Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Technology

Embedded Linux Wi-Fi Mesh Router On Sale 131

juxter writes "Following the announcement earlier this month, LocustWorld are now selling pre-built hardware MeshAPs for use as instant turn-key nodes in community mesh networks. (pictures here) - Featuring auto-updating and auto-configuration via a centralized management site, these are designed with 'Joe PC' in mind."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Embedded Linux Wi-Fi Mesh Router On Sale

Comments Filter:
  • by Crusty Oldman ( 249835 ) on Thursday October 31, 2002 @11:41PM (#4576215)
    Locustworld just had a plague descend upon it.
  • by Greedo ( 304385 ) on Thursday October 31, 2002 @11:44PM (#4576232) Homepage Journal
    LocustWorld seems to be down, so here's the Google cache [216.239.37.100].

    I'm such a whore.
  • Heh heh heh (Score:1, Funny)

    by sheepab ( 461960 )
    Kinda funny when the topic is "Embedded Linux Wi-Fi Mesh Router On Sale"...I click on the link...and up comes a pop up about coupons coupons coupons!!! Sale...coupons...get it? Heh yea I know Im a nerd...I read slashdot.
  • Matt PC? Have they ever considered Mike PC, or even Jennifer PC? I bet there are more Steve PC's than I can shake a stick at (and I can shake a stick at a lot of PCs!).

    This is the problem with Linux, always being targeted at the needs of a smallish audience.

    F-bacher
  • Speech (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward
    There's a big difference between "on sale" and "available".

    Learn it.
  • No, Not Joe (Score:2, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward
    Joe PC would use Microsoft. Probably has a Dell, drinks Budwiser, watches wrasslin.

    This would be Timmy The Computer Hippie. He drinks Red Bull and builds his own boxen. He like to watch Friends and Ally McBeal.

  • Joe PC (Score:4, Insightful)

    by 56ker ( 566853 ) on Friday November 01, 2002 @12:31AM (#4576404) Homepage Journal
    "Following the announcement earlier this month, LocustWorld are now selling pre-built hardware MeshAPs for use as instant turn-key nodes in community mesh networks. (pictures here) - Featuring auto-updating and auto-configuration via a centralized management site, these are designed with 'Joe PC' in mind." I'm afraid Joe PC doesn't understand the words MeshAPs, turn-key, nodes, community mesh networks, auto-updating, auto-configuration and centralized management site. Are you sure this isn't aimed at the more computer literate user than Joe PC?
    • Re:Joe PC (Score:3, Insightful)

      by SirSlud ( 67381 )
      Joe PC - With PC in his name. Which I assume means he likes PCs. And if he knows abit about PCs, and spends time with PCs, this might interest him.

      There's a reason they didn't use the name "abacus-granny".
    • What about Joe 6 pack? You know the type of guy that reads /. after a trip from his favorite tavern?

      What I want to know is when they'll be building apps for this market (besides www.persiankitty.com)....

      oh well...
  • by Istealmymusic ( 573079 ) on Friday November 01, 2002 @12:43AM (#4576438) Homepage Journal
    Wouldn't mesh be a slightly, ahem, wildly inaccurate description of the Linux Wi-Fi router which is featured in this Slashvertisement? Wi-Fi access points have limited range in the form of a spherical sphere, causing some but not complete overlap of all cells with all cells. I concede this Linux router should be referred to as a "Linux Wi-Fi Cell Topology Router", conforming with the conventional toplogy standards. My Linksys wired router is already labelled as topology: star, why should wireless be any indifferent to the canonical forms?
    • by glwtta ( 532858 ) on Friday November 01, 2002 @01:05AM (#4576521) Homepage
      in the form of a spherical sphere

      My favourite kind of sphere ;)

    • by swillden ( 191260 ) <shawn-ds@willden.org> on Friday November 01, 2002 @01:19AM (#4576557) Journal
      There's a difference, and it's an important one: Most cells are essentially standalone. That is, each cell handles communications within its boundaries and really only communicates with other cells to manage handoff, if they even talk that much.

