Re: [WISPA] Internet service in Austin TX

2011-03-15 Thread Charles wyble
Chuck Hogg ch...@shelbybb.com wrote:

Keep in mind, it hasn't been fully marketed like they used to.  I have friends 
that switched to Clear from DSL, and after 6 months switched back because the 
AP's were loaded at night.
Regards,

Chuck


On Tue, Mar 15, 2011 at 8:36 PM, Rogelio scubac...@gmail.com wrote:

On Mon, Feb 21, 2011 at 6:08 PM, Charles N Wyble
char...@knownelement.com wrote:
 Hello,

 I'm going to be relocating to Austin TX (northeast. Anderson Springs
 apartment complex). Anyone out there providing net access?

Several friends of mine in Austin use Clear, and they seem very happy
with the throughput that they get around the city area.

--
Also on LinkedIn?  Feel free to connect if you too are an open
networker: scubac...@gmail.com




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Clear has worked wonderfully so far. Very happy with it. 
-- 
charles n wyble
Systems craftsman to the stars
Xmpp/sip/smtp char...@knownelement.com
Office: 310 929 8793
Cell: 626 539 4344


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Re: [WISPA] Anyone doing IPTV?

2011-03-08 Thread Charles wyble
support supp...@nitline.com wrote:

Anyone find a cost effective way to do IPTV yet? That is something I'm really 
wanting to get into Thanks -- Tim Steele supp...@nitline.com NITLine Support 
(574) 772-7550 ext 103 
www.NITLine.net_
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This is something I'm interested as well. Various opensource bits exist, but 
lots of drm involved. Also multicast is interesting. 
-- 
charles n wyble
Systems craftsman to the stars
Xmpp/sip/smtp char...@knownelement.com
Office: 310 929 8793
Cell: 626 539 4344


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Re: [WISPA] 4.9 Ghz

2009-07-29 Thread Charles Wyble
Also put in a call to the FCC.

If they are illegally using the spectrum, the feds will most likely want 
to know.



Jack Unger wrote:
 Blake,
 
 As Jerry suggests - investigate!
 
 Who is the system licensee? It should be a public safety agency or 
 critical infrastructure provider. Ask their techs about the link. Follow 
 up (if needed) with a very polite letter to the Chief of the agency 
 requesting information and advising him of the legal uses of the link. 
 Do your own research first so you can provide the Chief with accurate 
 information and education.
 
 jack
 
 
 Jerry Richardson wrote:
 Sounds like an investigative effort. Find out where they provide commercial 
 service and then SA the POP to see if they are only using 4.9 for backhaul.

 Jerry Richardson
 airCloud Communications
 Sent Mobile (Probably one handed)

 
 From: lakel...@gbcx.net lakel...@gbcx.net
 Sent: Wednesday, July 29, 2009 11:19 AM
 To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] 4.9 Ghz

 Can't. :-)
 Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry

 -Original Message-
 From: Blake Bowers bbow...@mozarks.com

 Date: Wed, 29 Jul 2009 13:16:50
 To: WISPA General Listwireless@wispa.org
 Subject: [WISPA] 4.9 Ghz


 I have been asked by some folks in an adjoining state how
 they would find out if a group is using 4.9 for their for-profit
 backbone, while they provide space for public safety on the
 4.9 system also.

 Any ideas?


 Don't take your organs to heaven,
 heaven knows we need them down here!
 Be an organ donor, sign your donor card today.



 
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Re: [WISPA] just attended broadband stimulus seminar and WOW.....

2009-07-28 Thread Charles Wyble
What you all seem to have forgotten. the big companies don't want 
the stimulus money. It requires them to open themselves up to the SAME 
level of INSANE TRANSPARENCY that any other grant applicant would have.

They reject the money for the same exact reasons you all are.

Therefore please  sit down and shut up :)


Robert West wrote:
 ATT was just an example.  I'm sure someone will be purchased but if
 anything I see it as one company buying up and consolidating smaller
 companies to make one big network.  But even with that, I still see the
 cellular companies trumping it all.  They already have the basic
 infrastructure, the financing, the political muscle and even the
 frequencies.  I'm not saying to jump ship, it's just good to keep an eye out
 and play what if in order to survive.  For me anyway.  If they erode the
 market, we just have to come up with other products and more innovative
 things to offer that they can't.  :)  
 
 
 -Original Message-
 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
 Behalf Of Tom DeReggi
 Sent: Tuesday, July 28, 2009 3:10 PM
 To: WISPA General List
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] just attended broadband stimulus seminar and WOW.
 
 Who said the buyer had to be ATT?  By the way, ATT bought Wayport, a wifi 
 company. It didn;t make sense for ATT to upgrade infrastruvcture and take 
 Wayport's market, when all they had to do is inject investment into the 
 engine and share in the profits.  Allthoguh Wayport was more of a LAN than a
 
 WAN company, it does show private wireless companies can be attractive to 
 RBOC.
 
 
 
 
 Tom DeReggi
 RapidDSL  Wireless, Inc
 IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband
 
 
 - Original Message - 
 From: Robert West robert.w...@just-micro.com
 To: 'WISPA General List' wireless@wispa.org
 Sent: Tuesday, July 28, 2009 1:07 PM
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] just attended broadband stimulus seminar and WOW.
 
 
 But I don't really envision ATT coming to me and cashing me out.  What I
 see is them upgrading their infrastructure and taking the market.  They
 already have presence in our areas with cellular.  I don't see think they
 will care one bit about most of us small time operators.  If we had a much
 bigger presence and were able to compete on the same national level that
 they can, maybe.  But as it is, we're just the small time pizza joint down
 the street that Pizza Hut opened across from offering items at half price.
 Well, until the small time joint closes.  Then it's full price from then
 on..



 -Original Message-
 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
 Behalf Of David E. Smith
 Sent: Tuesday, July 28, 2009 12:23 PM
 To: WISPA General List
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] just attended broadband stimulus seminar and WOW.

 Robert West wrote:
 Why should [big companies] invest
 their cash in building a market when we can do it for them and once it's
 about ripe, they can just walk in and pick it?  We need to do what we can
 to
 protect our little piece of the pie somehow.
 A small entrepreneur sees an opportunity, builds something that lots of
 people want, makes some money from it, then a larger company buys it and
 makes said entrepreneur filthy rich (or at least better-off than he
 was). The customers win (they get the benefit of the new network
 regardless of who built it), the guy that just cashed out wins, the
 bigger company that buys the network wins (they presumably see profit
 potential or else they wouldn't buy). I thought this sort of
 sweat-equity-for-cash tradeoff was basically the American dream.

 I don't see this being a bad thing for anyone involved.

 David Smith
 MVN.net





 
 
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Re: [WISPA] just attended broadband stimulus seminar and WOW.....

2009-07-28 Thread Charles Wyble


Robert West wrote:
 But a lot of these companies are government regulated already and have to
 abide by certain amounts of transparency due to various regulations and
 agreements. 


Sure. So do WISPS if I'm not mistaken. The e-mail that started this 
thread mentioned the famous 477. :)

  But I know what you're saying.  I
 don't imagine some big company grabbing the cash and swooping in and taking
 us all over. 

Sure. However the working theory seems to be that the cash will be used 
to enter new markets and/or starve out existing players.

  But the spirit of the Rural Electrification Act of 1936 this
 isn't.  The idea is to provide broadband access to every corner of the U.S.
 In 1936 they had co-ops formed who all worked together for the common goal.
 The only people I have had contact me have been the Connect Ohio bunch who
 do the same meetings in the other states and from whom I receive a monthly
 newsletter with pictures of them with various politicians and
 representatives from the major telecoms and not much info on how to get this
 goal accomplished.  

Right.

 
 A few years ago I lived in Niagara Falls New York.  The economy there
 absolutely sucks so the county was awarding a grant to some unknown company
 to come in and provide wireless internet to the entire county.  I don't
 remember the dollar amount but it was HUGE.  The local WISP, yes, there was
 already a company who was providing the larger populated areas with
 wireless, he was never considered.  The county supposedly thought that some
 bigger outfit from out of the area would do a better job.  The local guy, I
 believe, was quoted as saying he could cover the entire county for 10 grand
 or less in equipment and he already had the basic setup, he just had to
 extend out further.  But no, they threw tens of thousands of dollars to
 someone outside of the area to do the same as this guy was doing.

Hm. Very interesting.


 
 I think that's where most of my frustration comes from.  I never had dollar
 signs in my eyes from this, only as maybe a means to achieve a few goals a
 bit quicker.  But no big deal.  It's how it's tossed up and celebrated by
 these big shot government types and turns out to be a bunch of hype that is
 a big waste of my time.


Right. It very much looks like the overall stimulus package fits that 
category. Now they are discussing another one. *shudders* However it may 
be too early to fully appreciate the impact. :)

   Kinda like when your brother in law offers to come
 help work on your truck.  Yeah, he comes over and yeah he'll be in the
 garage.  But how much quicker could you have got the job done without his
 help???  ;)

Excellent analogy. However in this case there seems to be a gap that 
isn't being filled by the current crop of providers (small independent 
(W)ISPS and the big guys.

My understanding of the stimulus package, was designed to add another 
variable to folks existing business plans and financial models. Was 
something not possible before, be made possible with an influx of cash.

Folks I have spoken with who are actively pursuing grants (particularly 
ARRA grants) support my assessment.

Will that turn out to be the case? Who knows.

 
 Most of us would do it quicker and cheaper and with better quality than any
 big company because we have to.  

Right. I agree.

If no one goes after the grant money due to the evidently draconian 
rules (I haven't read the NOFA in it's entirety as of yet) then that 
should send a message and the rules will get changed. Broadband policy 
does seem to be a priority for this administration. We have a chance to 
shape that policy and make sure we have a seat at the table.





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Re: [WISPA] just attended broadband stimulus seminar and WOW.....

2009-07-28 Thread Charles Wyble


Tom DeReggi wrote:
 The one thing that had initially scared me was large players moving into 
 wireless.

They seem to be actively pursuing it. They provide a lot of hotspots at 
places like starbucks and allow DSL users to connect for free. SBC has 
been doing it for some time, and now Verizon is as well.

 For example a Comcast or Verizon saying hey, OK we'll use PArt-15 spectrum 
 to, and apply for teh grants . 

Except for the part about the ridiculous amount of transparency it would 
bring.

But that doesn;t scare me anymore.
 The reason is its to hard to make businesses work for unlicensed. 

Oh I don't think so. They have enough money to do it where they have 
sufficient middle mile infrastructure built out. If they wanted to, they 
would simply deploy wifi as the last mile instead of DSL. It's a well 
understood operational model, as evidenced by the folks on this list. 
Sure there are quirks here and there, but the vast majority of posts to 
this list discuss business models, threats, and can someone service 
area x. Which is perfectly fine. :) I'm just comparing it to other 
lists I'm on, where things are in the very early stages (like open 
source GSM stacks for example).

So the telcos simply didn't do wifi because they have existing copper in 
the ground and make plenty from that. If they ever decide to go into 
small areas, I can say with about 100% certainty they won't do anything 
but wireless (at least in the typical consumer price point range).

I mean isn't that what the WISPS are doing now? It's the only viable 
model near as I can tell.

This is why I think that the vast majority (say 90% or so) of the 
broadband money should go to building out the middle mile from things 
like LAMBDA rail. In fact they put in a proposal offering up their fiber 
network for use to build middle mile off of.

Then just hang wifi / wimax  off of that.


It doesn't
 scale well.  But it works well for small providers.
 I'm referring to manageing and troubleshooting the last mile is to 
 difficult, unless the party is intimently involved with the last mile 
 network.

Um yeah verizon and sbc are all over that with a little thing called 
DSL :)

 Its hard to outsource it to central support on the other side of the 
 country.

They do that pretty well already. At least on my business class connection.

 Of course there will be consolidation, but I think consolidation will 
 eventually start to become counter productive, as the consolidation starts 
 to become to larger.

Maybe yes, maybe no. I think it's hard to say.


 
 Thedeath of  small wireless companies will not be from consolidation.  It 
 will be because an area will reach a state where it no longer needs wireless 
 to the scale that will be large enough to support the small provider.  When 
 consumers are given the choice to have video over broadband, for the same 
 price as broadband, most will likely choose it.
 
 The question is whether Satelite TV will survive? As long as it has a viable 
 percentage of market share, there will always be a market for wireless 
 broadband, that doesn't have to operate at fiber to the home speeds, to be 
 valuable.  Wireless is more than capable to adequately offer the double play 
 (voice).
 
 When Fiber to the home is made possible by grants, its not the cable cos 
 that  are hurt, its the satillite providers that are hurt more.

Well except that's not viable. Fiber is SUPER expensive and not a viable 
option in anything but major urban areas.

Wireless is far more bang for the buck. One can get a substantial amount 
of bandwidth, and do QoS tricks etc.


But you all know that. :)



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Re: [WISPA] Nice unit for POP Router / Appliance

2009-07-28 Thread Charles Wyble


Josh Luthman wrote:
 I am sure that MT will support the RT* chipsets - it is Linux after all.
From my experience Linux supports every NIC and better then Windows.  Anyone
 from the 3com 905a or b Win98 era?


I had so succesfully blocked those memories until today.

Bad Josh! :)



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Re: [WISPA] Nice unit for POP Router / Appliance

2009-07-28 Thread Charles Wyble


Josh Luthman wrote:
 I do apologize.

Haha. :)



   Just realize Linux did not have this problem and
 those cards are so abundant. 

Oh I know. I'm well aware of that. :)

Linux is awesome. I absolutely love it.

  Made me some serious bandwidth servers
 for cheap at LAN parties...


Yes it did.




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Re: [WISPA] Nice unit for POP Router / Appliance

2009-07-28 Thread Charles Wyble
Quite right.

Especially on a tower. One wants as few ports and cables as possible. :)

Jayson Baker wrote:
 VLAN
 
 On Tue, Jul 28, 2009 at 3:37 PM, Josh Luthman
 j...@imaginenetworksllc.comwrote:
 
 Well the subject included POP router.  Kind of difficult to route with
 one
 interface =P

 Josh Luthman
 Office: 937-552-2340
 Direct: 937-552-2343
 1100 Wayne St
 Suite 1337
 Troy, OH 45373

 When you have eliminated the impossible, that which remains, however
 improbable, must be the truth.
 --- Sir Arthur Conan Doyle


 On Tue, Jul 28, 2009 at 5:32 PM, John Valenti vale...@lir.msu.edu wrote:

 Josh,
 You wouldn't need a NIC unless you want dual ethernet (comes with one
 on motherboard).
 But you do need to put in a stick of laptop memory and a boot device.
 Maybe USB flash, IDECF or SATA DOM, because the CF slot is hard to
 get at.
 Oh, the one I have says 19V DC power brick, so I don't think you could
 feed it directly off a battery.
 -John

 On Jul 28, 2009, at 4:30 PM, Josh Luthman wrote:

 $120 PC + $20 NIC for a desktop one...
 http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16856167032

 Josh Luthman
 Office: 937-552-2340
 Direct: 937-552-2343
 1100 Wayne St
 Suite 1337
 Troy, OH 45373




 
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Re: [WISPA] FW: Introducing Bullet M: 100+Mbps Real TCP/IP Throughput

2009-07-22 Thread Charles Wyble
Has UBNT not heard of capital financing?

With the demand for their products, credit ought to be a cinch no?

I mean

Robert West wrote:
 Actually, I am forced to at times due to lack of availability.  As I said in
 an earlier post, in my opinion, Ubiquiti makes very good and reliable
 equipment.  Given a choice I would pick the NS2 and 5's for all CPEs, XR
 cards for the Mikrotik and the bullets for quick, down and dirty installs on
 the fly.  However..  I have found myself waiting 6 months or more
 for things and it seems that the availability varies between vendors.  For
 instance, I have been on backorder for some 2.4ghz Ubiquiti Airview2s since
 March with one vendor we use yet it's now available at many other vendors
 with just a click.  We also have a load of Ubiquiti cards and boards back
 ordered with yet another vendor since February.  That order I have since
 given up on and replaced with product from Mikrotik (including radio cards)
 and I have slowly ordered the same products that are on backorder with one
 vendor from other vendors.  And this is not always new products.  (How many
 posts have we seen from people begging for NS2s?)  Now I know one is saying,
 Why use so many vendors? but the reason is because we have to in order to
 have a decent supply stream.  In that respect, I guess it spreads the love
 amongst the dealers.  
 
 My post, however, was tongue in cheek.  Just because I have an issue with
 the way a certain company operates doesn't mean I need to pack my bags and
 take my business elsewhere.  Not at all.  Besides, I'm trying to keep our
 equipment list simple, consistent and with quality equipment, not a
 hodgepodge of whatever I can afford or what is available today.  I was just
 voicing my frustration, not trashing a company.  Love it or leave it is no
 way to be.  There is no place in life where you can agree with everything
 100%.  
 
