kenneth marken wrote:
On Sunday 05 August 2007 20:21:57 Derek Pressnall wrote:

On 8/2/07, Ian Stirling <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Wolfgang S. Rupprecht wrote:

However, the signals from distant stations still interfere, and increase
the channel noise level, reducing range.
With planned networks, this is all managed.
With unplanned networks, it could in principle auto-configure, but only
if everyone implements the same fairness protocol.

I had an idea that may help reduce radio interference in point to
point communications.  Lets say if one end (the base) was set up to
broadcast using multiple antennas aranged in some sort of pattern,

Beamforming antennas are a big future topic.
In principle, you can trade off number and arrangement of antennas so that you can, both reject noise in certain directions, and send less of your signal in different directions.

sounds like a cross between mimo and direction finding to me.

would be interesting to try it :)


The limit of this is pretty much the size of the device.
It can work _really_ well with devices not constrained too much in size.

For example, at 700Mhz, the wavelength is some 40cm.
With a cylindrical antenna a metre or so in diameter and a meter tall, you can get around a beam of 30 degrees or so.

With 1/12th the actual power needed to talk to a mobile device.

On the device itself, options are very limited.
You can accurately point the antenna (electrically) at an interfering source, and have the device not be interfered with it by then - but actually positively pointing isn't really favoured by the physics. That only really happens when the size of the device gets over the wavelength.

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