      In this case, the "cells" communicate with each other intensively, because most of them have no Internet connection at all. They pass packets from AP to AP until they arrive at one that can actually forward them onto the Net.

      Thus, these access points do merge together into a seamless communications transport that seems worthy of the name "mesh".

    • what is the range on these exactly. and how good is the signal - what type of penetration does it get.

      If I use this in my 5th floor apartment - how far will the signal be usable. What if i stick it on the roof of my building. What if I zip tie it to a phone pole outside my house?

      Can you answer these.... with real praactical answers?
      • The answer depends on the antenna you hook up to it. With a good omnidirectional antenna on a mast on the roof you could well get a mile or so out of it.

        A directional antenna pointed at the park across the street from a 5th story window would work great.
    • by Gerry Gleason ( 609985 ) <gerry@geraldgl[ ]on.com ['eas' in gap]> on Friday November 01, 2002 @02:15AM (#4576707)
      Star is correct for the typical WiFi network with one or more wired APs and many leaf nodes. These nodes will connect to one another for routing exclusively through a wireless "mesh" of nodes, hence the name. This is a superset of cell topo where you hook up to wired base stations in a star topo, but you can be handed off while moving. Cell type handoff should be part of this type of network as well, but it will probably be controlled in the "client" node rather than being a function of the network as will cell phones.

      This is a very cool development, and I can't wait until a network develops in my neighborhood. I wonder how dense these things have to be to get good coverage in an urban environment?

      • This is a very cool development, and I can't wait until a network develops in my neighborhood

        I don't want to sound like i'm nagging or anything, but why wait. Take the init and plop one down yourself, tell everyone (well everyone that would want to know) and get the ball rolling yourself.

        karpe noctum
        • Well, aside from budget considerations, I'm on a 'home' class DSL which makes even my in-house wired NAT box slightly grey, and I don't really want to push any legalities. I like that some people are pushing the envelope in these areas, but I want to stay within the lines on this.

          The right way to do this is with bandwidth cooperatives. You just need a couple of wired points in your mesh where you are licensed to share upstream bandwidth, then you can expand outward from those points. I can think of a number of interesting business plans to develop networks like this, and I might consider some of them in the context of an educational initiative I'm trying to get off the ground. OTOH, if someone else gets there first, I'd be perfectly happy to drop a few hundred and mount one of these boxes in my attic.

          It would have been even more useful in the first year or so of my DSL service when it was a bit unreliable. I'm sure that I would want to keep my DSL service in the near term until I have some confidence in the reliability of the mesh network. It sure would be nice if this kind of configuration was fully supported by the AP so that mesh traffic stays on the mesh, and both authorized wireless and wired nodes could be routed either through the mesh or a wired ISP connection.

  • by thinmac ( 98095 ) on Friday November 01, 2002 @12:44AM (#4576440) Homepage
    I can't find anything about it on their site, but I have a feeling the problem is me not finding it, not it not being there (assuming that sentence made any sense).
    Anyone know if you can run their software on an existing linux server? I'm using my linux gateway/firewall as my AP right now, but the new protocol looks like it could be a lot of fun. On their site, however, I can only find info about running it either on an access point or by booting off of a CD, which would kind of mess up all the other stuff I do on that machine. Anyone have any info on how to run it without booting off a removable disk?
    • When I followed the link to "community mesh network", there were hardware and software links to the site, so I assume you can just get the software to set up your node. Of course this doesn't get interesting unless you have a handful of mesh node to connect with and create an extended network.
  • I was just wondering what the range on these things were? Unfortunatly there are a lot of hills and trees where I live.
  • commodity hardware (Score:5, Interesting)

    by g4dget ( 579145 ) on Friday November 01, 2002 @12:50AM (#4576465)
    Here's the bits and pieces:
    • Motherboard and case from CaseOutlet.com [caseoutlet.com]; you get a choice of 533MHz or 800MHz, for about $200. Motherboard and CPU alone are $100.
    • CF-to-IDE adapter from various sources, for about $20
    • 32MB CF card for $15 (512M for about $175)
    • wireless PCI 802.11b adapter, for about $40
    Total cost: $275.

