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Posted by rabbitjoker on Jun-20-2007 17:12:

Read This! New Wi-Fi distance record: 382 kilometers

New Wi-Fi distance record: 382 kilometers
June 18, 2007 9:18 AM PDT
http://news.com.com/8301-10784_3-97...ag=2547-1_3-0-5


Researcher Ermanno Pietrosemoli has set what appears to be a new record for the longest communication link with Wi-Fi.

Pietrosemoli, president of the Escuela Latinoamerica de Redes (which means networking school of Latin America) established a Wi-Fi link between two computers located in El Aguila and Platillon Mountain, Venezuela. That's a distance of 382 kilometers, or 238 miles. He used technology from Intel, which is concocting its own long-range Wi-Fi equipment, and some off-the-shelf parts. Pietrosemoli gets about 3 megabits per second in each direction on his long-range connections.

Most Wi-Fi signals only go only a few meters before petering out. Conventional Wi-Fi transmitters, however, send signals in all directions. By directing the signal to a specific point, range can be increased.

Honing the signal, however, means that the receiver and transmitter have to be aligned. Trees, buildings and other objects that get between them can sever the link. The curvature of Earth, misalignment between the transmitter and receiver, as well as shaking and any sort of movement at the transmitting or receiving end can also impair the signal. (To ameliorate some of these factors, Intel has created a way to electrically steer the signal, which in turn increases bandwidth.)

Geography was on Pietrosemoli's side. El Aguila and Platillon Mountain sit in the Andes, which form fairly jagged peaks in this part of the range.

The old record was 310 kilometers. Swedish scientists made a link between a balloon and an Earth-bound station. We say "apparently" on Pietrosemoli's record, in case someone out there has set a better record about which we are unaware.

More details can be found in an article at the Web site for The Association for Progressive Communcations. (Inveneo, which is trying to bring PCs to emerging markets, told us about Pietrosemoli's achievement.)

Intel, along with organizations like Inveneo, are testing the feasibility of long-range Wi-Fi as a communication link in Uganda and other emerging nations. Long-range Wi-Fi isn't as robust at WiMax, but the towers cost a lot less. Some hobbyists have accomplished a long-range Wi-Fi connection with low bandwidth.

Similar experiments are being carried out in the United States as well. A long-range Wi-Fi link connects Intel Research's Berkeley Lab and a Sun Microsystems lab on the San Francisco Peninsula, more than 20 miles away.


Posted by rabbitjoker on Jun-20-2007 17:12:


Posted by Cosmic Fur on Jun-20-2007 17:49:

I'm rolling my fucking eyes. Wow, there has to be a clear path from sender to receiver or else the signal would be lost. Such a wide range of applications. All they did was focus the signal instead of sending it out in all directions. Oh, and it was from one mountain peak to another. Hardly impressive.


Posted by exstasie on Jun-20-2007 17:57:

How much? haha


Fuck, i can't even get like 10 feet in my house


Posted by jchung52 on Jun-20-2007 18:00:

dats lonnnnnnnng distance. i wonder how long they held the connection, cuz anything could have cut it at that distance


Posted by DigiNut on Jun-20-2007 23:41:

Give me a 10-megawatt antenna and I'll bet you I could get it to go further than that.


Posted by activate on Jun-20-2007 23:48:

quote:
Originally posted by Cosmic Fur
Hardly impressive.




you can do better?

Cause apperently no one else is the world has.

I'd say that qualifies as impressive.


Posted by mnemonic. on Jun-21-2007 01:43:

quote:
Originally posted by Cosmic Fur
I'm rolling my fucking eyes. Wow, there has to be a clear path from sender to receiver or else the signal would be lost. Such a wide range of applications. All they did was focus the signal instead of sending it out in all directions. Oh, and it was from one mountain peak to another. Hardly impressive.


bingo, clear thin mountain air = little or no attenuation of the signal, congratu-fucking-lations.


Posted by Porky on Jun-21-2007 02:04:

the latest issue of Business2.0 magazine has an interesting article about wi-max, the successor to wi-fi. universal wireless connectivity should be something that we should look forward to in the future.

this is all very exciting, considering that the wireless revolution is only a few years old!


