FYI. Interesting and promising endeavor indeed!

miraj khaled


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Rob Flickenger" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Fri, 27 Jan 2006 09:01:01 -0000
Subject: Wireless Networking in the Developing World
book release

Hello, all--

I've spent the past three months working on a new book
with a team of folks from around the world, and it's
finally out!  It's called "Wireless Networking in the
Developing World", and it is a free book released
under Creative Commons.

More info is available at: http://wndw.net/

and: http://us.wndw.net/ (US Mirror)

Enjoy!

--Rob


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE


London, England-- Imagine trying to piece together a
wireless network with no manuals, sporadic and slow
access to the Internet, inadequate tools, a shortage
of supplies, and in the most inclement weather. The
authors of a recently published book, "Wireless
Networking in the Developing World" don't need to
imagine. They have been doing so for years.

In almost every village, town, or city in the
developing world, there are people who can build just
about anything. With the right know-how, this can
include wireless networks that connect their community
to the Internet. The book addresses what Rob
Flickenger, the book's editor and lead author, calls a
chicken-and-egg problem: "While much information about
building wireless networks can be found on-line, that
presents a problem for people in areas with little or
no connectivity", said Flickenger from his workshop in
Seattle. The book covers topics from basic radio
physics and network design to equipment and
troubleshooting. It is intended to be a comprehensive
resource for technologists in the developing world,
providing the critical information that they need to
build networks. This includes specific examples,
diagrams and calculations, which are intended to help
building wireless networks without requiring access to
the Internet.

In the developing world, one book can often be a
library, and to a techie this book may well be a
bible. Access to books is difficult where there are
few libraries or book stores, and there is often
little money to pay for them. "Our book will be
released under a Creative Commons license, so
everybody can copy and distribute it free of charge.
That doesn't mean it is a 'cheap' book. I think it is
a great book," stated Corinna 'Elektra' Aichele, one
of the books co-authors who was recently installing
wireless networks in Bangladesh.

The book has been released under a Creative Commons
license, meaning that it is free to download, print
and modify, even for a profit, as long as proper
credit is given and any modifications or copies made
are shared under the same terms. For Flickenger, who
has already published several successful books,
publishing a book for free has been an interesting
endeavor. He explains, "the Book Sprint team felt that
the need for a freely available collection of
practical information greatly outweighed any short
term profit."

For the authors, all of whom spend their time building
networks in the developing world, their pay-back will
be having a resource to hand to their beneficiaries.
"I wasn't paid and I don't expect to earn money with
it, though that would be nice," stated Elektra.

The authors, all experts in the field of wireless
community networking, gathered in London for a "Book
Sprint" last October. The book sprint was the
brain-child of Tomas Krag, one of the book's authors,
and was to be the kickstart of a 3-month effort
culminating in a finished book. The trans-continental
team spent a week in the aging Lime House Town Hall
near the Thames for a week, fleshing out the details
of the book while sitting around a mix of old tables,
powering their notebooks over yards of extension cords
and with stacks of power adapters. Flickenger
explains, "the idea was to get a hand picked, tightly
focused team of experts together and aggressively work
on a book project." The team wrote, edited, and have
now released the 250 page manual in only three months.
Though he admits it was difficult to motivate a team
who was not being paid, especially over the holidays,
Flickenger's quiet persistence prevailed.

The authors also hope that by releasing the book into
the "Creative Commons" that it can be improved,
expanded, corrected and translated. Efforts are
underway to translate the book into other languages
and to provide it to those who need it most, the 5 to
6 billion who don't yet have access to the Internet
today.

The book is available in PDF form and for sale in
print at the book's website: http://wndw.net/

Ian Howard, co-Author, Limehouse BookSprint Team

For more information:

Web site: http://wndw.net/

    * Canada
      Contact: Ian Howard
      Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
      Phone: +1 647 722 5629 x1
    * Denmark
      Contact: Tomas Krag
      Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
      Phone: +45 27115960
    * Germany
      Contact: Corinna 'Elektra' Aichele
      Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
      Phone: +49-30-220 192 77

      Contact: Sebastian Büttrich
      Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
      Phone: +45 27 11 93 91
    * Italy
      Contact: Marco Zennaro
      Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
      Phone: +39 040 2240 406
    * United States
      Contact: Rob Flickenger
      Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
      Phone: +1 206 202-3230



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Miraj Khaled
============
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
mindexplorer.blogspot.com

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