    This takes a few minutes to put together. You get a choice between 12V or 120V power supply.

    • CF-to-IDE adapter from various sources, for about $20

      If CF-to-IDE adapters are so cheap, why are the CF based solid state IDE hard disks so expensive!?! I've been waiting for Sandisk's 1GB 2.5" ide drive to come down under $500 so I can replace my laptop drive. It doesn't look like that will happen any time soon.
      • if your willing to spend 500, why not just get an ipod and steal the hard drive from that? you even can get a 20 gig one for under $500

      • CF is really slow. If you actually use your laptop for anything but surfing pr0n, you probably don't want a CF solid state drive.

        • I believe that CF is particularly slow on writes, but not so bad on reads.

          -Paul Komarek
          • I belive you are correct on that account.....now if they had Sram cards.....that would be fast...they just need power...all the time ;->
            • Any idea how DOC or other solid-state IDE interfaces compare?

              Not particularly relevant (hence I unchecked the +1 bonus =-), but one of Cray's old vector machines had static ram for main memory with an incredible fabric between ram and cpus. If I remember correctly, it was a "butterfly" network (5 years after I learned about it, I don't much remember it anymore =-).

              -Paul Komarek
      • by ColaMan ( 37550 ) on Friday November 01, 2002 @02:53AM (#4576764) Journal
        CompactFlash already has an IDE interface - the adaptor is merely to convert teeny-CompactFlash-pins to your normal 40 pin IDE

        The reason that CF-based IDE drives are so expensive is that Flash memory is expensive to manufacture.
      • f CF-to-IDE adapters are so cheap, why are the CF based solid state IDE hard disks so expensive!?! I've been waiting for Sandisk's 1GB 2.5" ide drive to come down under $500 so I can replace my laptop drive. It doesn't look like that will happen any time soon.

        Because Flash is expensive, that's why.

        And you won't be replacing an IDE HDD with a CF card for very long. Flash has a limited number of write cycles. And it's dog-slow.

    • ...how long will it take you to configure the software, and test everything? Are all the big security holes plugged?

    • Allow me to be a little offtopic for a second, but where can you get this 12VDC power supply? I'm building a computer into my trunk to play my oggs, and inverting 12 to 120 just to go back to 12 seems inefficient. Alternatively, I've seen plans to build 12V ATX power supplies, but that means going all over to find parts and designing a pcb layout and etching etc etc etc etc. A nice 12VDC ATX power supply that doesn't cost more than the rest of the project combined would be really nice.
    • What motherboard+CPU did you see there for under $250? I couldn't find a motherboard for a fanless CPU, other than Crusoe, Pentium or 486DX4, and even they were $250-$380 without CPU.

      • The Via Eden 533mhz x86 based platform goes for about $90. The Via Eden is the new popular inexpensive fanless platform. The VIA Eden has a built in CPU, video, audio, ethernet, usb, etc... Also, the VIA Eden is tiny tiny tiny. Great for little Linux projects.

        I am running a default Redhat desktop on it as we speak. Installed right out of the box.
        • The Via Eden 533mhz x86 based platform goes for about $90.

