154 lines
7.5 KiB
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154 lines
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To: <transhumantech@yahoogroups.com>
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Cc: forkit! <fork@spamassassin.taint.org>
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Subject: Making a mesh on the move
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Date: Tue, 3 Sep 2002 08:05:27 +0200 (CEST)
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http://www.guardian.co.uk/Print/0%2c3858%2c4489999%2c00.html
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Making a mesh on the move
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A new way to give us fast mobile net access spells further trouble for 3G,
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reports Peter Rojas
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Peter Rojas
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Thursday August 29, 2002
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The Guardian
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Imagine being able to surf the net at speeds faster than DSL from
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anywhere, at any time - you could watch a live video webcast while waiting
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for the bus, email photos to your friends while sitting in the park, or
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download the MP3 of the song that's playing in the pub before it finishes.
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This is the vision of a high-speed wireless internet paradise that the
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third-generation (3G) mobile phone companies have been promoting for
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years. 3G services are just beginning to be rolled out, but a new
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technology called mesh networking promises to deliver on this vision
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sooner and more effectively than the mobile phone companies could ever
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dream.
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Two companies, US startup MeshNetworks and Moteran Networks of Germany,
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are each developing their own competing version of mesh networking.
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Instead of the current hub-and-spoke model of wireless communications,
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with every device connecting to an overburdened central antenna, any time
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"mesh-enabled" devices - mobile phones, PDAs, laptops - are in close
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proximity to each other, they automatically create a wireless mesh
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network. Every device in the area acts as a repeater or router, relaying
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traffic for everyone else. Traffic hops from person to person until it
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reaches the nearest internet access point, reducing the need for central
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antennas, and improving wireless coverage.
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As the number of mobile phones soars, and wireless PDAs, laptops, and
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other devices begin to crowd the spectrum, this approach to wireless
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networking may be inevitable.
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Mesh networks also have several other advantages over 3G wireless
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networks. While 3G operators roll out mobile services that offer users
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connection speeds of up to 144 kbps (roughly three times faster than a
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dial-up modem), Moteran and MeshNetworks are able to offer connection
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speeds of up to 6Mbps, over a hundred times faster than dial-up. The
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technologies they use include Wi-Fi - the emerging standard for high-speed
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wireless networking also known as 802.11b. A similarly short-range
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protocol called UltraWideBand, which is poised to succeed Wi-Fi, is even
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faster and could, by 2005, approach 400 Mbps.
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The range of a typical Wi-Fi network is generally too limited to be of
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much use when travelling around a city. Mesh networks get around the
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problem of coverage by having every device in the network relay traffic.
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Even though the range of any individual device is relatively small,
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because (in theory) there will be so many users in the surrounding area,
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connections will be faster and better than that of a standard 3G wireless
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connection.
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Because mesh networks use Wi-Fi, the equipment and infrastructure needed
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to create them is cheap and readily available. Instead of building
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cellular phone towers that often cost hundreds of thousands of pounds, all
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that is needed to get a network going are wireless access points (around
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<EFBFBD>100 now) placed strategically around town to relay traffic, and the
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proper software. Existing laptops and PDAs can be mesh-enabled by
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software.
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It also means that anyone could set up their own mobile phone network.
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Unlike with 3G cellular, the part of the spectrum that Wi-Fi operates on
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is unregulated in the US, Britain. The mobile phone companies are none too
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pleased about this, especially since many of them spent billions of pounds
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acquiring 3G licences.
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All that's needed are cheap relays and mobile phones equipped to connect
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to the network. With every additional customer that signs up coverage gets
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better, instead of getting worse, as is the case with mobile phone
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networks.
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But things get very interesting when you realise that when you have
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high-speed internet connections everywhere, and everyone's laptops, PDAs,
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and mobile phones are connected together at blazingly fast speeds, sharing
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music, movies, or whatever else becomes ridiculously easy. When
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UltraWideBand hits, all of this will just accelerate.
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At 400Mbps, copying a pirated copy of the Lord of the Rings from the
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person sitting across from you at the cafe would take about 15 seconds.
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Sooner or later, playgrounds will be filled with kids swapping files of
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their favourite songs, movies, and video games.
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But the first mesh networks are not likely to be available to consumers.
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MeshNetworks has no plans to offer its own high-speed wireless service.
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Instead the company plans to sell its technology to others, such as cities
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that want to provide wireless internet to police, fire, and public works
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employees, or businesses that want to establish wireless networks on the
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cheap. Moteran has similar aspirations for small businesses and for
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enterprise networks.
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The first place average users may use the technology is when it is
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incorporated into vehicles, enabling motorists to access the internet at
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high speeds, which both companies see happening soon.
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When will you be able to wander around town with a 6Mbps connection in
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your pocket? It's too soon to say, but just as broadband internet service
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was initially available only to businesses and universities, eventually
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someone will see the profit in bringing mesh networking to the masses.
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