 So to sum it up
 
 Chill.
 
 Bob-
 Just Micro Digital Services Inc.
 
 
 -Original Message-
 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
 Behalf Of Jayson Baker
 Sent: Wednesday, July 22, 2009 9:45 AM
 To: WISPA General List
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] FW: Introducing Bullet M: 100+Mbps Real TCP/IP
 Throughput
 
 If you don't like their marketing and distribution methods, you could always
 buy someone elses equipment.
 It's a known fact Ubiquiti announces new equipment long before they start
 manufacturing it.
 
 On Wed, Jul 22, 2009 at 7:30 AM, Robert West
 robert.w...@just-micro.comwrote:
 
 Is this the same reason they only make electricity available in Iraq for 2
 hours a day?

 Also.

 I was thinking, if that sort of marketing makes good sense, I should raise
 my prices 50%, only give wireless access on every other day between the
 hours of 11:00am and 2:00pm and again at 6:45pm and 11:20pm.  Porn sites
 will be given access only on a Wednesday and YouTube once a month.  With
 this marketing idea, I just can't go wrong!  :)

 -Original Message-
 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
 Behalf Of Bradley D. Thornton
 Sent: Wednesday, July 22, 2009 3:20 AM
 To: WISPA General List
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] FW: Introducing Bullet M: 100+Mbps Real TCP/IP
 Throughput

 That's Datsun.

 the 240Z got everyone into a frenzy because, by design of Nissan, they
 made sure that everyone had to get on a waiting list for one. It's been
 a marketing tool ever since for desireable things.


 Robert West wrote:
 I was looking at it myself.  Everyone is negative stock-wise.  At least
 that's what I see.  Just like Ubiquiti to release a product with zero
 stock.
 Darn good products but I swear, they must have got their marketing ideas
 from the Nintendo, PlayStation and McRib sandwich.  Create a demand by
 having your products available sporadically.





 -Original Message-
 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
 Behalf Of Cameron Kilton
 Sent: Tuesday, July 21, 2009 5:34 PM
 To: wireless@wispa.org
 Subject: [WISPA] FW: Introducing Bullet M: 100+Mbps Real TCP/IP
 Throughput
   http://e2ma.net/oz/2226372211/2026197/10197/spacer.gif
 http://e2ma.net/oz/2226372211/2026197/10197/spacer.gif
 If you're having trouble viewing this email, you may see it online
 http://e2ma.net/map/view=CampaignPublic/id=10197.2226372211/rid=0bb40cf
 d2aa52f2df60569807ae43a20 .

 http://e2ma.net/map/view=Forward/ID=10197.2226372211/rid=0bb40cfd2aa52f
 2df60569807ae43a20/send_to_friend Forward this message to a friend


 Anybody heard anything about this yet or where you can get to try?



 -Cam



 -Original Message-
 From: Ubiquiti Networks Inc. [mailto:sa...@ubnt.com]
 Sent: Tuesday, July 21, 2009 4:06 PM
 To: c...@midcoast.com
 Subject: Introducing Bullet M: 100+Mbps Real TCP/IP Throughput





 http://e2ma.net/go/2226372211/2026197/75867791/10197/goto:http:/www.ubn
 t.com Ubiquiti Home Page


Re: [WISPA] FW: Introducing Bullet M: 100+Mbps Real TCP/IP Throughput

2009-07-21 Thread Charles Wyble
Where did Michael say it wasn't?

Bret Clark wrote:
 Uhm...and how is that different from releasing products with zero stock ;) ?
 
 Michael Baird wrote:
 Ubiquiti does release product with zero stock. They take orders from 
 their resellers after the announcement, and fill them in batches. 
 
 
 
 
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Re: [WISPA] Tranzeo TR-5800 Access

2009-07-17 Thread Charles Wyble
Do a broadcast ping with something plugged straight into it?



Josh Luthman wrote:
 IIRC Tranzeo has a cdp utility on it - and a mac finding tool.
 
 Not sure if one of these would work as that model isn't listed...
 
 http://support.tranzeo.com/files.php?utilities
 
 Josh Luthman
 Office: 937-552-2340
 Direct: 937-552-2343
 1100 Wayne St
 Suite 1337
 Troy, OH 45373
 
 When you have eliminated the impossible, that which remains, however
 improbable, must be the truth.
 --- Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
 
 
 On Fri, Jul 17, 2009 at 12:08 PM, Jeremy Parr jeremyp...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 I have a few used TR-5800s that I do not know the IP address so. Any
 tricks to locating it? The MAC address is worn off the back label, and
 sniffing the wire reveals no activity (should it?).



 
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Re: [WISPA] Tranzeo TR-5800 Access

2009-07-17 Thread Charles Wyble
These things don't have a console port?



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Re: [WISPA] Question re: WISP for sale

2009-07-17 Thread Charles Wyble
ROFL ... NTIA got you all tied up ? :)

Brian Webster wrote:
 I would certainly map out your network and show the total number of
 households able to be reached, not just base it on the number of subscribers
 you have. I know someone who can do that type of work :-) But not until
 after August 14th.
 
 
 
 Thank You,
 Brian Webster
 
 -Original Message-
 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org]on
 Behalf Of Patrick D. Nix, Jr
 Sent: Friday, July 17, 2009 3:21 PM
 To: wireless@wispa.org
 Subject: [WISPA] Question re: WISP for sale
 
 
 I apologize as I know this has been discussed on the list before.  We
 are entertaining the idea of selling out of our respectable size
 wireless ISP business in eastern Oklahoma.  We have about 500 (growing
 daily) subscribers.  Anyway, we are working on determining the net worth
 of the business.  Any thoughts or formulas for determining this?
 
 
 
 Patrick Nix, Jr.,
 Computer Network Solutions
 CSWEB.NET Internet Services
 IT Manager
 
 http://www.cnetworksolutions.com
 http://www.csweb.net
 
 (918) 235-0414
 
 
 
 
 
 Attention: This e-mail and any attachments may contain confidential and
 privileged information. If you are not the intended recipient, please
 notify the sender immediately by return e-mail, delete this e-mail and
 destroy any copies. Any dissemination or use of this information by a
 person other than the intended recipient is unauthorized and may be
 illegal.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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 http://signup.wispa.org/
 
 
 
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Re: [WISPA] Question re: WISP for sale

2009-07-17 Thread Charles Wyble
Actually that was addressed to Brian. :)

But I hear ya. :)

Patrick D. Nix, Jr wrote:
 No, actually we were awarded a RUS grant back in 2006 and we've completed 
 that project.  We're just tired out, and ready for a change. :-)
 
 Patrick Nix, Jr.,
 Computer Network Solutions
 CSWEB.NET Internet Services
 IT Manager
 http://www.cnetworksolutions.com
 http://www.csweb.net
 (918) 235-0414
  
 
 Attention: This e-mail and any attachments may contain confidential and 
 privileged information. If you are not the intended recipient, please notify 
 the sender immediately by return e-mail, delete this e-mail and destroy any 
 copies. Any dissemination or use of this information by a person other than 
 the intended recipient is unauthorized and may be illegal.
 
 
 -Original Message-
 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On 
 Behalf Of Charles Wyble
 Sent: Friday, July 17, 2009 3:03 PM
 To: bwebs...@wirelessmapping.com; WISPA General List
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] Question re: WISP for sale
 
 ROFL ... NTIA got you all tied up ? :)
 
 Brian Webster wrote:
 I would certainly map out your network and show the total number of
 households able to be reached, not just base it on the number of subscribers
 you have. I know someone who can do that type of work :-) But not until
 after August 14th.



 Thank You,
 Brian Webster

 -Original Message-
 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org]on
 Behalf Of Patrick D. Nix, Jr
 Sent: Friday, July 17, 2009 3:21 PM
 To: wireless@wispa.org
 Subject: [WISPA] Question re: WISP for sale


 I apologize as I know this has been discussed on the list before.  We
 are entertaining the idea of selling out of our respectable size
 wireless ISP business in eastern Oklahoma.  We have about 500 (growing
 daily) subscribers.  Anyway, we are working on determining the net worth
 of the business.  Any thoughts or formulas for determining this?



 Patrick Nix, Jr.,
 Computer Network Solutions
 CSWEB.NET Internet Services
 IT Manager

 http://www.cnetworksolutions.com
 http://www.csweb.net

 (918) 235-0414



 

 Attention: This e-mail and any attachments may contain confidential and
 privileged information. If you are not the intended recipient, please
 notify the sender immediately by return e-mail, delete this e-mail and
 destroy any copies. Any dissemination or use of this information by a
 person other than the intended recipient is unauthorized and may be
 illegal.





 
 
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Re: [WISPA] Tranzeo TR-5800 Access

2009-07-17 Thread Charles Wyble
See if they will do a distribution deal. :)

Josh Luthman wrote:
 Patent and sell it at $100 a piece!
 
 Josh Luthman
 Office: 937-552-2340
 Direct: 937-552-2343
 1100 Wayne St
 Suite 1337
 Troy, OH 45373
 
 When you have eliminated the impossible, that which remains, however
 improbable, must be the truth.
 --- Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
 
 
 On Fri, Jul 17, 2009 at 5:37 PM, Jeremy Parr jeremyp...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 2009/7/17 Jeremy Parr jeremyp...@gmail.com:
 I have a few used TR-5800s that I do not know the IP address so. Any
 tricks to locating it? The MAC address is worn off the back label, and
 sniffing the wire reveals no activity (should it?).
 Ok, I got these things reset. All four units responded on the default
 IP address after resetting, despite not transmitting a single bit of
 data out of their wired ports before. See the pictures in the link for
 info on making your own Tranzeo reset tool.

 http://www.gonzorock.com/gallery/v/Jeremy/TranzeoReset/



 
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Re: [WISPA] POE Switch box

2009-07-15 Thread Charles Wyble
On a cisco poe enabled switch can't you just do

conf t
interface Gig0/0
shutdown
no shutdown
done

to power cycle?

Lots of resellers out there.


Jason Hensley wrote:
 Looking for recommendations on a 10+ port POE switch that will do up to
 24volt.  Prefer remote manageable with options to switch power on and off
 per port (remote reboot per port).
 
 Thanks in advance!
 
 
 
 
 
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Re: [WISPA] Re-evaluating our anti-spam solution

2009-07-14 Thread Charles Wyble
+1 for postfix and the mentioned add ons.

3k and it's not redundant? Good grief.

Though it's not a few hours.

https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Postfix

Copy/paste from the howtos. Takes like 30 minutes.



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Re: [WISPA] Re-evaluating our anti-spam solution

2009-07-14 Thread Charles Wyble


Scottie Arnett wrote:
 Agreed! Been using Postfix since I told Postini to take a hike. They both use 
 a modified version of Postfix and related add-ons. You can make a spam 
 machine out of the cheapest hardware now.

I presume you mean anti spam machine? :)



  I have been doing this for over 3 years and have a much better 
customer satisfaction.
 
 Scottie


Yeah.

I can't imagine not having access to logs for my mail server. Would 
drive me crazy.  So many mail related issues that pop up.







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Re: [WISPA] Re-evaluating our anti-spam solution

2009-07-14 Thread Charles Wyble
Block people from using those sites?

Kick them off your network?

Are these end users doing this? Or do they have bot infected machines 
using webmail to send spam in an automated fashion? If so then 
snort+clamav should do the trick.

I presume folks run inbound and outbound IDS right? I sure hope so. :)

Olufemi Adalemo wrote:
 I have rather different anti-spam requirements
 For a while now I've been looking for a solution to stop users on a network
 sending spam via web-based email like Hotmail, Gmail and Yahoo by scanning
 the outgoing HTTP POST command on a proxy server based on Bayesian
 statistics like Dansguardian which would have been great if it did POST
 scanning, is there anything new out there that fits this description?
 
 Femi
 
 
 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
 Behalf Of Travis Johnson
 Sent: 14 July 2009 05:40
 To: sarn...@info-ed.com; WISPA General List
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] Re-evaluating our anti-spam solution
 
 The difference with Postini compared to an in-house box is Postini stops the
 incoming SPAM before it uses any bandwidth on our backbone. Last time I
 checked (over a year ago), it was saving us 3-4Mbps of traffic (24x7). I
 would guess now it's closer to 7-10Mbps of incoming SPAM flow that never
 makes it to our network.
 
 Postini also queues are mail if we ever have a major problem. We had our
 email server have a controller failure about a year ago... while we were
 fixing it and brining up a new box (4-5 hours), no email was lost or even
 bounced because Positni had queued it all up (on 10,000+ email accounts). :)
 
 Travis
 Microserv
 
 Scottie Arnett wrote: 
 Agreed! Been using Postfix since I told Postini to take a hike. They both
 use a modified version of Postfix and related add-ons. You can make a spam
 machine out of the cheapest hardware now. I have been doing this for over 3
 years and have a much better customer satisfaction.
 
 Scottie
 
 -- Original Message --
 From: Jeremy Parr jeremyp...@gmail.com
 Reply-To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
 Date:  Mon, 13 Jul 2009 20:25:16 -0400
 
   
 2009/7/13 Don Grossman d...@willitsonline.com:
 
 It seems time to take a look at our anti-spam solution.  Currently we
 are looking to replace out Barracuda due to ongoing issues with the
 box that after several attempts to work with Barracuda can not be
 resolved.  Barracuda is helpful but like to point at other things like
 DNS and unrelated stuff.  In the end they log into the box after
 wasting time so something to kick the box and we are good for an
 undetermined amount of time.
 
 The Barracuda gives us a few features that we like such as an in house
 box that we are not paying per email address or domain.  Also the per
 user configurability is great for letting users independently control
 their white and blacklists.
 
 In a nutshell what products should we look at that offer us similar
 features as the Barracuda box.
   
 You can roll your own with Postfix and a few addons. After looking at
 the configuration options for a lot of the Postfix addons, you come to
 the realization that with a few hours of work, you can have all of the
 software tools used by the Barracuda internally, and have root access
 to the box to fix it yourself when it goes south, instead of waiting
 on them. You can also throw in things like redundant hard drives, and
 redundant power. How a company can market a $3k+ device with a single
 IDE drive in good conscience is beyond me.
 
 I can't find the link right now, but there is a package that provides
 users with an accessible, configurable quarantine, just like the
 Barracuda. I'll post the link as soon as it turns up.
 
 
 
 
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 $30.00/mth.
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Re: [WISPA] Re-evaluating our anti-spam solution

2009-07-14 Thread Charles Wyble


David E. Smith wrote:

 What kind of problems were/are you having with your Barracudas? On the 
 (exceedingly rare) occasion that ours do anything odd, rebooting them 
 almost always clears it up.

One should NEVER have to reboot a mail server, outside of a kernel 
upgrade (and even then one can use ksplice).

I'm sorry but that's a pathetic resolution process.

I have mail/web/dns servers with years of uptime. They sit there and 
just work. RAID + UPS = 100% uptime.











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Re: [WISPA] WE HAVE NOFA

2009-07-03 Thread Charles Wyble
Ditto.

Myself and my COO will be attending the LA workshop on July 24th.


St. Louis Broadband wrote:
 I certainly intent to bring it up at the workshop I will be attending.
 
  
 
 Victoria Proffer  - CEO 
 
  http://stlbroadband.com/ StLouisBroadband.com  314.974.5600 
 
 SBA Certified WOSB - SBA 8 (a) Certification - in process.
 
 STLBBLogo
 
  
 
 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
 Behalf Of Jack Unger
 Sent: Friday, July 03, 2009 1:42 PM
 To: WISPA General List
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] WE HAVE NOFA
 
  
 
 I think it's going to be important for WISPA to educate the government and
 the public so they learn to differentiate between broadband FIXED wireless
 Internet access and MOBILE (i.e. cellular) wireless Internet access. If we
 don't differentiate these two different services then the grants (and the
 service) definitions can become and remain muddied. We already made this
 point once in public at the Las Vegas hearing but IMHO we really need to
 keep bringing this point up. No one else seems to be making it. 
 
 jack
 
 
 Tom DeReggi wrote: 
 
 We've been talking about on Member's list.
  
 The worst thing I saw about it was 3G cellular service appears to 
 disqualify an area from being eligible for funding, based on definition of 
 underserved.
  
 An area is eligible for underserved if it does not have a provider offering 
 over 3mbps down stream. However, without conditions for upload, or mandating
 
 average, or considering wired only, 3G kills us because 3G is spec'd at 3.1 
 peak download. WISPA lobbied for 2mb upload and speeds based on average. We 
 didn't get that. :-(
  
 Tom DeReggi
 RapidDSL  Wireless, Inc
 IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband
  
  
 - Original Message - 
 From: RickG  mailto:rgunder...@gmail.com rgunder...@gmail.com
 To: WISPA General List  mailto:wireless@wispa.org wireless@wispa.org
 Sent: Wednesday, July 01, 2009 11:42 PM
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] WE HAVE NOFA
  
  
   
 
 With more strings than an orchestra!
 -RickG
  
 On Wed, Jul 1, 2009 at 1:45 PM, Charles Wyble mailto:char...@thewybles.com
 char...@thewybles.com 
 wrote:
 
 
 http://is.gd/1ktef
  
  
  
 
 
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Re: [WISPA] Problem with an NS2 running the latest firmware

2009-07-01 Thread Charles Wyble
OpenWRT. :)

I refuse to run stock firmware on my wifi gear.

