From: Mark Grant (mark@unicorn.com)
Date: Sun Jul 13 1997 - 17:21:23 MDT
On Sun, 13 Jul 1997, Eugene Leitl wrote:
> The
> system must come in a rugged, atmosphere-proof case, large
> enough to contain a buffering battery (in case the system is
> powered by a solar cell, crucial for a standalone relais).
I've heard of a company in Australia making solar-powered Internet routers
with 400kbps spread-spectrum radio links; at one stage there was a plan to
use them to provide Net access in Bosnia, and they were talking about
upgrades to T1 and above. I don't know what happened to them, but a Web
search might find something.
> routing and switching. Boxes, knowing their spatial address
> (from GPS, and/ultrasonic, or vis LPS), can select the nearest
> one.
I don't see the advantage of this; why should the boxes know my spatial
location rather than where I'm connected to? Otherwise when I move I'll
have to update my address all the time. It would presumably work OK for
fixed sites, but be really bad for mobile users.
Mark
|-----------------------------------------------------------------------|
|Mark Grant M.A., U.L.C. EMAIL: mark@unicorn.com |
|WWW: http://www.unicorn.com/ MAILBOT: bot@unicorn.com |
|-----------------------------------------------------------------------|
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.5 : Fri Nov 01 2002 - 14:44:35 MST