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Comment Re: Protest bid for Los Angeles Wifi (Score 1) 2

Start small, get AS/IP assignment from ARIN, possibly IPv6-only to save costs (NAT and implement DNS64), setup a switch in one of the LA Internet Exchanges (e.g. CoreSite or Equinix), peer with Hurricane Electric, mount some backhaul radios on top the building (these are cheap! RBSXTG-5HPnD-HGr2), deploy more radios throught the city and form an Ad Hoc Mesh Network, don't forget to deploy cheaper radios (not the >10km 17dBi bastards) to get ordinary 100mw stations connected (<=2dBi, <200m range).

Build a community mesh network like Freifunk!

This 30c3 lecture is inspiring - Y U NO ISP.
The Internet

The Internet Is 'Built Wrong' 452

An anonymous reader writes "API Lead at Twitter, Alex Payne, writes today that the Internet was 'built wrong,' and continues to be accepted as an inferior system, due to a software engineering philosophy called Worse Is Better. 'We now know, for example, that IPv4 won't scale to the projected size of the future Internet. We know too that near-universal deployment of technologies with inadequate security and trust models, like SMTP, can mean millions if not billions lost to electronic crime, defensive measures, and reduced productivity,' says Payne, who calls for a 'content-centric approach to networking.' Payne doesn't mention, however, that his own system, Twitter, was built wrong and is consistently down."
Power

PC Makers Try To Pinch Seconds From Their Boot Times 399

Some computers are never turned off, or at least rarely see any state less active than "standby," but others (for power savings or other reasons) need rebooting — daily, or even more often. The New York Times is running a short article which says that it's not just a few makers like Asus who are trying to take away some of the pain of waiting for computers, especially laptops, to boot up. While it's always been a minor annoyance to wait while a computer slowly grinds itself to readiness, "the agitation seems more intense than in the pre-Internet days," and manufacturers are actively trying to cut that wait down to a more bearable length. How bearable? A "very good system is one that boots in under 15 seconds," according to a Microsoft blog cited, and an HP source names an 18-month goal of 20-30 seconds.
Hardware

First Graphene Transistor 83

An anonymous reader writes "UK researchers are announcing the first ever workable transistor made of graphene — that's one layer of carbon atoms. It's thinner and smaller than a silicon transistor can ever be, and it works at room temperature. When silicon electronics are dead, this is what many speculate is going to take over. There's slight controversy as they decided to announce their results via a review article, rather than wait for their (submitted) peer review paper to come out."
Supercomputing

Submission + - Your Dream Machine...

isaachulvey writes: "If you could put together your dream machine with any components you want, what would it be? Obviously price is not a factor here or we'd all be putting together 800 MHz systems with 128 MB of RAM... This is your dream machine, so be creative, go as over the top as you need, remember overkill is not a crime."

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