Roll my own image.

http://luci.freifunk-halle.net/ is very cool.




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Re: [WISPA] Problem with an NS2 running the latest firmware

2009-07-01 Thread Charles Wyble


Josh Luthman wrote:
 If I have a bug and need a fix I like holding someone responsible, for
 business.

Yeah that's great if they actually fix the bug in a timely manner.

I love being able to pick up the phone, or jump on IRC and have a dev 
respond within hours.

Plus open source implementation of TDMA from Berkely + UBNT gear running 
custom openwrt not a bad combination.



 
 For personal stuff, I agree - homebrew all the way!
 
 Josh Luthman
 Office: 937-552-2340
 Direct: 937-552-2343
 1100 Wayne St
 Suite 1337
 Troy, OH 45373
 
 When you have eliminated the impossible, that which remains, however
 improbable, must be the truth.
 --- Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
 
 
 On Wed, Jul 1, 2009 at 1:16 PM, Charles Wyble char...@thewybles.com wrote:
 
 OpenWRT. :)

 I refuse to run stock firmware on my wifi gear.

 Roll my own image.

 http://luci.freifunk-halle.net/ is very cool.




 
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[WISPA] WE HAVE NOFA

2009-07-01 Thread Charles Wyble
http://is.gd/1ktef




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Re: [WISPA] Problem with an NS2 running the latest firmware

2009-07-01 Thread Charles Wyble


Jayson Baker wrote:
 Plus open source implementation of TDMA from Berkely + UBNT gear running
 custom openwrt not a bad combination.
 
 
 What?  Is there a custom openwrt from Berkely that supports TDMA?  
 Please clarify.


http://tier.cs.berkeley.edu/wiki/Wireless

http://tier.cs.berkeley.edu/wiki/Tierlinux

Actually it's an x86 distribution.

Though... wrt were used... details at 
http://www.wilac.net/descargas/documentos/EnlaceAguila_Baul.pdf


I have yet to test on the UBNT. Plan to soon.



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Re: [WISPA] Problem with an NS2 running the latest firmware

2009-07-01 Thread Charles Wyble


Jayson Baker wrote:
 Plus open source implementation of TDMA from Berkely + UBNT gear running
 custom openwrt not a bad combination.
 
 


Actually

http://www.ab9il.net/wlan-projects/wifi1.html is a better page.

Just search for 279km wireless link




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Re: [WISPA] email black lists

2009-06-30 Thread Charles Wyble



Also you might want to talk with http://www.maawg.org/



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[WISPA] IRC channel

2009-06-30 Thread Charles Wyble
All,

Would there be any interest in creating a jabber or IRC channel for the 
group?

Sometimes it's more convenient then e-mail for resolving issues.

What do folks think?



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Re: [WISPA] IRC channel

2009-06-30 Thread Charles Wyble
Cool.

I joined.



Rick Harnish wrote:
 There is one, has been for years at irc.mvn.net #wispa.  I have also
 installed a chat client at http://www.wispa.org/wispa-chat/ 
 
 -Original Message-
 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
 Behalf Of Josh Luthman
 Sent: Tuesday, June 30, 2009 5:10 PM
 To: WISPA General List
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] IRC channel
 
 I'd go there
 
 On 6/30/09, Charles Wyble char...@thewybles.com wrote:
 All,

 Would there be any interest in creating a jabber or IRC channel for the
 group?

 Sometimes it's more convenient then e-mail for resolving issues.

 What do folks think?



 
 
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Re: [WISPA] Anyone have NS2 in stock?

2009-06-28 Thread Charles Wyble
It has been running flawlessly for me, for a few months straight.

With the 2.2 firmware.

I upgraded to the latest stock fw last night, then reflashed with openwrt.



Tom Sharples wrote:
 Basic issue with the ubnt integrated units is that the firmware is still a 
 bit flakey, altho they are working on it and it's getting better:
 
 http://www.ubnt.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=10438
 
  and there's no internal hardware watchdog to rescue the system after a 
 firmware lockup.
 
 It can take months to work out all the bugs in a complex embedded firmware 
 environment, and every time you add a lot of new features, the clock starts 
 over again.
 
 Tom S.
 
 
 
 - Original Message - 
 From: Jeremy Parr jeremyp...@gmail.com
 To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
 Sent: Sunday, June 28, 2009 12:26 PM
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] Anyone have NS2 in stock?
 
 
 2009/6/26 Charles Wyble char...@thewybles.com:
 I'm hearing to avoid the ns2 and go with the ps2/5. Less issues.

 What do folks say?

 I've been putting some decent load in both a hotspot and point to point
 configuration configuration. It's worked flawlessly so far.

 I'm planning to do some pretty serious stress testing on it and see if I
 can break it.
 I just logged in to an NS2 (from the wired side) acting as an AP,
 changed the ACK timeout, it rebooted (of course) it and never came
 back.

 *sigh*


 
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Re: [WISPA] OT, pesky email stuff

2009-06-26 Thread Charles Wyble
There are whitelist companies. Goog/yahoo/live and other popular web 
sites (ie mc donalds/BofA etc) pay 50k+ a year to be on that list.

People then subscribe to that list and pass the traffic uninhibited for 
a share of the profit.

I previously worked at an event management company that got well over 10 
million visitors a day, and sent out massive amounts of e-mail. We paid 
to be on such lists.

George Rogato wrote:
 How come Google, Yahoo, and Live.com don't get black listed.
 I'm pretty sure 1 million times more spam comes out of those domains 
 than any small independent isp's ...
 
 
 
 Marlon K. Schafer wrote:
 Hi All,

 What are you guys doing for email these days?  I LOVE my setup for it's 
 reliability, ease of use etc.

 Hacked customer accounts and virus's are killing me though.  We don't catch 
 things until 100,000s of messages go out and we get black listed.  This has 
 now happened 3 or 4 times in the last couple of years.

 My server admins aren't coming up with a solution to this other than to 
 limit cc's to 25 per message.  We did that once before and my phone rang off 
 the hook because people can't send jokes to their friends.

 The other thing that makes it hard is that the log files that I get (up to 
 40 megs per day!) don't list the authenticated sender, only the reply 
 address.  So I see tens of thousands of messages from a user that's not even 
 mine (faked info).  sigh

 We use Courier MTA.

 My thought is to set the server to allow a max of 1000 messages per day per 
 user.  And to somehow make the log file ONLY send me the number of messages 
 received per a user, and the number sent, user name and ip addy of all those 
 sending.  Twice now I've asked about that idea and gotten no response from 
 the server admins.

 Suggestions?

 laters,
 marlon



 
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[WISPA] It's a friday....

2009-06-26 Thread Charles Wyble
I can't resist and I'm bored thoughts on the new FCC chairman?




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Re: [WISPA] Anyone have NS2 in stock?

2009-06-26 Thread Charles Wyble
I'm hearing to avoid the ns2 and go with the ps2/5. Less issues.

What do folks say?

I've been putting some decent load in both a hotspot and point to point 
configuration configuration. It's worked flawlessly so far.

I'm planning to do some pretty serious stress testing on it and see if I 
can break it.



Brian Rohrbacher wrote:
 Please contact offlist.
 
 Brian
 
 
 
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Re: [WISPA] Bullets

2009-06-26 Thread Charles Wyble
ROFL.

Josh Luthman wrote:
 We talking copper or Ubiquiti..?
 
 On 6/26/09, jree...@18-30chat.net jree...@18-30chat.net wrote:
 Anyone have some dead bullets they will sell? I am in need or 2 or 3 (mainly
 the
 end caps)

 Jeromie


 
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Re: [WISPA] Bullets

2009-06-26 Thread Charles Wyble
If your in Iran, you could probably use both.

Josh Luthman wrote:
 We talking copper or Ubiquiti..?
 
 On 6/26/09, jree...@18-30chat.net jree...@18-30chat.net wrote:
 Anyone have some dead bullets they will sell? I am in need or 2 or 3 (mainly
 the
 end caps)

 Jeromie


 
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Re: [WISPA] New ZBot variant for Outlook

2009-06-23 Thread Charles Wyble
Ah. I've been seeing a lot of those. I knew they were malware or some 
other nonsense.

Thanks for sharing.

Bleh e-mail is going to die off soon, or usage models of it will 
switch to white list only. It's getting to be ridiculous.

David Hulsebus wrote:
 FYI
 
From SANS Newsbytes 6-2-09
 
 --Spam Spreading ZBot Masquerades as Outlook Update
 (June 22, 2009)
 Spam masquerading as a Microsoft Outlook security and stability update
 actually infects computers with ZBot, a Trojan horse program that
 steals sensitive information.  The malware contains a list of
 financial institution and social networking sites; if users visit any
 of these sites on infected machines, the malware steals login and
 credit card information and sends it back to a server controlled by
 the attacker.  Earlier variants of ZBot infected computers through
 drive-by downloads.
 http://www.scmagazineus.com/Fake-Microsoft-critical-update-spam-propagating-trojan/article/138823/
 
 
 
 
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Re: [WISPA] [Motorola II] Mesh Network

2009-06-21 Thread Charles Wyble
A good custom fw package is http://ff-firmware.sourceforge.net/

L. Aaron Kaplan wrote:
 As far as I am informed, the Athens wireless folks use a custom built  
 OLSR package for Microtik.
 I think I could put that onto the www.olsr.org page
 
 FYI: OLSR.org is proven to scale to at least 1000 nodes. We currently  
 estimate a few thousand nodes is possible with linksys 200MHz devices.  
 Tests between Freifunk and Funkfeuer cross connection showed that 1000  
 nodes work.
 
 best,
 a.
 
 
 On Jun 19, 2009, at 5:28 AM, Butch Evans wrote:
 
 On Thu, 2009-06-18 at 22:19 -0400, Scott Carullo wrote:
 Butch, MT has some Mesh support built in now, I assume you have  
 tested it
 and / or helped others who may have deployed, whats your feedback on
 functionality and stability? Ready for real world deployment?
 I've tested it in numerous configurations in a lab environment.
 Configuration is quick and easy.  It works pretty well for small
 deployments, but does not work well when a router has multiple  
 wireless
 interfaces that are part of the mesh.  If the configuration includes
 
 
 
 
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Re: [WISPA] 3.65GHz Exclusion Zone

2009-06-18 Thread Charles Wyble
BTW the calculations in the RO appendix have errors. I have a corrected 
version provided to me by the FCC OET. If there is interest I can post 
it online and send the link.

Matt Liotta wrote:
 150km radius
 
 -Matt
 
 On Jun 18, 2009, at 11:01 AM, 3-dB Networks wrote:
 
 Okay I'm banging my head against the wall a bit this morning J



 Subpart Z of the FCC Part 90 Rules - Wireless Broadband Serices in the
 3650-3700 MHz Band - Section 90.1331 states:



 (a)(1) Except as provided in paragraph (a)(2) of this section, base  
 and
 fixed stations may not be located within 150 km of any grandfathered
 satellite earth station operating in the 3650-3700 MHz band. The  
 coordinates
 of these stations are available at http://www.fcc.gov/ib/sd/3650;



 My interpretation of that rule would mean that you need to draw a  
 circle of
 a radius of 150Km from each station, and this is your exclusion zone.



 Yet many maps on the web show this 150Km requirement as diameter.  
 not as a
 radius.



 Our office would be outside of the exclusion zone if it is a diameter
 requirement, yet inside the exclusion zone if it is a radius  
 requirement.



 Can anyone point me to something from the FCC that specifies what the
 requirement is?



 Thank you,



 Daniel White

 3-dB Networks

 http://www.3dbnetworks.com





 
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Re: [WISPA] Mesh Network

2009-06-18 Thread Charles Wyble


Jerry Richardson wrote:
 I believe there is still a market for municipal public wifi. I am
 finding the barrier is the cost of the radios at $1k ea minimum for a
 true mesh type dual radio system. Anything lower is cost is not true
 Mesh. Yes, I could put something together using pieces and parts however
 that's a support nightmare waiting to happen.
  
 If you could have a Mesh Radio designed the way you want, what would it
 look like?
  
 My wish would look something like this:
 - Dual radio
 - Client access on 802.11b/g (optional 4.9 model for Public Safety)
 - Mesh on 802.11a (open-mesh?) with DFS on 5.2/5.4

Yep. For me it would be 802.11n for backbone/mesh and client access on 
802.11b/g

 - Automatic scan for best channel
 - Multi-SSID (up to 16 SSID/VLAN sets)
 - BW allocation per SSID
 - QoS per VLAN
 - Encryption
 - Client Isolation
 - SNMP v1, v2

DD-WRT or OpenWRT can give you this.

 - Ping watchdog

Not sure what this is? A script that runs on the router and reboots if 
it can't ping?

 - Push/Pull config

The PTP guys did something for this with openwrt 
http://www.stephouse.net/files/openwrtprovisioner/openwrtprovisioner.v0.1.tgz 



 - NAT/DHCP to clients (running as router)
 - 10/100 Ethernet
 - Outdoor, ready to hang (not a roll-your-own)
 - Browser Configurable
 - POE
 - Tech support from a manufacturer (not third party support/forums/mail
 lists)


So it would seem UBNT gear with an OpenWRT load would do most of what 
you want?




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[WISPA] Mesh - on the cheap

2009-06-18 Thread Charles Wyble
Thought I would share this with the list


http://freifunk-texas.net/Building_a_Rural_Wireless_Mesh_Network_-_A_DIY_Guide_v0.7_65.pdf
 


I'm planning to put a 5 node mesh together this weekend and see how well 
it works.

Then I'll play with TDMA firmware from 
http://tier.cs.berkeley.edu/wiki/Wireless

I see a lot of high priced gear, and keep wondering if it's really 
necessary. I realize the CapEx vs OpEx trade off. but it seems a bit 
extreme.






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Re: [WISPA] Suggestions on Firewall

2009-06-18 Thread Charles Wyble
Bah! That's just stupid. They really ought to include snort.

How can you call yourself a network equipment vendor, if you sell a 
border product without an IDS?

Linux is really quite great for these applications. IPTABLES, decent 
routing protocol implementations and an awesome IDS. I'm appalled it 
doesn't include snort. :(



jree...@18-30chat.net wrote:
 As much as I love Mikrotik they do not have Snort. It is a very valuable tool.
 That said, you can do like i do and run Snort on a dedicated ethernet port on
 one of your existing servers and mirror everything to it. That combined with
 MT's firewall abilities is great. I have been working on dynamic firewall 
 rules
 in MT from snort and some log monitors but have not done much. The MT API is
 wonderful, if I can just wrap my brain around it.
 
 Jeromie
 
 
 Patrick D.. Nix, Jr wrote:
 Basically just wanting to protect our servers 8 servers total (3 email 2
 DNS 1 Web 2 offsite backup)

 -Original Message-
 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
 Behalf Of Alan Long
 Sent: Thursday, June 18, 2009 10:34 AM
 To: 'WISPA General List'
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] Suggestions on Firewall

 How may users behind it? How much throughput?

 
 Aerowire
 Alan Long
 Director of Network Operations
 alan.l...@aerowire.net
 687 North Dean Road
 Auburn, AL 36830
 tel: 3342759998
 mobile: 336092
 
 -Original Message-
 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
 Behalf Of Patrick D.. Nix, Jr
 Sent: Thursday, June 18, 2009 10:30 AM
 To: wireless@wispa.org
 Subject: [WISPA] Suggestions on Firewall

 Any suggestions on a good linux firewall distro.  I'm looking at either
 implementing this or going with an older Cisco PIX 525.  Which would be
 the best way to go?  Something with a nice GUI would be good

  

 Thanks



 
 
 
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Re: [WISPA] Suggestions on Firewall

2009-06-18 Thread Charles Wyble
Jeff,

H. Interesting. I would love to know more about the challenges you 
faced adding it on.

Though this is probably more of a software engineering/architecture 
discussion that may or may not be appropriate for the WISPA list. Ah who 
cares, I'm bored. :)



Jeff Broadwick wrote:
 Hi Charles,
 
 It's not a simple add-on.  We've added it as an option on ImageStream
 routers, but there have been a lot of headaches getting there.
 
 Regards,
 
 Jeff
 ImageStream 
 
 -Original Message-
 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
 Behalf Of Charles Wyble
 Sent: Thursday, June 18, 2009 4:12 PM
 To: WISPA General List
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] Suggestions on Firewall
 
 Bah! That's just stupid. They really ought to include snort.
 