Posted by jdjd on Jun-21-2007 02:18:

quote:
Originally posted by Porky
the latest issue of Business2.0 magazine has an interesting article about wi-max, the successor to wi-fi. universal wireless connectivity should be something that we should look forward to in the future.

this is all very exciting, considering that the wireless revolution is only a few years old!


My networks prof was saying that wimax is nothing to write home about, there will be a much better technology to come along soon.. compare it to the zip disk.


Posted by Cosmic Fur on Jun-21-2007 06:29:

quote:
Originally posted by activate
you can do better?

Cause apperently no one else is the world has.

I'd say that qualifies as impressive.


Yeah, I bet someone holds the record for pissing the farthest too. That's also impressive, but hardly worth writing about.


Posted by exstasie on Jun-21-2007 11:41:

What i'm looking forward to is wireless electricity...can't wait for that to happen! Make my life and room look so much neater!


Posted by rabbitjoker on Jun-21-2007 18:19:

quote:
Originally posted by exstasie
What i'm looking forward to is wireless electricity...


Tesla did it long, long ago.

Recently was revived by researchers (saw articles on it last week or the week prior).


Posted by DigiNut on Jun-22-2007 03:36:

quote:
Originally posted by exstasie
What i'm looking forward to is wireless electricity...can't wait for that to happen! Make my life and room look so much neater!


Posted by exstasie on Jun-22-2007 03:50:

quote:
Originally posted by rabbitjoker
Tesla did it long, long ago.

Recently was revived by researchers (saw articles on it last week or the week prior).


Yeah, i saw that article last week i think...actually it was a couple weeks ago
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,279153,00.html


speaking about electricity...

this is pretty cool

http://www.splashpower.com/


Posted by VERTiG0 on Jun-22-2007 04:33:

This thread needs way more DD-WRT am i rite guise or am i rite


Posted by SkyHigh on Jun-22-2007 15:18:

Tesla is way to unstable.....for us (dumbass humans)...
If we as a collective were smart ..it could work
But as it seems we are not ...Tesla is doomed to cause trouble


Posted by Cro_Addict on Jun-22-2007 15:32:

quote:
Originally posted by rabbitjoker
Tesla did it long, long ago.

Recently was revived by researchers (saw articles on it last week or the week prior).


Wow you actually know of Tesla.

I find it soo fucked up that almost noone knows of the guy. He is in NO textbooks and is rarely mentioned.

Without him we would not be where we are today.


Posted by SkyHigh on Jun-22-2007 15:47:

quote:
Originally posted by Cro_Addict
Wow you actually know of Tesla.

I find it soo fucked up that almost noone knows of the guy. He is in NO textbooks and is rarely mentioned.

Without him we would not be where we are today.


Are you high now???


Posted by Cro_Addict on Jun-22-2007 15:48:

quote:
Originally posted by SkyHigh
Are you high now???


umm...no


Posted by SkyHigh on Jun-22-2007 15:52:

Well if you not .
Why would you say that without TESLA we wouldnt be where we are today?

All he did is invent a weapon


Posted by Cro_Addict on Jun-22-2007 16:02:

quote:
Originally posted by SkyHigh
Well if you not .
Why would you say that without TESLA we wouldnt be where we are today?

All he did is invent a weapon


You just proved my point.

Tesla's inventions and developments include the induction motor, various devices that use rotating magnetic fields, the alternating current poly-phase power distribution system, the fundamental devices of systems of wireless communication, radio frequency oscillators, devices for voltage magnification by standing waves, robotics, logic gates for secure radio frequency communications, devices for x-rays, devices for ionized gases, devices for high field emission, devices for charged particle beams, voltage multiplication circuitry, devices for high voltage discharges, devices for lightning protection, the bladeless turbine, and VTOL (Vertical Takeoff Or Landing) aircraft.
This is just some of the stuff.


Posted by Cosmic Fur on Jun-22-2007 16:06:


Posted by Cro_Addict on Jun-22-2007 17:01:


Posted by rabbitjoker on Jun-22-2007 17:58:

quote:
Originally posted by Cro_Addict
Wow you actually know of Tesla.


Tesla is my hero.


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