---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: L. Aaron Kaplan <[email protected]>
Date: Sat, Jul 23, 2011 at 07:19
Subject: Fwd: [wsfii-discuss] [TIER] The alternative Internet, WiFi
based (Project Kleinrock)
To: change-owner at change.washington.edu


Hi!
The original mail from Chris Wilson went to
change at change.washington.edu as well as WSFII.
I am subscribed to WSFII but I believe my answer can be also valuable
for change at change.washington.edu.
Would you be so kind and forward my answer as well? Thanks.
Aaron.

Begin forwarded message:

From: "L. Aaron Kaplan" <[email protected]>
Date: July 23, 2011 4:09:18 PM GMT+06:00
To: Discuss list on the World Summit on Free Information
Infrastructure <wsfii-discuss at lists.okfn.org>, Chris Wilson
<chris at aptivate.org>
Cc: ashish makani <ashish.makani at gmail.com>, TIER
<tier at tier.cs.berkeley.edu>, change <change at change.washington.edu>
Subject: Re: [wsfii-discuss] [TIER] The alternative Internet, WiFi
based (Project Kleinrock)


Chris,

in Austria (Funkfeuer.at) we are slowly expanding to a nationwide mesh network.
There are tests underway to create a cross country (Slovenia-Austria,
Slovenia-Croatia) connection.
The Ham people already have something like this running - for
emergency cases:
http://wiki.oevsv.at/index.php/Kategorie:Digitaler_Backbone
(red links are working links, green under construction and blue planned ones)

So - to be precise - for a country wide backbone network with Wi-Fi -
yes, this is totally doable. But as Alexander already wrote, not with
self made antennas (they are just simply cheaper to buy and more
stable and they have a better quality than FabFi style antennas).
Other issues might be more important. For example: stable electricity.

In case you need further information on how we plan links and how we
can create a country wide network, feel free to contact me.

Aaron.


On Jul 20, 2011, at 5:56 PM, Chris Wilson wrote:

Hi all,

Related to this, I've been asked to comment about a proposed project to

create a free, open source, open hardware, country-wide wireless network

infrastructure in Madagascar using FabFi.

Does anyone have any thoughts about the feasibility of this (my gut

feeling is "infeasible"), know of anyone who has succeeded or failed in

any such project before, or have any thoughts about or experience with

FabFi?

Cheers, Chris.

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