 How can you call yourself a network equipment vendor, if you sell a border
 product without an IDS?
 
 Linux is really quite great for these applications. IPTABLES, decent routing
 protocol implementations and an awesome IDS. I'm appalled it doesn't include
 snort. :(
 
 
 
 jree...@18-30chat.net wrote:
 As much as I love Mikrotik they do not have Snort. It is a very valuable
 tool.
 That said, you can do like i do and run Snort on a dedicated ethernet 
 port on one of your existing servers and mirror everything to it. That 
 combined with MT's firewall abilities is great. I have been working on 
 dynamic firewall rules in MT from snort and some log monitors but have 
 not done much. The MT API is wonderful, if I can just wrap my brain around
 it.
 Jeromie


 Patrick D.. Nix, Jr wrote:
 Basically just wanting to protect our servers 8 servers total (3 
 email 2 DNS 1 Web 2 offsite backup)

 -Original Message-
 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] 
 On Behalf Of Alan Long
 Sent: Thursday, June 18, 2009 10:34 AM
 To: 'WISPA General List'
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] Suggestions on Firewall

 How may users behind it? How much throughput?

 
 Aerowire
 Alan Long
 Director of Network Operations
 alan.l...@aerowire.net
 687 North Dean Road
 Auburn, AL 36830
 tel: 3342759998
 mobile: 336092
 
 -Original Message-
 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] 
 On Behalf Of Patrick D.. Nix, Jr
 Sent: Thursday, June 18, 2009 10:30 AM
 To: wireless@wispa.org
 Subject: [WISPA] Suggestions on Firewall

 Any suggestions on a good linux firewall distro.  I'm looking at 
 either implementing this or going with an older Cisco PIX 525.  Which 
 would be the best way to go?  Something with a nice GUI would be good

  

 Thanks



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 06/18/09
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Re: [WISPA] DTV Arrives but Transition Continues

2009-06-18 Thread Charles Wyble
WISPS unite. It's time to start sending packets over them airwaves! :)

Why they don't abolish broadcast tv/radio and move to a pure IP based 
solution I don't know. It would stimulate the economy. IPTV could just 
as easy be IP radio. :)

Jack Unger wrote:
 Anyone who even suspects that they might want to set up a TV White Space 
 WAN someday should start following the news about digital television 
 (DTV). You can probably benefit from some of the information contained 
 in the following article.
 
 *http://tinyurl.com/mqhcys
 
 
 *jack*
 *
 
 -- 
 Jack Unger - President, Ask-Wi.Com, Inc.
 Author - Deploying License-Free Wireless WANs
 Serving the Broadband Wireless Industry Since 1993
 www.ask-wi.com  818-227-4220  jun...@ask-wi.com
 Twitter - wireless_jack
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Re: [WISPA] DTV Arrives but Transition Continues

2009-06-18 Thread Charles Wyble


Scottie Arnett wrote:
 Charles,
 
 You are evidently in a IP rich environment(based on your statement:and move 
 to a pure IP based solution. 


Well I use that in a somewhat generic fashion. I should have said 
internet technology based solution.

The carriers are using IPTV to deliver TV now. Over fiber for the most 
part.

We still do good here to get a nice unfettered stream of you-tube. Just 
saw today that LG is including all their TV's with Netflix built in! I 
am in one of those supposedly digital divide areas and I can say that 
there is not enough bandwidth here to support no more than 10 high def 
you-tube videos within 30 miles, no matter which carrier you choose.

Hmmm. Interesting.

Well perhaps a wifi/wimax/whitespaces solution utilzing massive amounts 
of spectrum (*cough*700 mhz block sold to $bigtelcos *cough*) will 
deliver enough bandwidth?

How much spectrum does tv/radio take up now?

I may be crazy, who knows? :) I'm just curious as to whether spectrum 
efficiency gains could be had by changing over to IP delivery in the 
tv/radio s


 
 Don't get me wrong, I am all for this White Space hype. It will hep me 
 tremendously more than you guys in the big cities. The BIG boys are 
 fighting this stuff tooth and nail so far, so it will be interesting how it 
 fills out.
 

Of course they are. This is what they do. It's all they know how to do.




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Re: [WISPA] FTTx

2009-06-17 Thread Charles Wyble
Mike,

Care to share more about the BTOP process?

Or are you just preparing a proposal for the FOA on June 30th?

Mike Hammett wrote:
 Hang.  It should actually cost less than $10k, but $10k is a safe bet.  I 
 figured it'd cost me $7k to do it myself.  I forget where I saw $10k.  I'm 
 budgeting $20k for my BTOP project to cover instances where you may have to 
 bore at up to $200k/mile.
 
 
 -
 Mike Hammett
 Intelligent Computing Solutions
 http://www.ics-il.com
 
 
 
 --
 From: sa...@michianawireless.com
 Sent: Tuesday, June 16, 2009 10:08 PM
 To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] FTTx
 
 Mike,

 Who are you working with for the build out quotes? We got quotes around 
 13,000 per mile. Was this the hang it or bury it?

 John Buwa
 Michiana Wireless

 - Original Message -
 From: Mike Hammett wispawirel...@ics-il.net
 To: sarn...@info-ed.com, WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
 Sent: Tuesday, June 16, 2009 10:08:43 AM GMT -05:00 Columbia
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] FTTx

 It's about $10k/mile to build aerial 60 - 96 strand aerial cable.

 It's about $1600/home to do a 400 or so home FTTx deployment.

 Singlemode is what you'll want to use.


 -
 Mike Hammett
 Intelligent Computing Solutions
 http://www.ics-il.com



 --
 From: Scottie Arnett sarn...@info-ed.com
 Sent: Tuesday, June 16, 2009 9:53 AM
 To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] FTTx

 What kind of cost are we looking at to get into fiber? What is the cost 
 of
 fiber now by the foot...I know this will vary by type and strands...so 
 say
 multimode, around 100 strands. I do not know much about fiber, so sorry 
 if
 these are stupid questions.

 Scottie

 -- Original Message --
 From: Charles Wyble char...@thewybles.com
 Reply-To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
 Date:  Mon, 15 Jun 2009 23:03:21 -0700

 H. thanks for the heads up.

 Chuck Bartosch wrote:
 On Jun 15, 2009, at 5:57 PM, Charles Wyble wrote:

 I'm also interested in this information.

 WiFI and other wireless networking technologies have there place, but
 fiber does as well.

 Is there any operational lists for small/medium FTTx providers?
 Funny you should ask...WISPA is just starting up a new Fiber list as
 it turns out. It's a WISPA members list.

 Chuck

 Mike Hammett wrote:
 okay, PONs have gotten faster since I last looked.  Last I knew
 they had
 peaks of a few hundred megs per it's equivalent of an AP.  Now it's
 peak is
 2.5 GB and there's a new spec due later this year for maybe 10 GB.
 I'll
 open it up to PONs.  ;-)


 -
 Mike Hammett
 Intelligent Computing Solutions
 http://www.ics-il.com



 --
 From: Mike Hammett wispawirel...@ics-il.net
 Sent: Monday, June 15, 2009 1:10 PM
 To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
 Subject: [WISPA] FTTx

 Has anyone here done any FTTx deployments?  I'm looking for a non-
 PON
 solution.  Small scale.


 -
 Mike Hammett
 Intelligent Computing Solutions
 http://www.ics-il.com



 
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 Chuck Bartosch
 Clarity Connect, Inc.
 200 Pleasant Grove Road
 Ithaca, NY 14850
 (607) 257-8268

 If all is not lost, where is it?





 
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[WISPA] Weather balloons to provide net access in Africa

2009-06-17 Thread Charles Wyble
http://www.internetevolution.com/author.asp?section_id=694doc_id=178131;


No mention of what equipment is attached to the balloons, frequency etc. 
Hopefully more details will become available.



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Re: [WISPA] FTTx

2009-06-16 Thread Charles Wyble
H. thanks for the heads up.

Chuck Bartosch wrote:
 On Jun 15, 2009, at 5:57 PM, Charles Wyble wrote:
 
 I'm also interested in this information.

 WiFI and other wireless networking technologies have there place, but
 fiber does as well.

 Is there any operational lists for small/medium FTTx providers?
 
 Funny you should ask...WISPA is just starting up a new Fiber list as  
 it turns out. It's a WISPA members list.
 
 Chuck
 
 Mike Hammett wrote:
 okay, PONs have gotten faster since I last looked.  Last I knew  
 they had
 peaks of a few hundred megs per it's equivalent of an AP.  Now it's  
 peak is
 2.5 GB and there's a new spec due later this year for maybe 10 GB.   
 I'll
 open it up to PONs.  ;-)


 -
 Mike Hammett
 Intelligent Computing Solutions
 http://www.ics-il.com



 --
 From: Mike Hammett wispawirel...@ics-il.net
 Sent: Monday, June 15, 2009 1:10 PM
 To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
 Subject: [WISPA] FTTx

 Has anyone here done any FTTx deployments?  I'm looking for a non- 
 PON
 solution.  Small scale.


 -
 Mike Hammett
 Intelligent Computing Solutions
 http://www.ics-il.com



 
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 --
 Chuck Bartosch
 Clarity Connect, Inc.
 200 Pleasant Grove Road
 Ithaca, NY 14850
 (607) 257-8268
 
 If all is not lost, where is it?
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Re: [WISPA] Project Management Software - Online

2009-06-15 Thread Charles Wyble
+1 for basecamp.

Yes there are numerous open source LAMP packages, but do you want to be 
in the IT business or the WISP business?

+1 for basecamp. Use it and be happy.

Israel Lopez-LISTS wrote:
 I'm currently running a test project with Basecamp, been so far impressed.
 
 http://www.basecamphq.com/
 
 -Israel
 
 
 Gino Villarini wrote:
 Anyone with a recomendation ?
  

 Gino A. Villarini 
 g...@aeronetpr.com 
 Aeronet Wireless Broadband Corp. 
 tel  787.273.4143   fax   787.273.4145 

  


 
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Re: [WISPA] FTTx

2009-06-15 Thread Charles Wyble
I'm also interested in this information.

WiFI and other wireless networking technologies have there place, but 
fiber does as well.

Is there any operational lists for small/medium FTTx providers?

Mike Hammett wrote:
 okay, PONs have gotten faster since I last looked.  Last I knew they had 
 peaks of a few hundred megs per it's equivalent of an AP.  Now it's peak is 
 2.5 GB and there's a new spec due later this year for maybe 10 GB.  I'll 
 open it up to PONs.  ;-)
 
 
 -
 Mike Hammett
 Intelligent Computing Solutions
 http://www.ics-il.com
 
 
 
 --
 From: Mike Hammett wispawirel...@ics-il.net
 Sent: Monday, June 15, 2009 1:10 PM
 To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
 Subject: [WISPA] FTTx
 
 Has anyone here done any FTTx deployments?  I'm looking for a non-PON 
 solution.  Small scale.


 -
 Mike Hammett
 Intelligent Computing Solutions
 http://www.ics-il.com



 
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Re: [WISPA] Conficker Attack?

2009-06-11 Thread Charles Wyble


Ryan Ghering wrote:

 As a side note, my upstream called this morning, asked if they could remove
 the access-list, stating its policy to only leave ACL's in place for 12 to
 24 hours.
 I asked them If this was conficker what can be done to permently block it.


Do they have an IPS in place? If they aren't blocking the windows ports 
(which I understand the rational for/against), then I would hope they 
have an IPS in place. If so, signatures are readily available to detect 
conficker.



 They tell me this is my issue not theres.

Heh. Typical.

  So I have to take a chance in 12
 hours when they remove the ACL that my network will be screwed again. An log
 export shows in just a 10 minute period over 18,000 address's denyed on 445
 tcp.

Yep. Sounds about right. They really should implement filtering. Can 
they do an ACL just on your vlan? I understand them not wanting to 
filter at the border. However they should be willing to filter on your 
VLAN. Is this one of the major telcos?



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Re: [WISPA] Finding Available Licensed Frequencies

2009-06-10 Thread Charles Wyble
FCC license database.

Forbes Mercy wrote:
 Is there a tool or resource to find out if certain frequencies are
 available or who owns them to lease them?  I'm particularly looking for
 2.5 in my area.
 
 Thanks,
 Forbes Mercy
 President - Washington Broadband, Inc.
 
 
 
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Re: [WISPA] Electronic Signatures

2009-06-08 Thread Charles Wyble
Ah. Gotcha.

Thanks for clarifying.

RickG wrote:
 Having an AUP is fine but it doesnt spell out the terms of a specific
 obligation between you  the end user. The big carriers obligate you
 to two year contracts when you agree online so I'm assuming we can do
 the same.
 -RickG
 
 
 On Sun, Jun 7, 2009 at 11:22 PM, Charles Wyblechar...@thewybles.com wrote:
 The big carriers don't require a signature on a contract. They also
 don't do (free/near free) installs either. I don't know if there is a
 signed contract if you pay for an install.

 Yes I realize this is a very important differentiator that we can
 provide, however I don't feel a signed contract is necessary. An AUP is
 an excellent idea as a general rule, however if they are transiting bits
 on your network, you have the right and obligation to defend that
 network. If you don't, you risk other operators dropping traffic from
 your IP rnage /AS.


 Your free to enforce your AUP with impunity. Failure to do so is the
 sole reason that bits of evil reach our border routers. A few simple
 route filters, and spam/botnets would be stopped. Subscribe to the Don't
 Route Or Peer List from Spamhaus
 (http://www.spamhaus.org/drop/index.lasso), and monitor outbound traffic.


 *sighs*



 Martha Huizenga wrote:
 Exactly, we send the contract with the install and then get it back when
 the install is done. Works fine.

 Jason Hensley wrote:
 Wow.  Seems like a waste of time and resources.  If I mailed contracts like
 that here I'd lose half my install opportunities because they would never
 send the contract back.  Send a contract with the installer, get them to
 sign it before they install, give one copy to customer, bring one back, 
 done
 deal.  If nothing else, get an electronic as an initial confirmation, then
 get an actual signature at install.



 -Original Message-
 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
 Behalf Of Scott Reed
 Sent: Saturday, June 06, 2009 6:42 AM
 To: WISPA General List
 Subject: [WISPA] Electronic Signatures

 We currently use a two-year contract for customers.  Right now we gather
 the information, generate a contract, USMail it to the customer and wait
 for them to USMail it back after they sign it before we schedule an
 installation.  We would like to reduce the time from initial contact to
 installation.  One option we are looking at is electronic signature on
 the contract. We have done some research into doing this, but thought it
 would be good to get some other input.
 If you do electronic signatures, how do you do it?
 If you use a third party to certify the signatures, who do you use?
 What is good about them?  What is not so good?



 
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Re: [WISPA] document version control? (e.g. web-based solution to check out KMZ files)

2009-06-07 Thread Charles Wyble
*shudders*

I can't use SVN after using GIT. It's so powerful and elegant.



Scott Reed wrote:
 This is a great solution. 
 I didn't find Subversion so hard to setup and getting tortoise running 
 was just follow the directions.
 Works great.  The fact that tortoise embeds in Windows Explorer means 
 you can search for files just like you do now and check them out with a 
 right-click menu.
 
 Jon Auer wrote:
 Ditto.  :-)
 If you go the subversion route check out tortoise svn for windows
 desktop client. http://tortoisesvn.tigris.org/
 Makes subversion on the client side a piece of cake.

 On Fri, Jun 5, 2009 at 11:49 PM, D. Ryan Spottrsp...@cspott.com wrote:
   
 I apologize for my language. :(

 I am 3 pitchers in after a long week. Turning off the not so smart
 phone now!!

 ryan



 On Jun 5, 2009, at 9:44 PM, Rogelio scubac...@gmail.com wrote:

 
 On Fri, Jun 5, 2009 at 9:27 PM, D. Ryan Spott rsp...@cspott.com
 wrote:
 Subversion. ;)

 Bitch to setup but then easy.

 Thanks, I'll look into possibly doing that also.

   
 
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Re: [WISPA] Electronic Signatures

2009-06-07 Thread Charles Wyble
The big carriers don't require a signature on a contract. They also 
don't do (free/near free) installs either. I don't know if there is a 
signed contract if you pay for an install.

Yes I realize this is a very important differentiator that we can 
provide, however I don't feel a signed contract is necessary. An AUP is 
an excellent idea as a general rule, however if they are transiting bits 
on your network, you have the right and obligation to defend that 
network. If you don't, you risk other operators dropping traffic from 
your IP rnage /AS.


Your free to enforce your AUP with impunity. Failure to do so is the 
sole reason that bits of evil reach our border routers. A few simple 
route filters, and spam/botnets would be stopped. Subscribe to the Don't 
Route Or Peer List from Spamhaus 
(http://www.spamhaus.org/drop/index.lasso), and monitor outbound traffic.


