Nice, Erich.

In a sense, radio waves are the -ultimate- in liberation, crossing national 
boundaries in (single or multiple) bounds. That may be a subrosa reason 
governments fight so hard to control them. That is clearly why some shortwave 
broadcasts are jammed. It's why the amateur service was cut off during WWII. 
That's also my conclusion about why amateurs are not allowed to use codes and 
ciphers (speaking of US here). And many amateurs are so blasted conservative 
politically, but I don't know why that is! This is experimentation, and 
tinkering, and hacking, and potentially liberation, but in the electronics 
sphere. There is a ton of potential that should not be ignored.

Much as an interest in sci-fi may lead to certain kinds of mindsets, 
experimentation and curiosity, an interest in amateur radio is frequently 
correlated with an interest in other people, other cultures, science, 
engineering, electronics, software and other skills that can be immensely 
valuable to our efforts.

There are certainly lots more folks on the list who have licenses, and there 
are lots of amateur operators who aid liberation technologies without 
advertising it.

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
CyberSpark.net
-Keeping the flame of free speech 
      and human rights alive online

On Mar 7, 2013, at 9:50 AM, "Erich M." <er...@moechel.com> wrote:

> On 03/07/2013 09:26 AM, Griffin Boyce wrote:
>>  How far is the distance being covered, and in what kind of terrain (flat
>> plains, hills)? HAM might not even be necessary if it's fairly close
>> (relatively speaking).  GMRS radios can cover several miles.  Other
>> small/cheap handhelds can cover a couple of miles in ideal conditions.
> 
> Think I can add a few bits of info here. Of course are these analog
> walkie talkies an absolute no go if you have to relay sensible information.
> 
> But ham operators _can_ help with their skills and Know-how. Here in AT
> our ham radio club - my callsign is OE3EMB - operates a nationwide
> wireless broadband backbone ring using TCP/IP. The ring is connected to
> the German HAMnet, the network reaches from Southern Italy to
> Scandinavia already. Self built self owned.
> 
> This is in German but there is an infrastucture graph
> http://wiki.oevsv.at/index.php?title=Kategorie:Digitaler_Backbone
> 
> This is English showing the German HAMnet in 2009
> http://kb9mwr.blogspot.co.at/2009/12/german-hsmm-hamnet-20.html
> 
> Essential is the availability of electrical power, of course. If that is
> a tribal areal area I have some doubts.
> 
> Components are off the shelf outdoor WiFI routers. The backbone operates
> in the 5 GHz WiFi band with directed antennas. At 5 GHz a much higher
> power output ist allowed than on 2,4 GHz which is used to distribute
> locally.
> All in all the whole network consumes rather little power, one unit or
> node - WiFi-Router and two planar directional antennas - is around USD
> 200 or less.
> 
> The antennas MUST look into "each others eye" that is another
> difficulty. But if so you can bridge 20 kilometers safely using 4-7
> stations, depending on terrain, offering 50 Mbit/sec - conservative
> calculation.
> 
> - The net works like the internet, whether connected to the internet at
> some single node, or without that.
> 
> - There is neither a problem with encryption nor with licenses. This
> part of the frequency spectrum is open. Everbody can use it for wireless
> broadband purposes.
> my two Groschen and 73s
> de
> Erich OE3EMB
> 
> -- 
> 
> http://moechel.com/kontakt.html        PGP KEY 0xEA7DC174
> fingerprint 02AA B2E7 C609 307D 34FE 4B5C ACC6 A796 EA7D C174
> --... ...--   -.. .   . .-. .. -.-. ....   --- . ...-- . -- -...
> --
> Too many emails? Unsubscribe, change to digest, or change password by 
> emailing moderator at compa...@stanford.edu or changing your settings at 
> https://mailman.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/liberationtech

--
Too many emails? Unsubscribe, change to digest, or change password by emailing 
moderator at compa...@stanford.edu or changing your settings at 
https://mailman.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/liberationtech

Reply via email to