          Most excellent. Thank you for the pointer. However the Via Eden isn't on the site mentioned. :-)

      • Here:

        http://www.caseoutlet.com/NWPc/2677/itx2677.html

        Get the Eden 533MHz version for a fanless motherboard.
    • Another source, which I just bought from is http://www.idot.com/TheStore/Desktop/555Spec.asp?P roduct.id=555&Cate.id=19 [idot.com] from www.idot.com. It showed up very quickly and I got a system with 128mb ram, 533 MHz Via board, and that nice black case. I got the ITX-PV Black ITX w/Riser Card & DC PS case. (nice black color, with external 12V DC power supply) Check out this link too, it has more pictures and a review of the case. http://www.mini-itx.com/reviews/2677R/ [mini-itx.com] Right now it's running ipcop (www.ipcop.org) with a second nic, as my DSL router. Soon to be reloaded and get a usb wifi card in it!
  • by Loopy ( 41728 ) on Friday November 01, 2002 @12:52AM (#4576474) Journal
    I only see one wireless NIC in it...how much good as a hub will it do after 10, 20 or 50 people start using it?
    • The other problem is you won't be able to link them via wireless either....
    • You could always overlay several of them if you had to. 802.11b allows for 3 completely unique channels to be used 1, 6 and 11.

      The thing looks fairly expandable as well, it probably is no trick to add to it.
    • I think you have hit the nail on the head with 802.11b in general. Bandwidth is a huge issue in "mesh" concepts. With only 3 unique channels, there is certain overlap and interference, if your mesh is over 3 nodes. However, if you just wanted on superbandwidth node, I suppose a second nic would be very useful... now, if only the software would support it.
  • system specs (Score:5, Interesting)

    by ruiner5000 ( 241452 ) on Friday November 01, 2002 @12:57AM (#4576494) Homepage
    I've been selling the same sort of MINI ITX boxes to quite a few people. There setup is based on the VIA 500MHz C3 model with Casetronic MINI ITX case with PCI riser. Not too shabby, although costs could be cut by using embedded memory onboard instead of using the compact flash to ide adapter. Now if VIA would get the DDR memory based Eden 2 out that would make a sweet little box.
    • I would love to see highly specialized Via Eden platforms, for example:
      • Embed a TV Tuner Card, Disk-on-Chip, and RAM: would make for a great lowcost baseline Linux PVR platform
      • Embed a 4 port NIC, Disk-on-Chip, and RAM: would make for a great low cost Linux router, firewall, etc...

      RAM is cheap, so I don't know why they haven't embedded RAM on the motherboard like all the other devices, and the VIA EPIA Eden already has a place for a Disk-on-Chip, but the boards sold as of now don't have a DOC installed.

      Linux based PVR and Network devices can still be made using the Via Epia Eden by just adding a PCI TV Tuner, PCI NIC, etc... I have Linux installed on my Epia Eden. No fans, low power consumption... I leave it on all the time!
      • > Embed a 4 port NIC, Disk-on-Chip, and RAM: would make for a great low cost Linux router, firewall, etc...

        No it wouldn't! Why do people say this? For one thing, 4-port NICs are *expensive*. You can buy a cheap 4-port switched router.

        Even if you were to get a 4-port card for free, Linux will *not* be able to forward or even bridge the packets fast enough.
  • Alternative Solution (Score:5, Informative)

    by PhotonSphere ( 193108 ) on Friday November 01, 2002 @01:02AM (#4576507) Homepage Journal
    The wireless group [houstonwireless.org] in Houston is building even smaller boxes that are capable of doing everything that this box does. A HOWTO [photonsphere.com] is being assembled here. They are using the Soekris [soekris.com] Net4501 in combination with the DWL-520 [dlink.com] 802.11b PCI card to run Linux and push HostAP [epitest.fi] and NoCatAuth [nocat.net]. The Soekris comes with 3 NICs and no moving parts!
    • Sorry about the URL for the HowTo. The correct URL is http://www.photonsphere.com/article.php?sid=186 [photonsphere.com].
    • by g4dget ( 579145 ) on Friday November 01, 2002 @01:28AM (#4576578)
      The Soekris motherboard costs $196, for a 133MHz 486. A Mini ITX motheboard with processor [mini-itx.com] costs around $100, with your choice of 533MHz or 800MHz Pentium-compatible processor, plus a $20 CF-to-IDE adapter.

