802.11b at 22Mbps isn't new. Another company called Artem (www.artem.de) does it as well. They have this access point operates as a bridge and access point at the sametime, it splits the available 22Mbps. Where as a conventional setup would require 2 seperate set of equipment.
If i share files for free why can't i share my clock cycles for free. That'll be the spirit, wouldn't it.
Think if it, i'll be helping those still on P1s and P2s. Then i'm not going to buy a new computer anymore, cuz the guy next to me going to share his P4 or maybe P5 clock cycles, right? He wouldn't need it anyway. But wait, then whats going to happen to my seti@home scores, well it'll have to share my clock cycles with other sharing programs.
I know i've been thought to share (by parents, teachers, elders and you), but this is too much. Share my files (ok that the start of this mess), share my bandwidth, share my harddisk space, share my electricity bill, share my hardware cost, share my time, share my floor space, share my life (you can imagine how the sharer is like by looking at the files he/she shares)....
Oh... this distributed sharing thingi is getting way over my head. Anyone's got some orange juice to share with me? Just send it over this new "matter over IP" p2p network that i'll be creating.
Suddenly they found out it could also locate "virtual" doors into my office. Damn and i though a firewall was enough, anyone making radio firewalls cuz i'm going to need them when everyone starts infecting on my "leaking" radio-waves. Like moss on a damp wall.
These days, nobody gives a second thought when they make a phone call to enquire information, chat casually or communicate. The called party is reached directly by a mobile or fixed phone. This was the age of voice communications, but as the future is data & voice integration, a personal (maybe business) mobile wireless webserver may be the next form mobile phones will take.
More on the latest information on this project at;
802.11b at 22Mbps isn't new. Another company called Artem (www.artem.de) does it as well. They have this access point operates as a bridge and access point at the sametime, it splits the available 22Mbps. Where as a conventional setup would require 2 seperate set of equipment.
If i share files for free why can't i share my clock cycles for free. That'll be the spirit, wouldn't it.
Think if it, i'll be helping those still on P1s and P2s. Then i'm not going to buy a new computer anymore, cuz the guy next to me going to share his P4 or maybe P5 clock cycles, right? He wouldn't need it anyway. But wait, then whats going to happen to my seti@home scores, well it'll have to share my clock cycles with other sharing programs.
I know i've been thought to share (by parents, teachers, elders and you), but this is too much. Share my files (ok that the start of this mess), share my bandwidth, share my harddisk space, share my electricity bill, share my hardware cost, share my time, share my floor space, share my life (you can imagine how the sharer is like by looking at the files he/she shares)....
Oh... this distributed sharing thingi is getting way over my head. Anyone's got some orange juice to share with me? Just send it over this new "matter over IP" p2p network that i'll be creating.
Maybe they failed to locate a near-by hotspot..
Suddenly they found out it could also locate "virtual" doors into my office. Damn and i though a firewall was enough, anyone making radio firewalls cuz i'm going to need them when everyone starts infecting on my "leaking" radio-waves. Like moss on a damp wall.
- love? "LAN on vulnerable environment"
These days, nobody gives a second thought when they make a phone call to enquire information, chat casually or communicate. The called party is reached directly by a mobile or fixed phone. This was the age of voice communications, but as the future is data & voice integration, a personal (maybe business) mobile wireless webserver may be the next form mobile phones will take.
More on the latest information on this project at;
http://www.quiezent.com/pda_wws.html
Regards,
Quiezent F.