The Wireless Innovation Forum has announced the winners of its
competition to find a radio technology suitable for use following a 15
gigaton earthquake.

Skipping over the huge loss of life and general destruction wreaked by
a magnitude 10 earthquake - more than 10 times the size of the Indian
Ocean quake of 2004 - the Forum asked teams to develop a radio system
that could provide connectivity to emergency services descending on
the area from around the world.

The University of Calgary team landed First Place and Best Design,
pocketing $4,000 and $2,000 respectively. The Tokyo Institute of
Technology got second place, worth $3,000, while the Worcester
Polytechnic Institute won Best Presentation and Best Report, worth
$2,000 and $1,000 respectively.

Each prize comes with a scholarship to attend the next Wireless
Innovation Forum Conference.

An earthquake rating 10 on the Richter scale would go way beyond
national borders (probably removing a few in the process), so the
Wireless Innovation Forum envisioned complete destruction of the local
wireless infrastructure and increasing radio congestion as agencies
from different countries arrived on the scene with demands for ever
more bandwidth.

We can't help thinking that in the event of a magnitude 10 quake (five
times larger than the biggest ever seen by humans) international aid
might not be forthcoming in sufficient volume to congest the airwaves,
but perhaps we're too cynical.

Competing teams of students from around the world were whittled down
to six in April last year, based on written submissions. The six were
then tasked with creating a dynamic database to coordinate the
spectrum uses of at least 20 separate emergency service groups in an
apocalyptic urban setting. The database was required to sense users,
and deduce transmitter locations as well the as signalling systems
used, identifying available frequencies for allocation to new arrivals
and working out the potential for interference based on both the
frequencies and the manner in which they are used.

The teams created both hardware and software, then modelled how
effective their solutions would be using Matlab, which by happy
coincidence sponsored the competition.

The winners were marked not only on how effective their solution was,
but also the extent to which the solutions "leverage working group
efforts of the SDR Forum". Which is what this kind of competition is
really about: demonstrating that Software Defined Radio can achieve
remarkable things in extreme circumstances, in the hope that people
will start using it in more mundane applications. ®

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