      The Soekris has a number of advantages, primarily that it's smaller and that it is happy with just 5V or 7-20V DC. But you pay a premium for those features, and you sacrifice functionality. The Mini ITX gives you a standard PCI slot, many more I/O options, much better performance, and more I/O ports.

      I think, given its functionality, the "value" of something like the Soekris 486 boards really "should be" around $50 these days, and that's what it probably would be if it really were manufactured in huge quantities. Does anybody know of a low-cost 486 PC104 board like that?

      • by Paul Komarek ( 794 ) <komarek.paul@gmail.com> on Friday November 01, 2002 @02:43AM (#4576742) Homepage
        Just to be picky:

        * "The Soekris motherboard costs $196" It's not a motherboard, it's a single board computer. You know that and I know that, but it makes a big difference for someone not familiar with the board.

        * The Mini-ITX stuff is very new, using very new technology, and I haven't seen one yet with three eth ifaces, two 'pci' slots (one mini-pci, one 3.3v pci), and two serial ports. One of the Soekris eth ifaces is net-bootable.

        * The Mini-ITX stuff is fanless, but still hotter than the Soekris. I expect the Mini-ITX stuff (esp. w/ enough gear to do what the net4501 does) draws a lot more power than the 0.06A at 120V during normal (not idle) operation. Of course, the cpu on the Mini-ITX stuff is much faster. That probably doesn't matter to the target market of the net4501, because of their applications (hardware-assisted vpn and other WAN routing/firewalling tasks).

        * Besides being smaller and lighter (as you mention), the net4501 runs cooler than the C3 and does not need a heat sink.

        * I wonder if the Soekris has been vibration tested and such. Since the Mini-ITX stuff requires assembly (cpu, heat sink, network cards, etc), it probably couldn't withstand much vibration without some ruggedizing.

        * You cannot find equivalent functionality to the net4501 for $50 anywhere (see my next paragraph =-). The net4501 is a bargain for the intended audience. And pc104 stuff is generally more expensive, because of the slightly more compact form factor and fancy i/o stuff.

        I've spent a *lot* of time looking for SBCs like the net4501 but less expensive. There aren't any (yet). That's why I've got a net4501 handling many of my gateway and network tasks. For another $100 or so dollars, you can get a nice 3-port 300MHz NatSemi Geode board from Acrosser (AR-B1550, fanless and very compact) that seems adequate for file serving, mail serving, and light web serving. As with the Soekris, I haven't found better prices on compact fanless SBCs anywhere.

        FWIW, the folks at Soekris and Acrosser are very pleasant to work with, and the user communities are nice.

        -Paul Komarek
        • I expect the Mini-ITX stuff (esp. w/ enough gear to do what the net4501 does) draws a lot more power than the 0.06A at 120V during normal (not idle) operation.

          The 533MHz supposedly consumes 1W, and the 800MHz 5W (I haven't measured it).

          The Mini-ITX stuff is very new, using very new technology

          I dunno--looks like pretty run-of-the-mill PC technology to me.

          with three eth ifaces, two 'pci' slots (one mini-pci, one 3.3v pci), and two serial ports

          Well, no, but it comes with single or dual regular PCI slots (depending on riser), dual USB, Ethernet, VGA, S-video, Audio, PS/2, and serial, probably a more useful collection for many applications.

          • My "new technology" comment was definitely off-base. I really meant that the C3 was very new.

            I'm not sure how to interpret the cpu power draw. I really want to know about system power, which is what I was measuring on the Soekris (with a regular VOM, not a power meter).

            I agree that many applications want "PC" ports. The Soekris isn't being marketed or sold into those markets. By the same token, the Mini-ITX C3 stuff is tremendous overkill for VPN WAN routers.