*sighs*



Martha Huizenga wrote:
 Exactly, we send the contract with the install and then get it back when 
 the install is done. Works fine.
 
 Jason Hensley wrote:
 Wow.  Seems like a waste of time and resources.  If I mailed contracts like
 that here I'd lose half my install opportunities because they would never
 send the contract back.  Send a contract with the installer, get them to
 sign it before they install, give one copy to customer, bring one back, done
 deal.  If nothing else, get an electronic as an initial confirmation, then
 get an actual signature at install.   



 -Original Message-
 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
 Behalf Of Scott Reed
 Sent: Saturday, June 06, 2009 6:42 AM
 To: WISPA General List
 Subject: [WISPA] Electronic Signatures

 We currently use a two-year contract for customers.  Right now we gather 
 the information, generate a contract, USMail it to the customer and wait 
 for them to USMail it back after they sign it before we schedule an 
 installation.  We would like to reduce the time from initial contact to 
 installation.  One option we are looking at is electronic signature on 
 the contract. We have done some research into doing this, but thought it 
 would be good to get some other input.
 If you do electronic signatures, how do you do it?
 If you use a third party to certify the signatures, who do you use?  
 What is good about them?  What is not so good?

   
 
 
 
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Re: [WISPA] 3.65 Wimax

2009-06-05 Thread Charles Wyble
Well there is NLOS performance and spectrum crowding to be considered. 
Not sure which Mike Cowan was referring to.



Mike Hammett wrote:
 I don't think I'd go that far.  In many areas 2.4 is useless, so by that 
 very token, 3.650 would be a world of better because it's virgin territory.
 
 
 -
 Mike Hammett
 Intelligent Computing Solutions
 http://www.ics-il.com
 
 
 
 --
 From: Mike Cowan mi...@wirelessconnections.net
 Sent: Friday, June 05, 2009 6:24 AM
 To: 'WISPA General List' wireless@wispa.org
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] 3.65 Wimax
 
 It is true that a 802.11 based 3.650 product is not going to be any better
 than 2.4.  A wimax based 3.650 product is going to gve field performance
 much like 2.4.  A diversity based 3.650 system is going to provide 
 coverage
 much like, and oftentimes exceeding that of 900Mhz.  These observations 
 are
 based on real field deployments in diverse terrain across the US.

 Mike





 Mike Cowan
 Wireless Connections
 A Division of ACC
 166 Milan Ave
 Norwalk, OH 44857
 419-660-6100
 419-706-7348 Cell
 419-668-4077 Fax
 mi...@wirelessconnections.net
 www.wirelessconnections.net

 -Original Message-
 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
 Behalf Of Travis Johnson
 Sent: Monday, June 01, 2009 1:33 AM
 To: WISPA General List
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] 3.65 Wimax

 Hi,

 We have two small 3.65 repeaters (serving only other small WiPOPs). The
 3.65 does work, but our experience was that it did not do any better in
 NLOS than 2.4ghz would already do (when comparing the same type of radio
 systems). There are several other radio features and tricks that the
 higher-end WiMax companies are doing to get better NLOS, but it is still
 not comparable to 900mhz.

 In our area, there is a provider using 2.5ghz licensed WiMax and they
 still have NLOS issues where our 900mhz Trango system will work just
 fine. YMMV.

 Travis
 Microserv

 Jeremie Chism wrote:
 Several months ago I paid the small fee for the 365 license but have 
 not
 used it. We are looking to deploy something that has a little less
 interference since there is quite a bit of 900mhz and 5.8ghz equipment
 deployed where we are.   Has anyone tested any of this equipment and how
 has
 it worked.  Also does it possess any NLOS capabilities (I know all the
 manufacturers claim they do).
 Thanks

 Jeremie Chism
 Triton Communications



 
 
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[WISPA] BTOP - mapping

2009-06-05 Thread Charles Wyble
 From


http://www.ntia.doc.gov/broadbandgrants/BTOPQuarterlyReport_090518.pdf


  In addition,
NTIA intends to release a separate NOFA with respect to the broadband map.

Excellent!

Would be awesome if they break it down per state/major metro area. Such 
that multiple players can bid on the contract and map stuff out. Maybe 
even involve  http://www.openstreetmap.org/

Maybe this will lead to some of the current reporting burden from things 
like geocoding getting some serious examination.

Even better would be correlation of broadband penetration with broadband 
availability. Having this as raw GIS data would facilitate true 
competition.

Ah I'm dreaming again. :)




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Re: [WISPA] BTOP - mapping

2009-06-05 Thread Charles Wyble
Hrm.

Broadband Map Posted to WebsiteFebruary 17, 2011



Wonder if any of the new census data will be available by then? That 
would help with showing some real numbers/markets/updated incomes etc.



Charles Wyble wrote:
  From
 
 
 http://www.ntia.doc.gov/broadbandgrants/BTOPQuarterlyReport_090518.pdf
 
 
   In addition,
 NTIA intends to release a separate NOFA with respect to the broadband map.
 
 Excellent!
 
 Would be awesome if they break it down per state/major metro area. Such 
 that multiple players can bid on the contract and map stuff out. Maybe 
 even involve  http://www.openstreetmap.org/
 
 Maybe this will lead to some of the current reporting burden from things 
 like geocoding getting some serious examination.
 
 Even better would be correlation of broadband penetration with broadband 
 availability. Having this as raw GIS data would facilitate true 
 competition.
 
 Ah I'm dreaming again. :)
 
 
 
 
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Re: [WISPA] document version control? (e.g. web-based solution to check out KMZ files)

2009-06-05 Thread Charles Wyble
KMZ is a binary file format?

What do you use for XLS/Word version control? Or do you simply use the 
built in reconciliation functionality?

I'm also interested in what folks are using for binary source control. 
KMZ/SHP etc.

Rogelio wrote:
 I've got a question that tangentially pertains to wireless stuff, but 
 isn't really related to wireless technology, per se.
 
 We sometimes have several people working on KMZ files, and the different 
 versions that we have gets really out of hand, and I'm hoping for a 
 web-based (LAMP?) solution that lets people sort of check out a KMZ 
 file and then incorporate some sort of version control.
 
 (This isn't really unique to KMZ files, of course, but could be for any 
 sort of file. It's just that KMZ craziness is killing me more than, say, 
 Word doc or xls craziness.)
 
 Any nudge in the right direction would be greatly appreciated!
 
 
 
 
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Re: [WISPA] document version control? (e.g. web-based solution to check out KMZ files)

2009-06-05 Thread Charles Wyble
Ah.

Well then if it's text, git may be useful. Trac is a good frontend, that 
I use on  a regular basis.

Or something more along the lines of sharepoint I really like 
http://www.knowledgetree.com/  http://www.knowledgetree.com/opensource

Rogelio wrote:
 Charles Wyble wrote:
 KMZ is a binary file format?
 
 KMZ is an XML-ish format you use for Google Earth locations, which are 
 insanely handy when planning out wi-fi spots
 
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keyhole_Markup_Language
 
 (While reading the wikipedia page just now, I found this interesting 
 tidbit: The name Keyhole is an homage to the KH reconnaissance 
 satellites, the original eye-in-the-sky military reconnaissance system 
 first launched in 1976.)
 



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[WISPA] BTOP news

2009-06-04 Thread Charles Wyble
http://www.networkworld.com/community/node/42373

I thought this was a good article and very insightful. Hope folks find 
it useful.



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Re: [WISPA] OT: Cisco 7200 Gigabit Ethernet Cards?

2009-06-03 Thread Charles Wyble


Matt Liotta wrote:
 On Jun 3, 2009, at 3:49 PM, David E. Smith wrote:
 
 Did Cisco ever come to their senses on IOS licensing? Used to be, the
 software on a Cisco router was licensed to an entity separate from the
 purchase of the hardware. Thus, if you bought a router used, its
 (already-installed) copy of IOS was unlicensed and you'd have to buy a
 new software license to use the router.

 That is FUD from competing vendors.

Uh. No. It's not. It's been stated to me by Cisco personnel.






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Re: [WISPA] OT: Cisco 7200 Gigabit Ethernet Cards?

2009-06-03 Thread Charles Wyble

 I have a Cisco pricelist with the relicense fees.

 I am sure you do. The question is who is subject to them and in what  
 case do they apply. I doubt you will provide answers.


Wow. What's your problem?


You treat customers like that as well?



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Re: [WISPA] OT: Cisco 7200 Gigabit Ethernet Cards?

2009-06-03 Thread Charles Wyble
Stop digging the hole you're in man.

Matt Liotta wrote:
 That is a policy statement. It is not legal fact.
 
 -Matt



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Re: [WISPA] OT: Cisco 7200 Gigabit Ethernet Cards?

2009-06-03 Thread Charles Wyble
No one said buying/selling used gear is illegal. They said operation of 
the gear is illegal without a separate license from Cisco.

Jesse Preiner wrote:
 We buy and sell used Cisco routers and switches on a daily basis.  It is
 totally legal and hundreds of companies do what we do and thousands of
 companies (including large multi-nationals) buy and use used Cisco gear.
 The IOS is included in the purchase price of the router or switch since
 it was already paid for from Cisco when the unit was new (it's like
 buying a pc with Windows on it and reselling the pc).  
 
 What you need to be aware of when buying used Cisco is:
 
 1.  Make sure the used unit you are buying has an IOS on it that will
 fit your needs and requirements.  If you need an IOS upgrade, you will
 need to purchase it.
 
 2.  You can not put all used Cisco on Smartnet.  Cisco does have certain
 requirements for putting Smartnet on used gear but it can be done and is
 done often.  
 
 If buying and selling used Cisco WAS illegal in anyway, you would not
 see any on Ebay.
 
 -Original Message-
 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
 Behalf Of David E. Smith
 Sent: Wednesday, June 03, 2009 4:39 PM
 To: WISPA General List
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] OT: Cisco 7200 Gigabit Ethernet Cards?
 
 Matt Liotta wrote:
 [ more stuff about Cisco IOS licensing ]
 
 Apologies for the wall of legalese.
 
  From the Cisco EULA at :
 http://www.cisco.com/en/US/docs/general/warranty/English/EU1KEN_.html
 
 Customer shall have no right, and Customer specifically agrees not to:
 transfer, assign or sublicense its license rights to any other person 
 or entity (other than in compliance with any Cisco 
 relicensing/transfer policy then in force), or use the Software on 
 unauthorized or secondhand Cisco equipment
 
 
 Cisco's terms of sale incorporate by reference the EULA, which
 incoprorates the software resale policy (as shown above), so the
 original buyer would definitely be in trouble. The second-hand buyer
 could be liable for use of Cisco IP (intellectual property, not the
 other IP) without a proper license; I don't know if there's any case law
 on this, but I'm in no hurry to set a precedent.
 
 Matt: Unless you have evidence to the contrary, I'm gonna have to stick
 with original assertion, that random second-hand Cisco gear can't
 legally be used. I wish I were wrong, but I'm afraid I'm right.
 
 David Smith
 MVN.net
 
 
 
 
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Re: [WISPA] Quesiton on Funding / Financing / Capital Availability

2009-06-03 Thread Charles Wyble
Advice I have heard from lawyers, is NEVER EVER EVER DO THIS (emphasis 
from them).

RickG wrote:
 Very nice info Larry! So, what is your take on incorporating in a
 state other than your home state for tax reasons? Is it worth the
 effort?
 -RickG
 
 On Wed, Jun 3, 2009 at 1:09 PM, Larry Yunker leyun...@wispadvantage.com 
 wrote:
 What you are referring to is called corporate formalities.  These same
 concepts exist with regards to LLC's.   For instance: You must have those
 officers which the state statute requires (usually president and secretary
 but some states require others), you must make those filings which the state
 statute requires, you must properly finance the company, you must reasonably
 insure the company, you must follow appropriate accounting procedures for
 the company, you must adhere to your own bylaws - articles of organization
 or other controlling documents, etc.

 The bottom line is that the more that you do to treat the company as an
 independent entity the less likely that someone can pierce the corporate
 veil.  The more often that you treat the company like an empty shell or as
 something owned and controlled solely for your benefit, the more likely it
 is that a creditor can reach beyond the company and attach to your assets.

 Yet, I think the most commonly overlooked liability is the dreaded personal
 guarantee.  Until your company has built up sufficient credit history of
 its own, it is likely that you will be asked to guarantee the liabilities of
 your company.  When you purchase on credit or if you take out a loan, it is
 quite likely that you will be asked and/or required to sign a personal
 guarantee regardless of the structure of your company.  If you sign such a
 document, you may be held personally liable for the underlying debt EVEN IF
 the company is a limited liability entity (such as a LLC or a S-Corp).  Be
 CAREFUL, some of these guarantees allow the creditor to seek payment from
 YOU FIRST instead of even chasing the company!

 So, keep in mind that one of the biggest reasons for going with a limited
 liability entity early-on is NOT to limit your liability to creditors (they
 probably will reach you through personal guarantees).  The reason to go with
 limited liability from the start is to limit your liability in tort
 (meaning when you or someone that works for you causes someone else to be
 hurt).  Also remember that torts happen outside of the company AND inside of
 the company.  I'd say at least half of the calls that I'm fielding these
 days come from people who have recently been laid-off from their employers
 and now they are suing their employers for some sort of tort. (wrongful
 discharge, employment discrimination, sexual harassment, etc.)

 - Larry



 -Original Message-
 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
 Behalf Of RickG
 Sent: Wednesday, June 03, 2009 11:29 AM
 To: WISPA General List
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] Quesiton on Funding / Financing / Capital Availability

 Apparently, meeting minutes are one of the differences between an
 LLC  Corporation. I do my minutes for the annual meeting. No
 biggie, but considering changing over to an LLC.
 -RickG

 On Wed, Jun 3, 2009 at 6:06 AM, George Rogato wi...@oregonfast.net wrote:
 Yeah, my accountant told me a story about one of his un named clients
 who was previously part of a corp . Turns out there was a lawsuit
 against a corporation that had filed for bk protection a couple years
 earlier.

 The person filing the lawsuit wanted to see the corporate minutes for
 the now defunct corporation to see if they were done on a regular basis.

 What they were after is, was it a real corporation that held directors
 meetings on a regular basis and kept minutes.

 if not, then the corporation would in fact  be considered an illegal
 corporation and the shareholders would then be considered sole
 proprietors and the corporations bk would be over turned, leaving them
 open to that lawsuit. More so than exposing the share holders to that
 type of liability, the share holders, now sole proprietor or partners
 would have also filed false tax returns and would be subject to all
 those unpaid taxes and penalties interest etc.

 A can of worms indeed, when not done right.



 Travis Johnson wrote:
 I understand the corporate structure and how it works. I also know that
 if you follow all the proper corporate bylaws, they can NOT break the
 corporate barrier. Yes, they will try and list each person individually,
 but if you have a good attorney, that is a simple motion to get the
 individuals removed (been there, done that).

 Travis
 Microserv

 Marlon K. Schafer wrote:
 It can be done a lot cheaper.  But we work hard to do it right not cheap
 these days.
 And the corporate veil isn't as strong as it used to be.  If your
 company screws up the officers (that's you) will be named on any suit these
 days too.
 marlon

   - Original Message -
   From: Travis Johnson
   

[WISPA] Geocoding

2009-05-31 Thread Charles Wyble
Thought folks might dig http://www.johnsample.com/



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Re: [WISPA] Geocoding

2009-05-31 Thread Charles Wyble
Wow. :(

Worked when I sent it. :)

Josh Luthman wrote:
 Big fat error Server Application Unavailable
 
 Josh Luthman
 Office: 937-552-2340
 Direct: 937-552-2343
 1100 Wayne St
 Suite 1337
 Troy, OH 45373
 
 When you have eliminated the impossible, that which remains, however
 improbable, must be the truth.
 --- Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
 
 
 On Sun, May 31, 2009 at 2:15 PM, Charles Wyble char...@thewybles.comwrote:
 
 Thought folks might dig http://www.johnsample.com/



 
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Re: [WISPA] Panel suggests state leases extra ETV capacity to two wireless companies

2009-05-28 Thread Charles Wyble


jp wrote:
 Based on the article it appears they are just looking to lease that spectrum 
 for cash. 
 Sounds fine to me, as it's what the feds have done for years with their 
 spectrum.
 I bet many states sit on unused or underused spectrum that could utilized for 
 commercial 
 purposes. I prefer unlicensed, but they probably don't have the authority to 
 do that to 
 this spectrum.

Most likely, at least not without federal approval.


 
 
 ETV is probably an antiquated system that can or has been replaced with 
 digital TV or 
 videoconferencing over existing Internet service to the places where it is 
 needed. 

Right. And that's the beauty of freeing up spectrum for wireless use. IP 
based services will make for massively more efficient use of it.

