First Public White-Space Network Is Alive
An anonymous reader writes "The first public white space network officially launched on Wednesday in Claudville, Virginia. It uses sensing technology from Spectrum Bridge with software and Web cams supplied by Microsoft and PCs from by Dell. The project was funded the TDF Foundation. White space networks use unlicensed television spectrum and have been called 'WiFi on steroids.' They offer more bandwidth, over larger areas, than does WiFi. IT companies duked it out with broadcasters for years to get white spaces approved by the FCC. They finally got the FCC's nod in November, 2008."
Thank god it didn't go to the cell companies.
Science advances one funeral at a time- Max Planck
Someone correct me if I'm mistaken, but doesn't lower frequency (30mhz to 300mhz) mean less bandwidth? I could see bonding several channels at once to achieve a higher bandwidth, but doesn't this mostly offer greater range?
while I am personally glad this finally went through... I can vouch for the potential issues this can cause with existing broadcasts. ATSC is so sensitive to multi-path as it is... (and other forms of interference to boot, but I digress) Throwing out a bunch of unlicensed transmitters, borrowing the space between TV stations is a very scary proposition.
I'm confused... what do they need webcams for in this project? I actually read the article and it didn't mention what they were for either.
I tried connecting, and apparently I got lots of traffic, but all I got was a blank screen.
When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
Seems rather pathetically low power to me.
I can't see them getting too much range out of that, not to mention that lower freqs = bigger antennas.
But more BW is always nice.
Sent from my PDP-11
enjoy :-)
My ism, it's full of beliefs.
Why Claudville? According to the Wikipedia page, there are around 20,000 people in the entire county. And according to the FCC DTV maps, they can only expect to receive two (!) TV stations, both from the Winston-Salem, North Carolina area. See here: (enter Claudville, VA) http://www.fcc.gov/mb/engineering/maps/
That is perhaps why they are testing it there. Its not hard to avoid active TV channels if there are only two.. and they are on adjacent RF channels (31 and 32).
-molo
Using your sig line to advertise for friends is lame.
Please, think of the example this is setting for the children. Congress should immediately hold hearings about Wifi cheaters.
"Believe me!" -- Donald Trump
Well, if you're surfing the whitespace-powered web using links, what did you expect?
"First Public White-Space Network Is Alive"
I think you mean "live". If it's "alive" we have some real problems ahead of us.
Did you use the darkspace overlay? Without the darkspace contrast, all the white looks the same.
Every mans' island needs an ocean; choose your ocean carefully.
I tried connecting, and apparently I got lots of traffic, but all I got was a blank screen.
I haven't even tried connecting, and I won't be doing so any time soon. I'm not going to buy any equipment for these networks until the big industry players resolve their format war. One camp is trying to standardize on tabs, and the other is pushing for spaces.
White space network, eh? I wonder if the security architect implemented true network segregation?
So this white space is "unlicensed"? Completely? What, if any restrictions are there on usage of it? Is it at all possible in the foreseeable future that there will be consumer-level devices for this type of frequency? Like routers and other networking equipment, or is this really more for just companies to provide service? Also, what kind of range can you expect on this band at 'normal' power levels?
In other news, the residents of Claudville VA are no longer able to watch distant stations in Roanoke due to these internet devices broadcasting over the channels.
The FCC Chairman's comment - "You're not supposed to see out of market stations anyway." One of the local viewers replied, "Now I only get 5 stations from Salem NC, where I used to get 10 from both Salem and Roanoke. They took away my channels."
"I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
What? An entire network protocol written in Whitespace? That must have been hard as hell!