            The Mini-ITX stuff I've seen (not much, and only on the web) doesn't seem to have bios-over-serial and built-in net-booting, which are very nice (if not essential) for "embedded" operation.
            I noted that VIA's suggested power supplies either had fans, except for that TK fanless ATX supply (which costs $150). I'm using a wall brick for my net4501.

            I guess what I'm trying to say is that the price, power, and engineering considerations for a Mini-ITX system *must* include the net-booting eth card and other "accessories", the power supply that probably has moving parts, and the additional heat output.

            I think I may use a C3 system when I get around to my fanless mailserver and Zope box, and I'll be willing to pay for all the extra equipment (including that TK supply). But the C3 isn't needed for serving nfs at home or acting as a DSL firewall. Since I want my gateway, nfs server, and web server to run on separate cpus (admin and security reasons), I'm trying to by the least expensive box for each task. The net4501 ended up an excellent choice for my network tasks, including gateway, router, wireless router, and firewall.

            We're just thinking of different applications.

            -Paul Komarek
            • I noted that VIA's suggested power supplies either had fans, except for that TK fanless ATX supply (which costs $150). I'm using a wall brick for my net4501.

              There are cheap, wall-brick power supplies for these boards; the CaseOutlet cases come with one.

              Mini-ITX system *must* include the net-booting eth card and other "accessories", the power supply that probably has moving parts, and the additional heat output

              The onboard Ethernet net-boots; there isn't much else that you need, except maybe a $20 CF-to-IDE adapter.

              • Good to hear about the wall-brick PSUs for Mini-ITX systems; that TK fanless ATX psu is expensive. Also good about the net-booting.

                I would definitely miss the serial bios console. I say this as an admin of 7 headless macines (4 Alpha boxes, 2 x86, one net4501). It is a real pain to drag monitors around to back of racks when you need to fiddle with them. Not that the Soekris has it, but remote management consoles rock; even if the kernel wedges, you can still power cycle remotely.

                I'm really hoping you're going to reply with "such-and-such Mini-ITX board has a serial bios". If you tell me it has a remote management console, I'll know you're lying. =-)

                Let's do a comparison, then:

                Gateway, Router, Wirless Access Point, Firewall with DMZ iface (which is precisely why I bought a board with three ifaces):

                $232+shipping: Soekris net4501 with case and psu
                $60+shipping: D-Link DWL-520
                -------
                About $300.

                I'm using nfs root right now, but might use an 8MB cf card soon. I have two that came free with digital cameras, but new ones seem to be about $4.

                How much would a similar 3-iface Mini-ITX system cost? I'm not trying to prove anything here, just trying to find out if I should have waited before buying the Soekris setup for $300.

                -Paul Komarek.
                • Well, you can get full specs here:

                  http://www.viavpsd.com/product/Download.jsp?mother boardId=21 [viavpsd.com]

                  Note also the upcoming EPIA-M motherboard, which features USB2, FireWire, and 933MHz clock speed.

                  As for serial consoles, it appears that the Linux Bios has been ported to it:

                  http://www.trustytech.com/TMBM-MINI-ITX.htm [trustytech.com]

                  That would not only give you serial console management, but also very fast Linux boots.

                  How much would a similar 3-iface Mini-ITX system cost?

                  Pretty much the same amount: motherboard, CPU, case, PCI riser, screws, cables, and brick power supply from CaseOutlet.com [caseoutlet.com] costs a little under $200. Add to that a $20 CF-to-IDE adapter and the DWL-520. If you want to use lower-cost 5 1/4" drives, you can get a slightly larger case for slightly more money.

                  Another choice is the WalMart Linux PC [walmart.com], which appears to be using same motherboard, but for $228 also gives you a minitower, a CD-ROM drive, and a 10G disk, and perhaps more fans than you like.

                  • Oh, sorry, I didn't see the "three interface" requirement. To add two more interfaces with the least amount of hassle, I'd still go with the CaseOutlet case and use USB Ethernet adapters. They are under $20 and USB powered. Some of the nicer ones (a little more expensive) are barely larger than a plug.
            • Just a note. The C3 is not the least bit new. Cyrix processors have been around as long as AMD (Via bought Cyrix from IBM, the C in C3 signifies Cyrix).