All that
 spectrum has probably been tied up for 15 years so a few people at each 
 school could watch 
 an hour or two a week of class from somewhere else. Not saying it's not a 
 good educational 
 tool, but it's a trademark of government inneficiency.

Indeed.  Which is why the spectrum inventory bill introduced recently 
should get our support.

http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/231502-Google_Counsel_Praises_Spectrum_Inventory_Bill.php
http://www.publicknowledge.org/node/2056





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Re: [WISPA] Wireless visualization

2009-05-27 Thread Charles Wyble
LOL.

I can imagine :)

I have actually seen it used in several NOCs at large data centers and 
so forth.

I run it in my NOC, along with various other visualization tools 
(kismet/wireshark etc).



Rogelio wrote:
 I see Etherape running more often in coffee shops than I do in NOCs.  :)
 
 
 
 On May 24, 2009, at 11:56 AM, Charles Wyble char...@thewybles.com  
 wrote:
 
 http://www.ittc.ku.edu/wlan/

 Also is anyone using visualization tools in your noc? such as  
 ethereape
 or http://www.rumint.org/ etc?



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Re: [WISPA] Wireless visualization

2009-05-27 Thread Charles Wyble
LOL.

I can imagine :)

I have actually seen it used in several NOCs at large data centers and 
so forth.

I run it in my NOC, along with various other visualization tools 
(kismet/wireshark etc).



Rogelio wrote:
 I see Etherape running more often in coffee shops than I do in NOCs.  :)
 
 
 
 On May 24, 2009, at 11:56 AM, Charles Wyble char...@thewybles.com  
 wrote:
 
 http://www.ittc.ku.edu/wlan/

 Also is anyone using visualization tools in your noc? such as  
 ethereape
 or http://www.rumint.org/ etc?



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Re: [WISPA] Starting a wisp - required capital

2009-05-27 Thread Charles Wyble


RickG wrote:
 Charles,
 
 I'll check my archives for the spreadsheet (I think Charles Wu has it
 online someplace)

Thanks. I appreciate that.

  but I believe the financing is only a small portion
 of the issue.

Indeed. Gear is only a small part of the network. I was thinking 100k 
for capex/initial contracting/build out only. To really do it right as 
it were.

  It's the labor. Good, reliable labor, that has
 experience and knowledge.

Very true. I have been building a team for some time and have found it 
very difficult work.

 As far as your $100k, there are many variables and more detail is
 needed. 

Of course. Which is why I asked for a spreadsheet listing out variables 
that folks have identified.

Sidenote: I dont live there now but I was born and raised in
 SoCal. When you say medium city, are you using city limits as a
 coverage area. I ask because in SoCal nearly all the cities run
 together from San Diego to Santa Barbara.

I was referring to population. I live in a city that is under served and 
I believe I can provide much better service to the city.

 At any rate, in my experience, whatever budget you come up with - double it!

Double the expenses and halve the revenue is common practice. :)





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Re: [WISPA] Cell phone with wifi?

2009-05-27 Thread Charles Wyble
T-mobile cell phones work over wifi. 1 number.

I use it all the time.

George Rogato wrote:
 Josh Luthman wrote:
 If you have Asterisk you just opened up nearly any Wifi phone to your
 system.  SIP is so universal...

   
 
 Yeah, I have not been keeping up with cell phones. My own is 5years 
 old...doesn't even have a camera or display caller id on the outside of 
 the phone ;(
 
 A client was telling me he heard there was a cell phone that when not in 
 range of the cell service could connect to ANYONES wifi.
 Hadn't heard that, seen the phones with skype and the t mobile cells, 
 but not cell over voip.
 
 Which is why I asked here.
 
 So I take it there is no cell phone service that works off wifi as well?
 
 
 
 
 
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Re: [WISPA] Cell phone with wifi?

2009-05-27 Thread Charles Wyble
Blackberry Curve and Pearl on t-mobile. Works like a champ. Use it all 
the time, along with heavy torrenting and other use.

George Rogato wrote:
 Is there a cell phone that can connect to someones wifi ap and still 
 make phone calls or recieve data when not in range of the cell service?
 
 Thanks
 
 
 
 
 
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Re: [WISPA] Cell phone with wifi?

2009-05-27 Thread Charles Wyble
http://www.villagetelco.org/

Matt Larsen - Lists wrote:
 I bought my E71 unlocked and it is an awesome phone.   It even went 
 through a complete washer/dryer cycle with my laundry and came out just 
 fine (after it dried out for a few hours).
 
 I have mine setup with my office Asterisk server so that it will try my 
 SIP extension first, then the cell phone number.   It's not perfect, but 
 it works pretty well.   Biggest weakness is the client on the Nokia 
 doesn't always link up to wifi and register the phone automatically.   
 If I could get that sorted out I would be really happy.
 
 If there were more inexpensive gsm/sip phones available, I think we 
 could potentially have a product competitive with the cellcos.It 
 works like this:
 
 1)  Get a GSM/SIP capable cell phone
 2)  Put in a prepaid GSM card from whatever provider
 3)  Configure the SIP client to work with an Asterisk or other VOIP server.
 4)  Port the customer's number to the Asterisk box
 5)  Set up Asterisk so that it tries the SIP connection first, then goes 
 to the prepaid number if SIP doesn't answer
 6)  Setup the phone so that it goes out through SIP if available, and 
 GSM if not available.
 7)  e911 goes through the cell phone (no e911 to worry about!!!)
 8)  Optimize VOIP traffic so that it runs well on your network, to your 
 VOIP server.
 
 In theory, this seems like it would work really well.   In my area, cell 
 coverage sucks, so customers would be using their wifi access points as 
 little cell-phone repeaters, but the traffic would actually be on VOIP, 
 rather than the cell carrier.   Since the cell component would be a 
 pre-paid card, the customer could just buy more prepaid cards when they 
 run down.   And 911 is not the VOIP carrier's responsibility - it would 
 be the cell carrier's responsibility.Selling prepaid cards or 
 recharging them could also be a potential revenue stream.
 
 Only catch - there aren't any cheap phones that will do this.   At least 
 none that I have seen.My Nokia comes VERY close, but it was a $450 
 phone.   We would need to have a $150 phone to make something like this 
 work.   Something like this would take the normal cell phone users bill 
 down by 50% or more each month, even compared to the plans that they are 
 offering now.  
 
 Anyone else out there doing something like this?
 
 Matt Larsen
 vistabeam.com
 
 
 Josh Luthman wrote:
 Nokia e71 is always unlocked AFAIK (I have never seen a locked one)

 You use the existing SIM card and get on that GSM network

 The SIP client connects to his Asterisk server, mine to my M6, your
 situation may be different...

 Josh Luthman
 Office: 937-552-2340
 Direct: 937-552-2343
 1100 Wayne St
 Suite 1337
 Troy, OH 45373

 When you have eliminated the impossible, that which remains, however
 improbable, must be the truth.
 --- Sir Arthur Conan Doyle


 On Tue, May 26, 2009 at 7:08 PM, George Rogato wi...@oregonfast.net wrote:

   
 Jonathan Schmidt wrote:
 
 I have had a series of Nokia phones will use Wi-Fi thru its built-in SIP
 client directly to my office Asterisk and have been doing that for
   
 several
 
 years.  The E71 I have now is FAR superior to the earlier models in terms
 of Wi-Fi sensitivity.  I use it in conferences overseas...Europe and
 Brazil and Mexico for free US calling.  It works very well and I leave it
 on during the shows and my office can call me with the 4-digit Asterisk
 extension.  There's a Skype for it and the iPhone, too.

 . . . J o n a t h a n


   
 So the Nokia E71 does cell and sip?
 Is this ATT?

 Also, do you buy the phone and use existing cell phone card in that
 phone and it just works?

 My original question is for one of my clients, but this phone might be
 something I want.

 George





 
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[WISPA] Wireless visualization

2009-05-24 Thread Charles Wyble
http://www.ittc.ku.edu/wlan/

Also is anyone using visualization tools in your noc? such as ethereape 
or http://www.rumint.org/ etc?




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Re: [WISPA] Monowall and Microsoft Vista machines

2009-05-18 Thread Charles Wyble
Google for the win once again. :) Blasted zeroconf.

D. Ryan Spott wrote:
 http://www.dslreports.com/forum/r22403089-Monowall-and-Mirosoft-Vista-machines
 
 the iptables -t filter -I INPUT --source 169.254.0.0/16 -j ACCEPT 
 makes good sense.
 
 
 ryan
 
 Steve Barnes wrote:
 Did not mean there was an issues with FreeBSD.  Just meant that not being a 
 vendor supported solution like Motorola, Tranzeo, Cisco, etc. that a 
 solution to this issue may be harder to readily access.

 Steve Barnes
 RCWiFi Wireless Internet Service


 -Original Message-
 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On 
 Behalf Of George Rogato
 Sent: Monday, May 18, 2009 12:11 PM
 To: WISPA General List
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] Monowall and Microsoft Vista machines



 Steve Barnes wrote:
   I just
   
 found that MoNowall is a FreeBSD Firewall.  Good luck with that.

 Steve Barnes RCWiFi Wireless Internet Service
 
 FreeBSD is well supported and quite popular. We use BSD for quite a bit 
 of stuff. Mainly servers, but also routers.


 
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Re: [WISPA] suggestions on lower end PC appliances?

2009-05-13 Thread Charles Wyble


David E. Smith wrote:
 Rogelio wrote:
 
 I've heard good things about the Soekris boards, particularly from guys 
 in the BSD community. The problem is time and finances.  I'm not sure 
 that this is the best sort of solution, given those constraints.  But 
 it's one option.
 
 The Soekris boards are basically low-end PCs, and work quite well for 
 that purpose.
 

Check out 
http://www.marvell.com/products/embedded_processors/developer/kirkwood/sheevaplug.jsp
 





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[WISPA] 3650Mhz Access Update

2009-04-30 Thread Charles Wyble
So I talked with someone who is heavily involved in the operation of 
3650Mhz ground stations.

The 30 second summary:

Mobile applications are out of the question.
Fixed point to point applications are possible.
Talk to comsearch.

Slightly longer summary:

He mentioned http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Low-noise_block_converter
being extremely sensitive and receiving pico watts from a satellite in 
space. Retrofitting is possible but at substantial expense.

Evidently the operators have already received interference and it's 
caused interruption of service.

He mentioned that for every licensed down link there are numerous others 
who aren't licensed.

These ground stations are utilized by every cable company and are all 
over the Los Angeles region.

So it looks like access to the 3650 spectrum may be possible but it has 
the potential to be a time consuming and expensive process.







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Re: [WISPA] 3650Mhz Access Update

2009-04-30 Thread Charles Wyble
Speaking of comsearch:
http://www.comsearch.com/newsletter/e-flash.html



Charles Wyble wrote:
 So I talked with someone who is heavily involved in the operation of 
 3650Mhz ground stations.
 
 The 30 second summary:
 
 Mobile applications are out of the question.
 Fixed point to point applications are possible.
 Talk to comsearch.
 
 Slightly longer summary:
 
 He mentioned http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Low-noise_block_converter
 being extremely sensitive and receiving pico watts from a satellite in 
 space. Retrofitting is possible but at substantial expense.
 
 Evidently the operators have already received interference and it's 
 caused interruption of service.
 
 He mentioned that for every licensed down link there are numerous others 
 who aren't licensed.
 
 These ground stations are utilized by every cable company and are all 
 over the Los Angeles region.
 
 So it looks like access to the 3650 spectrum may be possible but it has 
 the potential to be a time consuming and expensive process.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Re: [WISPA] WAN HotSpot and Polarity

2009-04-30 Thread Charles Wyble
I found that with a NanoStation2 I was able to provide coverage to an 
entire strip mall. Google earth it:

  229 Main Street
El Segundo, CA 90245

is where I deployed the AP.

It's a fairly standard strip mall. I covered the entire mall, plus 
across the street in all 4 directions.



Tom DeReggi wrote:
 Over the years, there have been many theories and strategies regarding what 
 polarity is best to use for various purposes.
 As an engineer, I as well have my theories. But, I wanted to get an updated 
 opinion based on field trials of others, for the following application
 
 Application... 2.4Ghz WAN WIFI HotSpot
 Specs...
 1) Average sub located within 100 yards to 1/2 mile.
 2) Find and Subscribe by Search for available Networks, via laptop's WIFI 
 card.
 3) If RF signal good enough to get a web splash screen to user, will display 
 instruction for ordering higher gain antenna self-install kit for inside 
 their window mount or balcony.
 4) Access Point would likely use a sector panel (60 deg?), with an EIRP of 
 36db.
 
 The goal here is enabling residential users to find the ISP's AP on 
 their own.
 
 So my questions are
 
 1. If a Horizontally polarized antenna is used at the AP, Is it likely the 
 consumer will equally be able to find your AP, compared to if it had been 
 verical pol'd?
 
 The idea being, horizontal pol's noise floor is much lower in the particular 
 area, and more likely ISP will avoid the noise from consumer APs that ship 
 with vert pol antennas, where end users by default will stick the antennas 
 straight up in Verticle pol position.
 
 2. By the time the ISP's horizontal signal gets to the end user, is it 
 received in multiple polarities, based on all the reflections in end users 
 home and stuff?
 
 3. Are laptop wifi cards typically no polarity, and pick up Horizontal as 
 good as verticle signals?
 
 4. Laptops would appear to have Horizontal pol antennas in some cases, 
 expecially if a PCMCIA card. Is this true?  Or are most laptops starting to 
 embed verticle pol antennas on the sides of screens?
 
 5. Are End Users getting savy enough to move their laptop all around, when 
 they first take it out of the box, to try and find Horizontal pol APs of 
 ISPs Hotspots?
 
 In summary If doing Hotspot WAN deployment, and Verticle noise is 
 significantly higher, will an ISP be doing a smart thing putting their 
 sector on Horiz pol to avoid noise, or shooting themself in the foot because 
 they'll be sending a signal cross pol to the average end user's verticle 
 pol's Wifi card, taking a 20db hit off the bat?
 
 Sure Horizontal will be better, if the the consumer gets a professional 
 install, or learns to put an external horizontal pol antenna on their laptop 
 or PC. But most people may not know to do that, by default, for hotspot self 
 subscription.  (PS. recognize could use dual pol or 45deg off pol, but 
 purposely avoiding that, to try not to interfere with others, to enable more 
 people to play in the same spectrum)
 
 What have other's found?
 
 Tom DeReggi
 RapidDSL  Wireless, Inc
 IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband
 
 
 - Original Message - 
 From: George Rogato wi...@oregonfast.net
 To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
 Sent: Wednesday, April 29, 2009 8:27 PM
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] RB333/433 eliminating self-interference test
 
 
 Tom DeReggi wrote:
 Good point but. the problem went away when the mcpi cards each had 
 their own SBC/Case, this would infer card to card or pigtail to pigtail 
 interference, since in all cases the dummy load was outside the cases, 
 from what it sounds like.

 I guess that should be clarified

 Kurt, when you tested with teh RB600 and 3 cards on the adjacent slots, 
 was the RB600 also in a case with the holes metal taped?


 Tom DeReggi
 RapidDSL  Wireless, Inc
 IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband



 Question I have that should debunk that theory that cards in close
 proximity interfere with each other. Why do the cards not interfere with
 each other when there is additional gain antennas hooked on to them?

 You would think there would be even more self interference with high
 gain antennas than with no antennas



 
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Re: [WISPA] WAN HotSpot and Polarity

2009-04-30 Thread Charles Wyble
The NS2 is dual polarity.

Not sure what polarity the clients are. We get a lot of Iphones/Ipods as 
clients.

So I haven't done any scientific studies, but wanted to give a real 
world indication of AP selection and coverage area.



Tom DeReggi wrote:
 well thats interesting, but you didn't address the primary question of 
 polarity.
 
 Or what polarity hotspot CPE devices generally see.
 
 Tom DeReggi
 RapidDSL  Wireless, Inc
 IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband
 
 
 - Original Message - 
 From: Charles Wyble char...@thewybles.com
 To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
 Sent: Thursday, April 30, 2009 2:30 PM
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] WAN HotSpot and Polarity
 
 
 I found that with a NanoStation2 I was able to provide coverage to an
 entire strip mall. Google earth it:

  229 Main Street
 El Segundo, CA 90245

 is where I deployed the AP.

 It's a fairly standard strip mall. I covered the entire mall, plus
 across the street in all 4 directions.



 Tom DeReggi wrote:
 Over the years, there have been many theories and strategies regarding 
 what
 polarity is best to use for various purposes.
 As an engineer, I as well have my theories. But, I wanted to get an 
 updated
 opinion based on field trials of others, for the following 
 application

 Application... 2.4Ghz WAN WIFI HotSpot
 Specs...
 1) Average sub located within 100 yards to 1/2 mile.
 2) Find and Subscribe by Search for available Networks, via laptop's 
 WIFI
 card.
 3) If RF signal good enough to get a web splash screen to user, will 
 display
 instruction for ordering higher gain antenna self-install kit for inside
 their window mount or balcony.
 4) Access Point would likely use a sector panel (60 deg?), with an EIRP 
 of
 36db.

