar · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Obviously the mobile internet service required for this particicular hotspot is expensive, and you'd be mad to want to offer it for open access at your own expense, but what caught my imagination more from the article is the idea of a 'personal network' to allow all of your devices to talk to each other via wifi. As more devices we carry around become wifi equipped imagine if your iPod, phone, psp and camera are all enabled & communicating with each other, having them all on a common network and working to each of their strengths (the psp using the ipod for storage, viewing images from the camera using the psp then uploading them via the phone.. , etc) seems to have real potential and be something that would enhance the usability factor of each device greatly.

  3. Re: A glimpse of the future in Personal Area Netwo by Roguelazer · · Score: 5, Interesting

    And lo, you've discovered the original idea behind Bluetooth. It even works pretty well. Unfortunately, the standard isn't the issue, nor is the bandwidth. Developers just are too lazy to take advantage of it. For a decent glimpse of the PAN concept, try out a recent Windows Mobile device (iPaq, Dell Axim, etc), a Sony Ericcson T610 and a bluetooth headset. You can use the PDA as a screen and data repository, the cell phone for network connection, and the headset for audio. Unfortunately, the headset can't be connected to both the phone and the PDA at the same time. Bummer. But it's a start! Remember- even Star Trek characters use three devices! Convergence is not a laudable goal!

  4. Providers by fingerfucker · · Score: 5, Interesting

    To get full internet connectivity, you have to be on a service plan with one of the 1xEVDO cariers. Currently, those are: ACS, Alltel, Sprint, Verizon, Bell Mobility (Canada), New Zealand Telecom (New Zealand), Telstra (Australia, even though they are still upgrading).

    One of the problems is that 1xEVDO does not contribute to the 3G convergence and really is a fork of a protocol. While 1xRTT is there for CDMA2000, GPRS and EDGE work on GSM-based networks. 1xEVDO seems like a very minor standard in terms of adoption, and its only benefit is lower capital needs for deployment. However, it does not really scale long-term.

    To me personally, it seems 1xRTT and EDGE will eventually prevail.

  5. Price not a problem by 808paulson · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Price does not matter if your company is paying for it.

    I saw something very similar to this in Las Vegas. They were using a back pack with linux, gps, and 2 evdo to transmit a live feed from an HDTV camcorder. And oh they also had a very fancy looking audio set up. I think the camera guy had to wear a battery belt and there was a fan blowing into the back pack.

    They have at least $5000 dollars on 1 camera crew and they at least have two crews.

    I went to their website. I didn't know what the website was about until I logged on. (It isn't a porn site.) It is a hotel finder specific for Las Vegas hotels.

    Basically, they're using this as a marketing tool for their website. Where you follow them around for 100 days.

    The feed it is clunky. And shitty in general for a feed that small.

    If you really want to see it http://i4vegas.com/

    I don't work for this company. Although I wish my company would let me spend a crap load of money for something that bad.

  6. Re: A glimpse of the future in Personal Area Netwo by pintpusher · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Is there a point at which we reach critical mass and all of us are continual interconnected all the time? At what saturation level do we achieve near 100% (for practical purposes) coverage in everyday life AND have the gear to tap into it at any time?

    What if the standard for all mobile connected devices (cell phones, pda's w/ wireless, sat. phones etc) was that any unused bandwidth was offered up on public airwaves? Then your other devices could tap into whatever avail. bandwidth was floating around. With the right technology, you could probably reduce some of the need for wifi repeaters and cell towers in dense urban areas as every device out there could become a repeater/router. My pda could tap into your currently unused bandwidth on the cell phone in your pocket which, was in a shadow from the nearest cell tower, BUT was currently grabbing bandwidth from three other cells phones that were a few yards away and outside that shadow and also grabbing a piece from that laptop over on the bench that was connected through a different network and not in the same shadow....

    --
    man, I feel like mold.
  7. only 3 hours? by gr0k · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This is cool and all, but maybe I'm reading it wrong. The article is pretty short on details. It says it only lasts 3 hours? Is that 3 hours just off the battery or including the solar panels? If it's only 3 hours even when the solar panels are connected, then it's pretty useless... that doesn't make sense.

    The junxion box though is very sweet. I set one up in my Boss's car recently. It's very slick and easy to setup, even though it's a little expensive. The other problem we had was the slot where the card goes didn't leave enough room for the pigtail connector on the card we had. (for some strange reason the connector was on the side of the card instead of the back) Had to order a special pigtail to hookup the antenna.

    --
    http://evoketv.com - TV Listings 2.0
  8. Re:Not what I was expecting by phil+reed · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Save money -- ditch the backpack. The solar cells don't generate enough power to make the unit run significantly longer. Put the money towards larger gell cells - I just bought a 7 amp-hour 12 V cell at the Dayton Hamvention for $15. A realistic size battery and a good charger will cost considerably less than the Voltaic backpack and give you longer run times besides.

    --

    ...phil
    "For a list of the ways which technology has failed to improve our quality of life, press 3."
  9. So... by TheQase · · Score: 3, Interesting

    What happens when Verizon says "No More" and cuts you off? According to Verizon's TOS: Unlimited NationalAccess/BroadbandAccess: NationalAccess and BroadbandAccess data sessions may be used with wireless devices for the following purposes: (i) Internet browsing; (ii) email; and (iii) intranet access (including access to corporate intranets, email and individual productivity applications such as customer relationship management, sales force and field service automation). Unlimited NationalAccess/BroadbandAccess is for individual use only and not for resale. Unlimited NationalAccess/BroadbandAccess cannot be used: (1) for uploading, downloading or streaming of movies, music or games; (2) with server devices or with host computer applications, including, without limitation, Web camera posts or broadcasts, automatic data feeds, telemetry applications, automated functions or any other machine-to-machine application; or (3) as a substitute or backup for private lines or dedicated data connections. NationalAccess and BroadbandAccess data sessions automatically terminate after two hours of inactivity unless used with a Mobile IP-capable device. We reserve the right to limit throughput or amount of data transferred, deny or terminate service, without notice, to anyone who uses NationalAccess or BroadbandAccess in any manner prohibited above or whose usage adversely impacts our network or service levels. We also reserve the right to terminate service upon expiration of Customer Agreement term. BroadbandAccess kilobyte usage may not appear on your bill http://www.verizonwireless.com/b2c/store/controlle r?item=planFirst&action=viewPlanDetail&sortOption= priceSort&catId=409&rp

  10. Thump by Electrawn · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I hate it when someone throws a bunch of buzzwords and sounds intelligent.

    EDGE is really just 4x GPRS, or "2.5G"

    The upgrade path to 3G for GSM carriers is to UTMS/WCDMA.

    For CDMA, the 1xRTT upgrade path is to CDMA2000 EV-DO.

    Between the two, EVDO can fall back to 1xRTT IS95 seamlessly. UTMS can't, although it has a speed advantage.

    1xRTT and EDGE are deployed everywhere. It's EVDO and UTMS that one should be looking for.

    Whats amusing:Watching Nextel trying UTMS iDEN hybrid. Ping Reply: Please wait while the Nextel IP Address is found.

    Scaleability (as far as speed) is only a minor factor in choosing an upgrade path. Carriers care about Capacity, netowrk reliability and footprint. For that, 1xRTT(IS95) and EVDO lay the smack on GPRS/EDGE/UTMS. ...and I am happy to have left the Cell industry as of yesterday.

  11. Re:Well... by hellanacho · · Score: 2, Interesting

    but if the clouds were blocking the sun...