  • Mod this down. thx!
  • by jiminim ( 104910 ) on Friday November 01, 2002 @03:28AM (#4576827) Homepage
    500MHz and 128MB RAM?

    My own version of this that I built last year mostly out of parts I had laying around when I was too cheap to buy a real ap:
    66MHz Pentium w/ small AT Mobo
    32MB RAM
    AT P/S
    Floppy
    ISA to ribbon cable to nice 2 card PCMCIA socket ($5 from ebay +$5s/h)
    Orinoco card ($60)
    WRP on a floppy from nocat.net
    random Intel PCI NIC

    This little baby, named Gates, ran faithfully for about six months until my roommate finally got a real ap.
    • I can see the uses for the processing power, for applications like VTun [sourceforge.net]. A 486 just couldn't run that with encryption or compression turned on. Certainly not at the speeds a wireless link can manage.

      The extra layer of encryption ontop of WEP is always helpful.
  • It says the CF is updatable over the air - how long before THAT is hacked?
  • This comes from the Joe PC department, so bear with me...

    Isn't it possible to have software -- roughly similar to a proxy server -- run on the different computers in a wireless network to achieve a similar sort of mesh effect for smaller networks.

    It would be handy to use other computers in the house as repeaters, i.e., not have to buy separate boxes or run extra network cable for additional access points.

    • Yup, that's more or less what my company [meshnetworks.com] does. We have a software product that sits on top of 802.11 cards and allows you to hop through other users back to our AP.

      We've deployed it around the office and it is suprisingly effective. Multihopping also gives you other benefits, like better throughput. For example, instead of communicating directly with an AP at 5 Mbps, you can hop at 11Mbps and get double the throughput.

      It really is cool stuff, but it isnt as open as this Locustworld stuff. Each has their place though.
      • Yeah, you guys just need to start selling it. It's only been "testing" for over a year now. The software that's supposedly $30 and works with standard 802.11b clients been "available" on your site for months now...but, not really because anytime MeshNetworks was contacted, we were told "not ready yet."

        Give us a break....
        • Its shipping as I type this. I think a lot of people are just confused about what products we have. The soft client that works on any 802.11b card has been available for months now, but it didn't work as well as we had hoped. It took months to get access to a real miniport SDK from the 802.11 vendor we wanted to use, but that step was necessary to get access to the 802.11 card at a low level, essential for doing the routing algorithms we do. The product that we have now was available to a select few clients, who were presumably under NDA. Its shipping, but it is pricey, since we arent exactly building big lots of this stuff.

          And that is the problem. We never intended to manufacture this stuff, rather we were supposed to license it to manufacturers. Things have changed as of late, and now we're shipping product.

          The other product line is a proprietary chip, which we've had for months, but haven't been selling in volume. The chip is dirt cheap, but the supporting PC card board is costly for us to make, and consequently, the cards are ridiculously expensive.

          And I'm good friends with our sales guys. I find it hard to believe they weren't itching to selling it to ya =). Mail em, sales at meshnetworks dot com.
  • What's in it for me? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by NKJensen ( 51126 ) <nkjNO@SPAMinternetgruppen.dk> on Friday November 01, 2002 @05:57AM (#4577087) Homepage
    It seems to be a parallel Internet on the air.

    IP range 1.x.y.z and no routing to/from the "old" internet.

    Can any gurus out there tell me about possible uses for this?

    Can I E-mail anyone on the old Internet from this new user-driven, no-subnet, free net?

    • by Anonymous Coward
      This distro *does* interface with the 'old' internet.

      It will seek a net connection via DHCP on a wired interface and setup ad-hoc routing over wireless to other locust nodes, with a default route via the regular net connection.
      • Thank you - I've been looking for that info. Now, where did you find it?