 The goal here is enabling residential users to find the ISP's AP on
 their own.

 So my questions are

 1. If a Horizontally polarized antenna is used at the AP, Is it likely 
 the
 consumer will equally be able to find your AP, compared to if it had been
 verical pol'd?

 The idea being, horizontal pol's noise floor is much lower in the 
 particular
 area, and more likely ISP will avoid the noise from consumer APs that 
 ship
 with vert pol antennas, where end users by default will stick the 
 antennas
 straight up in Verticle pol position.

 2. By the time the ISP's horizontal signal gets to the end user, is it
 received in multiple polarities, based on all the reflections in end 
 users
 home and stuff?

 3. Are laptop wifi cards typically no polarity, and pick up Horizontal 
 as
 good as verticle signals?

 4. Laptops would appear to have Horizontal pol antennas in some cases,
 expecially if a PCMCIA card. Is this true?  Or are most laptops starting 
 to
 embed verticle pol antennas on the sides of screens?

 5. Are End Users getting savy enough to move their laptop all around, 
 when
 they first take it out of the box, to try and find Horizontal pol APs of
 ISPs Hotspots?

 In summary If doing Hotspot WAN deployment, and Verticle noise is
 significantly higher, will an ISP be doing a smart thing putting their
 sector on Horiz pol to avoid noise, or shooting themself in the foot 
 because
 they'll be sending a signal cross pol to the average end user's verticle
 pol's Wifi card, taking a 20db hit off the bat?

 Sure Horizontal will be better, if the the consumer gets a 
 professional
 install, or learns to put an external horizontal pol antenna on their 
 laptop
 or PC. But most people may not know to do that, by default, for hotspot 
 self
 subscription.  (PS. recognize could use dual pol or 45deg off pol, but
 purposely avoiding that, to try not to interfere with others, to enable 
 more
 people to play in the same spectrum)

 What have other's found?

 Tom DeReggi
 RapidDSL  Wireless, Inc
 IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband


 - Original Message - 
 From: George Rogato wi...@oregonfast.net
 To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
 Sent: Wednesday, April 29, 2009 8:27 PM
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] RB333/433 eliminating self-interference test


 Tom DeReggi wrote:
 Good point but. the problem went away when the mcpi cards each had
 their own SBC/Case, this would infer card to card or pigtail to pigtail
 interference, since in all cases the dummy load was outside the cases,
 from what it sounds like.

 I guess that should be clarified

 Kurt, when you tested with teh RB600 and 3 cards on the adjacent slots,
 was the RB600 also in a case with the holes metal taped?


 Tom DeReggi
 RapidDSL  Wireless, Inc
 IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband



 Question I have that should debunk that theory that cards in close
 proximity interfere with each other. Why do the cards not interfere with
 each other when there is additional gain antennas hooked on to them?

 You would think there would be even more self interference with high
 gain antennas than with no antennas



 
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Re: [WISPA] WAN HotSpot and Polarity

2009-04-30 Thread Charles Wyble
I was using default settings. I'll login to it and look later today and 
let you guys know.

Brian Rohrbacher wrote:
 Dual polarity as in you are horizontal and vertical.
 
 Or as in the nano will do either polarity?
 
 As far as I know the nano does either (software switchable) not both.
 But, it would not be the first time I was wrong.
 
 Brian
 
 Charles Wyble wrote:
 The NS2 is dual polarity.

 Not sure what polarity the clients are. We get a lot of Iphones/Ipods as 
 clients.

 So I haven't done any scientific studies, but wanted to give a real 
 world indication of AP selection and coverage area.



 Tom DeReggi wrote:
   
 well thats interesting, but you didn't address the primary question of 
 polarity.

 Or what polarity hotspot CPE devices generally see.

 Tom DeReggi
 RapidDSL  Wireless, Inc
 IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband


 - Original Message - 
 From: Charles Wyble char...@thewybles.com
 To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
 Sent: Thursday, April 30, 2009 2:30 PM
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] WAN HotSpot and Polarity


 
 I found that with a NanoStation2 I was able to provide coverage to an
 entire strip mall. Google earth it:

  229 Main Street
 El Segundo, CA 90245

 is where I deployed the AP.

 It's a fairly standard strip mall. I covered the entire mall, plus
 across the street in all 4 directions.



 Tom DeReggi wrote:
   
 Over the years, there have been many theories and strategies regarding 
 what
 polarity is best to use for various purposes.
 As an engineer, I as well have my theories. But, I wanted to get an 
 updated
 opinion based on field trials of others, for the following 
 application

 Application... 2.4Ghz WAN WIFI HotSpot
 Specs...
 1) Average sub located within 100 yards to 1/2 mile.
 2) Find and Subscribe by Search for available Networks, via laptop's 
 WIFI
 card.
 3) If RF signal good enough to get a web splash screen to user, will 
 display
 instruction for ordering higher gain antenna self-install kit for inside
 their window mount or balcony.
 4) Access Point would likely use a sector panel (60 deg?), with an EIRP 
 of
 36db.

 The goal here is enabling residential users to find the ISP's AP on
 their own.

 So my questions are

 1. If a Horizontally polarized antenna is used at the AP, Is it likely 
 the
 consumer will equally be able to find your AP, compared to if it had been
 verical pol'd?

 The idea being, horizontal pol's noise floor is much lower in the 
 particular
 area, and more likely ISP will avoid the noise from consumer APs that 
 ship
 with vert pol antennas, where end users by default will stick the 
 antennas
 straight up in Verticle pol position.

 2. By the time the ISP's horizontal signal gets to the end user, is it
 received in multiple polarities, based on all the reflections in end 
 users
 home and stuff?

 3. Are laptop wifi cards typically no polarity, and pick up Horizontal 
 as
 good as verticle signals?

 4. Laptops would appear to have Horizontal pol antennas in some cases,
 expecially if a PCMCIA card. Is this true?  Or are most laptops starting 
 to
 embed verticle pol antennas on the sides of screens?

 5. Are End Users getting savy enough to move their laptop all around, 
 when
 they first take it out of the box, to try and find Horizontal pol APs of
 ISPs Hotspots?

 In summary If doing Hotspot WAN deployment, and Verticle noise is
 significantly higher, will an ISP be doing a smart thing putting their
 sector on Horiz pol to avoid noise, or shooting themself in the foot 
 because
 they'll be sending a signal cross pol to the average end user's verticle
 pol's Wifi card, taking a 20db hit off the bat?

 Sure Horizontal will be better, if the the consumer gets a 
 professional
 install, or learns to put an external horizontal pol antenna on their 
 laptop
 or PC. But most people may not know to do that, by default, for hotspot 
 self
 subscription.  (PS. recognize could use dual pol or 45deg off pol, but
 purposely avoiding that, to try not to interfere with others, to enable 
 more
 people to play in the same spectrum)

 What have other's found?

 Tom DeReggi
 RapidDSL  Wireless, Inc
 IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband


 - Original Message - 
 From: George Rogato wi...@oregonfast.net
 To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
 Sent: Wednesday, April 29, 2009 8:27 PM
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] RB333/433 eliminating self-interference test


 
 Tom DeReggi wrote:
   
 Good point but. the problem went away when the mcpi cards each had
 their own SBC/Case, this would infer card to card or pigtail to pigtail
 interference, since in all cases the dummy load was outside the cases,
 from what it sounds like.

 I guess that should be clarified

 Kurt, when you tested with teh RB600 and 3 cards on the adjacent slots,
 was the RB600 also in a case with the holes metal taped?


 Tom DeReggi
 RapidDSL  Wireless, Inc
 IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband

Re: [WISPA] NTIA mapping

2009-04-29 Thread Charles Wyble


Brian Webster wrote:
 Amen Rick
 
 I've always maintained the thought that the 350 Million was another back
 door political payback to the Telco and cable companies via Connected
 Nation. With the fact that this funding gets put out there and then the data
 never really becomes available because of the NDA's signed, it just smells
 like a pork barrel project to me. Your explanation just backs up that idea.


Um. what? Where do you see in the law where the data won't be 
available? What page and section?


 
 If you want to map broadband, go to a small organization like myself. We can
 do the work for tenths of a penny on the dollar these guys are quoting. You
 just build that cost in to the rest of your stimulus project and move on.
 Trying to take on Connected Nation is a losing battle. Just step around them
 and move forward..there are plenty of ways to map the competitive
 broadband in a market without proprietary data and you can successfully do
 it to convince the organizations that are handing out money.

Go compete for the (sub)contract then, instead of whining on the mailing 
list.

This sort of baseless posturing is pathetic and does your company a 
disservice.




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Re: [WISPA] NTIA mapping

2009-04-29 Thread Charles Wyble
Excellent!!!

My thoughts exactly to the millionth power!



Tom DeReggi wrote:
 Rick,
 
 I agree with your assessment that the $350 mil number was set based on 
 either Connected Nation being in mind (their lobbying), or using Connected 
 Nation as the only historical data to estimate what it could cost. But to 
 assume all $350 mil would just automatically go to Connect-the-Nation 
 without competitive bid process or considering all applicant's needs, is not 
 likely.
 
 No we should NOT leave these funds alone.  Every one wanting to contribute 
 in mapping efforts surely should submit bids for this money. If nobody bids 
 (submits grant apps) on it, it would just be handed over to connected nation 
 on a silver platter.  Its more likely that $5 Mil would be allocated to each 
 State, for each State to best define how they want to map their broadband 
 coverage. Mapping coverage and need is clearly the one area that the States 
 undisputedly could be effective in helping out with.  I'd argue that because 
 of the few intities capable of providing mapping solutions, the odds are 
 higher of actually gaining a grant.
 
 I also argue that if Connected Nation could do it for $8,000,000 for Ohio, 
 they surely could do the whole country for not to much more than that 
 number. After all, once one State is complete, all the tools, software 
 development, and processes are already there to replicate.   I'd argue that 
 it would be self serving without justification or basis, to try and 
 continue to get $5 mil per state, on an ongoing basis. If anything, it could 
 be lobbied that economies of scale should be able to be obtained to reduce 
 the cost, in one national project, or replicating for individual states, 
 argueing that there will be additional funds to go around.  Surely Connected 
 Nation will ask for the full $350 mil, but its not likely the government 
 will grant it, with other bids on the table, unless they can truly justify 
 it, or there could be huge repercussions on the way the funds were managed 
 after the fact. I'd also argue that at this opens up the door for new 
 entrants that are not greedy, and come up with a more affordable plan.  At 
 minimum it should be argued that the money should be spread around to create 
 competiton in Mapping solutions, or at minimum not put all the money in one 
 basket.  Solely on the public opinion that Connected Nation is a front for 
 the telco, it could be argued taht a more specialized mapping solution 
 should be made for WISPs, tailered to their market that have different 
 characteristics, or that would tackle the problem from another angle.
 
 Lastly, many prominent Wireless Association  and/or advocates have suggested 
 and supported ideas of spectrum mapping as needs equal to existing broadband 
 wireless coverage.  Based on the technology neutral clauses, it could be 
 argued that a certain percentage of mapping funds at minimum should go to 
 help mapo the needs of the wireless industry. Although, WISPA had been 
 neutral on this topic in its submissions, I'd argue that WISPA should 
 probably also offer support for such concepts and ideas.
 
 Don't misunderstand me, I am not against Connected Nation, but they are not 
 the only fish in the sea. Although CN may have some strong supporters 
 politically, that does not over-ride the process the government takes to 
 fairly consider all applications and bids for funding. It would probably be 
 illegal if NTIA/RUS did not fairly consider all applicants and include 
 additional interested parties.
 
 What we should do is thank Connected Nation for setting perception that 
 $5million is what it should cost, because that allows a lot of room for 
 applicants to underbid CN's track record, if they want to get into the 
 mappign broadband business.
 
 I personally, will include mapping costs in my application. Argueing that 
 they are necessary costs to increase success and speed of installation of 
 plan, that can only be implemented by me, since I hold the confidential 
 information (network details) needed to adequately accurately map my 
 wireless network. And if there are not funds left in the mapping funds 
 portion of the BTOP program that they cover them in the large pool of funds 
 (not specifically allocated for mapping).
 
 It could be argued that in theNational Broadband strategy, all Americans 
 need to be considered, even the 10% underserved in Urban America. Before 
 allocating more funds to build out wired networks in tehse areas that 
 already have wired networks,  it should be determined if these remaining 
 residents can be served with Wireless. The best way to do that is to create 
 wqireless coverage mapps, and build customer awareness of wireless coverage. 
 This is clearly within the goal of the BTOP program, to increase adoption. 
 Expecially to map your already served areas..
 
 Tom DeReggi
 RapidDSL  Wireless, Inc
 IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband
 
 
 - 

Re: [WISPA] NTIA mapping

2009-04-29 Thread Charles Wyble
Preach it Tom!

Wake up folks.

Regardless of your political views, your approval/disapproval of the 
stimulus package it's out there and the money is becoming available.

WE PAID INTO THIS WITH OUR TAXES! IT'S OUR MONEY!

I don't know about all you, but I have been preparing business and 
product plans since November and am waiting like a hawk for the grant 
process to be defined.



Tom DeReggi wrote:
 Brian,
 
 Thats where I disagree. I'm surprised to hear it come from you.
 
 Quick Note: Just two years ago, CN was nobody.  They have gotten clout 
 because they got off their hind side and started working on a solution to 
 the problem. But CN has had lots of critisim, they are not invincible.
 
 What you should be doing is writting your ticket to financial freedom, by 
 preparing plans for WISPs.
 Grant awardees can't write checks to themselves, but they can write checks 
 to their solution providers and contractors necessary to fullfil their 
 obligations of and goals for their grants.
 
 Brian, many WISPs like your work and see the value, but aren't paying you 
 now for services because they simply don't have the budget for it. The grant 
 program is an opportunity to get in in the budget. If mapping isn't 
 included in their grant apps, it won't likely be in their budget after their 
 award either.
 
 It might be hard to get a seperate grant for mapping. But its real easy to 
 add a line item to an existing application. If I were you, I'd be putting 
 togeather the deluxe package for WISPs to include in their applications, 
 and it doesn't have to be cheaper.
 
 Tom DeReggi
 RapidDSL  Wireless, Inc
 IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband
 
 
 - Original Message - 
 From: Brian Webster bwebs...@wirelessmapping.com
 To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
 Sent: Tuesday, April 28, 2009 10:09 PM
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] NTIA mapping
 
 
 Amen Rick

 I've always maintained the thought that the 350 Million was another back
 door political payback to the Telco and cable companies via Connected
 Nation. With the fact that this funding gets put out there and then the 
 data
 never really becomes available because of the NDA's signed, it just smells
 like a pork barrel project to me. Your explanation just backs up that 
 idea.

 If you want to map broadband, go to a small organization like myself. We 
 can
 do the work for tenths of a penny on the dollar these guys are quoting. 
 You
 just build that cost in to the rest of your stimulus project and move on.
 Trying to take on Connected Nation is a losing battle. Just step around 
 them
 and move forward..there are plenty of ways to map the competitive
 broadband in a market without proprietary data and you can successfully do
 it to convince the organizations that are handing out money.



 Thank You,
 Brian Webster



 -Original Message-
 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org]on
 Behalf Of Rick Harnish
 Sent: Tuesday, April 28, 2009 7:23 PM
 To: ccoo...@intelliwave.com; 'WISPA General List'
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] NTIA mapping


 Chris,

 It is my understanding that this bill was specifically written for 
 Connected
 Nation.  In a conversation today in Indianapolis I was told that if you
 divide $350 million by 50 states you get $7,000,000 per state.  This is
 approximately 80% of the $9,000,000 contract they recently signed with 
 Ohio
 or Tennessee.  The 80% number coincidentally matches up with the current
 thinking on the Broadband Stimulus Grants with 20% coming from the 
 awardees
 and 80% coming from the Federal Government.  If this assumption is 
 correct,
 it didn't take Connected Nation long to come up with a number to present 
 to
 the legislators that sponsored the bill.

 I'm not saying that this funding won't be allocated to other grantees but 
 I
 have been told that it will be extremely difficult to buck this 
 legislation
 given the current political clout that Connected Nation seems to have. 
 That
 is not to say that the states themselves will get control of the funding 
 and
 will make those decisions separately.

 Respectfully,
 Rick Harnish

 -Original Message-
 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
 Behalf Of chris cooper
 Sent: Tuesday, April 28, 2009 11:01 AM
 To: 'WISPA General List'
 Subject: [WISPA] NTIA mapping

 There is a $350 million mapping component set aside under BTOP.  Will
 this funding be available in smaller chunks to successful grantees to
 map their expanded networks?  Will it be available to all wisps to map
 their existing networks in an effort to add to the overall national BB
 map?