        The FAQ files didn't mention those facts (or I just could not find it).
        • This isn't a flame. But, your question is maybe to 'basic' for even the FAQ. When we talk about building a wireless Internet In The Sky via mesh configuration of multiple Access Providers, we inherently assume people understand the point of this is to access the "Internet" as we know it.

          It's true however, that if noone had a true net connection, a mesh/web could be "off-line" to the internet (yet still function if you were trying to contact someone else in your web... if you happened to know their private IP.).

          It's also true, that if this eventually takes off, and the density of AP's increase (and the technology continues to get better) such a mesh may become more of the 'default' "Internet" than the hard-wired one we use now. Granted, that's pie-in-the-sky thinking, and 5 years away.

          -malakai
    • It is a MS Word document, but this answers my own questions [locustworld.com]

  • Is it a true AP? (Score:4, Informative)

    by roybadami ( 515249 ) on Friday November 01, 2002 @08:52AM (#4577411)
    Given that they used the linux-wlan [linux-wlan.org] drivers, I suspect that this isn't a true AP (running in BSS mode), unless support for this is now in linux-wlan (they do say they use bleeding edge drivers).

    Given they use Prism II hardware, I don't understand why they don't use the hostap [epitest.fi] drivers.

    BSS mode has scalability advantages, because it solves the 'hidden sender' problem. ie even though 802.11 nodes always listen to check that the channel is clear before sending, there is a danger that two nodes at opposite extremes won't be able to hear each other, and will try to send at the same time, resulting in collisions. A true AP, running in BSS mode, helps aleviate this problem.)
  • Now, I might just be so phenomenally stupid that this isn't even worth thinking about, but, if I had a traditional wireless network, like a linksys ap and a buncha wireless cards, and i were to buid a meshAP, could my current nodes connect with that meshAP?

    Could i just plug it in somewhere else in my house and have it work? or, would the mesh have to be separate from the wifi network, with it's own gateway AP?

    and if so, could my wife's iBook with an airport card still connect to the mesh?

    All of the mesh networking sites seem to think the answer to this question is just so basic so as to be not worth answering...
  • There's a documentation download link here [locustworld.com], but it doesn't seem to work. I'm baffled. Everyone is discussing it as though it were a wireless internet access route, but the Newbie Quick Start [locust.net] only mentions cell phone text messaging. What the hell is it, and what is it supposed to do? Is "Locust" a particular "Community Mesh Network"? Is a "Community Mesh Network" an architecture making use of standard protocols? What services does a Community Mesh Network offer? Are the any Community Mesh users or admins who can speak up?
    • Ach! The Documentation link does work. I'm using an NT workstation and it invisibly and helpfully opened the document without providing any visual indication that anything had happened. Please mod the parent down.
  • I'm assuming the mesh network all runs on the same channel? How well does this thing scale if, for example, I cover a 1 square mile urban area with 10 nodes and only one of those nodes has a wired connection? I would think that the channel would become saturated rather quickly.
  • I myself have dreamed up a structure intermediate between Dyson spheres
    and planets. Build a ring 93 million miles in radius -- one Earth orbit
    -- around the sun. If we have the mass of Jupiter to work with, and if
    we make it a thousand miles wide, we get a thickness of about a thousand
    feet for the base.

    And it has advantages. The Ringworld will be much sturdier than a Dyson
    sphere. We can spin it on its axis for gravity. A rotation speed of 770
    m/s will give us a gravity of one Earth normal. We wouldn't even need to
    roof it over. Place walls one thousand miles high at each edge, facing the
    sun. Very little air will leak over the edges.

    Lord knows the thing is roomy enough. With three million times the surface
    area of the Earth, it will be some time before anyone complains of the
    crowding.
    -- Larry Niven, "Ringworld"

    - this post brought to you by the Automated Last Post Generator...

The moon is made of green cheese. -- John Heywood

Working...