 Chris Cooper

 Intelliwave



 
 
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[WISPA] Whitespace Equipment

2009-04-29 Thread Charles Wyble
All,

What is the current status of whitespace gear availability?

I'm ramping up my WISP efforts here in SoCal and am looking at a 
combination of TVWS and 3650 for back haul/aggregation.

I know who the 3650 players are, and the licensing process etc. Still 
working on negotiating access to the protected zones.

Who should I be talking to about TVWS gear?



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Re: [WISPA] Whitespace Equipment

2009-04-29 Thread Charles Wyble
Jack,

Thanks for the reply.

It would appear that 3650 is where efforts should be focused for those 
of us here in SoCal.



Jack Unger wrote:
 Charles,
 
 I estimate availability of TVWS equipment to be around the first quarter 
 of 2011 however in southern California (because of all the existing TV 
 stations) there will be few-to-none TVWS channels available. TVWS will 
 be most practical (and available) in rural areas where there are not as 
 many existing TV broadcasters.
 
 jack
 
 
 Charles Wyble wrote:
 All,

 What is the current status of whitespace gear availability?

 I'm ramping up my WISP efforts here in SoCal and am looking at a 
 combination of TVWS and 3650 for back haul/aggregation.

 I know who the 3650 players are, and the licensing process etc. Still 
 working on negotiating access to the protected zones.

 Who should I be talking to about TVWS gear?


 
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Re: [WISPA] Whitespace Equipment

2009-04-29 Thread Charles Wyble
What I have so far is captured at
http://www.socalwifi.net/index.php/3650_to_3700_mhz_spectrum_information

I've been busy with some other things most of the first quarter 
(changing jobs and residences) but that's winding down.


I plan to reach out to the contacts mentioned there very soon. I also 
need to post some data that I got from the FCC OET, as the published 
calculations in regards to the exclusion zones have errors.



Jack Unger wrote:
 Charles,
 
 Yep. Please update us on your efforts to negotiate access to 3650 spectrum.
 
 jack
 
 
 Charles Wyble wrote:
 Jack,

 Thanks for the reply.

 It would appear that 3650 is where efforts should be focused for those 
 of us here in SoCal.



 Jack Unger wrote:
   
 Charles,

 I estimate availability of TVWS equipment to be around the first quarter 
 of 2011 however in southern California (because of all the existing TV 
 stations) there will be few-to-none TVWS channels available. TVWS will 
 be most practical (and available) in rural areas where there are not as 
 many existing TV broadcasters.

 jack


 Charles Wyble wrote:
 
 All,

 What is the current status of whitespace gear availability?

 I'm ramping up my WISP efforts here in SoCal and am looking at a 
 combination of TVWS and 3650 for back haul/aggregation.

 I know who the 3650 players are, and the licensing process etc. Still 
 working on negotiating access to the protected zones.

 Who should I be talking to about TVWS gear?


 
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 -- 
 Jack Unger - President, Ask-Wi.Com, Inc.
 Author - Deploying License-Free Wireless WANs
 Serving the Broadband Wireless Industry Since 1993
 FCC-Licensed Since 1958
 Phone 818-227-4220  Email jun...@ask-wi.com www.ask-wi.com
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Re: [WISPA] NTIA mapping

2009-04-29 Thread Charles Wyble


Brian Webster wrote:
 Charles,
   I am not against this stimulus package nor the mapping effort.


Understood.

  There has
 been considerable criticism of connected nation and where they have
 responded to same, I have watched carefully. 

I will look into this further. This is the first mention I have seen of 
that entity.

Technically they have made the
 data available to the public and to the uninitiated decision makers, they
 think this is great.


Gotcha. Yes I agree a final product in PDF format isn't overly 
interesting. However I'm not sure if the data will only be available in 
that format. We should push for the raw data to be available.

  The format for which they have released the data is not
 what makes good use of a taxpayer funded mapping program. GIS and mapping
 should be considered a large Boolean logic system. In the same way you would
 do searches for key words using an internet search engine, mapping data
 layers can be used in a similar fashion. For example, if the broadband GIS
 data results were openly available, communities and/or individuals could
 build an application where you could ask things like, show me homes for sale
 in the $200,000 range with 3 bedrooms, in x school district in y
 municipality that have broadband. Today you as a citizen, who funded
 projects like the Census , have access to data sets which allow you to
 gather that type of information.

For example TIGER shape files and FCC shape files.

  The broadband mapping should be made
 available in the same formats.

Agreed.

  Maps in pdf format do not meet that criteria.

Right.

 Connected Nation has gone to great lengths to technically release their
 results, but also have hobbled the process and not made the real data
 available to even the government agencies. Think about that when all the
 grant applications start streaming in and the reviewers are trying to verify
 the communities that have or don't have broadband.

Sure. So lets push for the raw data to be available.

   There are many uses and benefits to keeping the data in the public 
 domain.
 Public policy and academic groups would use this as an additional data
 element for their socio economic studies, other industries who might be
 privately looking to locate new facilities, could use it and make sure the
 infrastructure they need would be located on otherwise suitable property.
 There are many others uses that I am aware of and probably many more that I
 wouldn't have though about. Point being is that connected nation does not
 share this philosophy.


Makes sense.

   For the money they have spent on mapping projects to date, they could 
 have
 easily gathered and compiled the same results using other methods with
 publically available data. They chose not to, and obtained information under
 NDA. I question if they did this because they took the lazy route or if it
 was done intentionally. The slightest little differences in the wording of
 contracts or final rules would go unnoticed to the casual observer, but in
 the end will make a huge difference in the benefit and usability to the
 final product.


Very true.

   I would love to lead a crusade to make sure this does not happen and to
 help educate all the policy makers involved. Unfortunately that takes a
 great deal of time and connections to get in front of the right people. As
 one individual I have neither. I have been talking to other groups that may
 have the resources to do so. I continue to offer my help and expertise in
 hopes that the best solutions will prevail to the maximum benefit of the
 taxpayer. The WISP industry would benefit a great deal by keeping access to
 the results open. It will go a long way in helping determine market
 viability for a particular business plan. It would also make the process and
 expense to apply for these grants less costly.
   I made the statement to move ahead despite the mapping effort only 
 because
 I fear that the worst would happen and the data will only be available in
 formats such as in Kentucky and Ohio. Those maps are all but useless when
 you need to answer complex questions like the number of households not
 served by broadband but would be under your project proposal. All important
 information under the grant processes. The statement was meant to say that
 you can still do it without the national mapping effort and at a much lower
 cost.
   This is a very complex issue and difficult to debate the points though
 email or list format. Out of frustration I hastily sent of a response and
 did not clearly state my thoughts on the topic. As a mapping geek I could
 drone on forever about the topic.
 



Thank you very very much for your detailed response. I appreciate the 
time and effort you put into it.

I'm working on combining the LA County GIS data, FCC data, and Census 
data and wardriving data nto an online solution that folks can play with.

Full GIS data from the county (couple gig SHP files) on DVD 

[WISPA] 3650Mhz and Wimax Vendors

2009-04-22 Thread Charles Wyble
So the recent thread on Wimax was quite interesting. I need to read up 
on the different technologies involved. I believe that a fixed 
deployment is sufficient for many many many needs and markets (wireless 
local loop if you will). If people want mobility/end user wireless they 
can hang an 802.11 AP off the ethernet port of whatever CPE. Wimax 
directly to the end device doesn't make much sense to me, in most 
markets and use cases. Obviously if you are supporting a highly mobile 
workforce (say public sector type stuff) then it makes a lot more sense.

It got me thinking... if one was a new WISP entering an un(der)served 
market, it seems that it would not make sense to deploy standard 802.11 
gear, but rather Wimax gear in 3650Mhz. Is this an accurate assessment?

One particular area that I'm targeting, doesn't have any broadband 
available (other then 3g from Verzion). So they would need to purchase 
CPE anyway, and it wouldn't be anything they could get from Best Buy 
(DSL or Cable modem).

I'm in the process of negotiating access to the excluded areas (in 
Southern California), but it's been slow going. Once I gain access it 
will open up many areas to some sorely needed competition.

So who are the vendors in this space worth considering?
What are peoples experiences with the sales process (both pre and post 
sales engineering)
etc etc.




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Re: [WISPA] 3650Mhz and Wimax Vendors

2009-04-22 Thread Charles Wyble
I'm looking for more operational experience and end user experience. 
Certainly good technology contributes to that, but that isn't my primary 
goal.


Michael Baird wrote:
 It was interesting, but I was hoping for some more first hand experience 
 reporting. Essentially the only explanation for improved range was a 
 lower noise floor, which isn't a wimax thing, but a 3.65 thing. I think 
 a lot of the 802.16d/e talk is market speak, I'm trying to get through 
 that and establish technical reasons why one or the other is superior.
 
 Regards
 Michael Baird
 So the recent thread on Wimax was quite interesting. I need to read up 
 on the different technologies involved. I believe that a fixed 
 deployment is sufficient for many many many needs and markets (wireless 
 local loop if you will). If people want mobility/end user wireless they 
 can hang an 802.11 AP off the ethernet port of whatever CPE. Wimax 
 directly to the end device doesn't make much sense to me, in most 
 markets and use cases. Obviously if you are supporting a highly mobile 
 workforce (say public sector type stuff) then it makes a lot more sense.

 It got me thinking... if one was a new WISP entering an un(der)served 
 market, it seems that it would not make sense to deploy standard 802.11 
 gear, but rather Wimax gear in 3650Mhz. Is this an accurate assessment?

 One particular area that I'm targeting, doesn't have any broadband 
 available (other then 3g from Verzion). So they would need to purchase 
 CPE anyway, and it wouldn't be anything they could get from Best Buy 
 (DSL or Cable modem).

 I'm in the process of negotiating access to the excluded areas (in 
 Southern California), but it's been slow going. Once I gain access it 
 will open up many areas to some sorely needed competition.

 So who are the vendors in this space worth considering?
 What are peoples experiences with the sales process (both pre and post 
 sales engineering)
 etc etc.



 
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Re: [WISPA] 3650Mhz and Wimax Vendors

2009-04-22 Thread Charles Wyble


Jason Hensley wrote:
 For me, personally in our area, 3650 is attractive because of the lack of
 noise.  We are saturated with 2.4 and 5GHz here, but if I was in an area
 with low noise levels in 2.4 and 5Ghz, then I would not see a point in
 spending the extra money to deploy 3650 gear.  I personally don't care that
 much about WiMax itself, as I tend to agree that a lot of it is marketing
 hype.  We have a city-wide (NOT Muni) 802.11 hotspot system that generates a
 fair amount of revenue for us with roaming users connecting with their
 laptops.  3650 won't do that because I doubt we will be seeing laptops with
 built-in 3650 cards anytime soon (though I could be wrong).

This is why I specifically mentioned a fixed base use case, and hanging 
an 802.11 access point off the CPE. :) Also Intel has a Wimax card now.

What is the cost difference between the 802.11 gear and Wimax gear?




 
 You can easily pull 10-20meg through 5.8 gear in low noise, good LOS
 environments.  


Southern California doesn't have a lot of those environments. :)

We're doing 10meg in an area that is saturated with 5.8. I'm
 looking at 3650 SOLELY because of our noise floor.  If it wasn't for the
 noise, I'd keep plugging along hanging Deliberant 2.4 and 5Ghz CPE's all
 over the place.  

Interesting. I'll investigate that vendor.


 
 Ideally, what I'm moving toward is putting 3650 gear in place for my large
 backhauls (tower to tower) and for my high-end customers that require higher
 availability and are willing to pay a premium price (i.e. businesses that
 want to go all VoIP over a 20meg Internet connection),


Right. Wireless local loop. Charge a few hundred per month and provide 
dedicated band width.

  while maintaining my
 current networks with their 5Ghz and 2.4 AP locations, although much of the
 5Ghz backhaul would be replaced with 3650 gear. 

Makes sense. What vendors are you considering? What vendors are giving 
you horrors?

 
 Anyway, this is just me.  I'm sure a lot of folks have different views and
 different opinions though, and maybe there is a purpose and need for Wimax
 itself, but for me, I have yet to see what the big deal is.  
   
 



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Re: [WISPA] 3650Mhz and Wimax Vendors

2009-04-22 Thread Charles Wyble
Yes. I know. Which is why I asked very specific questions. I don't 
really care about the technology involved and am not looking for 
information on it.

I'm asking for vendor recommendations and WISP experiences from people 
that have actually deployed Wimax in the 3650Mhz space. The area I'm 
looking to serve wouldn't be cost effective to serve via Wifi.


Matt Liotta wrote:
 Those of us operators who actually have experience in the field with  
 the gear tend to avoid posting to threads about WiMAX because the  
 threads quickly devolve. I suggest you read the archives of this  
 mailing list. To summarize though; operators who use WiMAX like it and  
 think the technology is actually different and better than what else  
 is out there. The people who don't use WiMAX think it is overpriced  
 and not particularly interesting.
 
 -Matt
 
 On Apr 22, 2009, at 1:41 PM, Charles Wyble wrote:
 
 I'm looking for more operational experience and end user experience.
 Certainly good technology contributes to that, but that isn't my  
 primary
 goal.


 Michael Baird wrote:
 It was interesting, but I was hoping for some more first hand  
 experience
 reporting. Essentially the only explanation for improved range was a
 lower noise floor, which isn't a wimax thing, but a 3.65 thing. I  
 think
 a lot of the 802.16d/e talk is market speak, I'm trying to get  
 through
 that and establish technical reasons why one or the other is  
 superior.

 Regards
 Michael Baird
 So the recent thread on Wimax was quite interesting. I need to  
 read up
 on the different technologies involved. I believe that a fixed
 deployment is sufficient for many many many needs and markets  
 (wireless
 local loop if you will). If people want mobility/end user wireless  
 they
 can hang an 802.11 AP off the ethernet port of whatever CPE. Wimax
 directly to the end device doesn't make much sense to me, in most
 markets and use cases. Obviously if you are supporting a highly  
 mobile
 workforce (say public sector type stuff) then it makes a lot more  
 sense.

 It got me thinking... if one was a new WISP entering an  
 un(der)served
 market, it seems that it would not make sense to deploy standard  
 802.11
 gear, but rather Wimax gear in 3650Mhz. Is this an accurate  
 assessment?

 One particular area that I'm targeting, doesn't have any broadband
 available (other then 3g from Verzion). So they would need to  
 purchase
 CPE anyway, and it wouldn't be anything they could get from Best Buy
 (DSL or Cable modem).

 I'm in the process of negotiating access to the excluded areas (in
 Southern California), but it's been slow going. Once I gain access  
 it
 will open up many areas to some sorely needed competition.

 So who are the vendors in this space worth considering?
 What are peoples experiences with the sales process (both pre and  
 post
 sales engineering)
 etc etc.



 
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Re: [WISPA] 3650Mhz and Wimax Vendors

2009-04-22 Thread Charles Wyble
What he said. :)

Seriously I'm interested in actual experiences. Not moans and gripes and 
arm chair speculation. I'm very interested in deploying Wimax technology 
and want real world information and actual operator feedback.

Michael Baird wrote:
 Matt,
 
 I appreciate your perspective, but I've already read through the 
 archives and with Wimax technology what was valid yesterday might not be 
 valid today. I'm not interested in a holy war, we are certainly going to 
 deploy Wimax in the near future, I just want to set expectations 
 properly before we are mounting the gear on the tower, and reading 
 marketing info from Alverion/Tranzeo/Aperto certainly doesn't help clear 
 up the differences and advantages to the technology.
 
 Regards
 Michael Baird
 Those of us operators who actually have experience in the field with  
 the gear tend to avoid posting to threads about WiMAX because the  
 threads quickly devolve. I suggest you read the archives of this  
 mailing list. To summarize though; operators who use WiMAX like it and  
 think the technology is actually different and better than what else  
 is out there. The people who don't use WiMAX think it is overpriced  
 and not particularly interesting.

 -Matt

 On Apr 22, 2009, at 1:41 PM, Charles Wyble wrote:

   
 I'm looking for more operational experience and end user experience.
 Certainly good technology contributes to that, but that isn't my  
 primary
 goal.


 Michael Baird wrote:
 
 It was interesting, but I was hoping for some more first hand  
 experience
 reporting. Essentially the only explanation for improved range was a
 lower noise floor, which isn't a wimax thing, but a 3.65 thing. I  
 think
 a lot of the 802.16d/e talk is market speak, I'm trying to get  
 through
 that and establish technical reasons why one or the other is  
 superior.

 Regards
 Michael Baird
   
 So the recent thread on Wimax was quite interesting. I need to  
 read up
 on the different technologies involved. I believe that a fixed
 deployment is sufficient for many many many needs and markets  
 (wireless
 local loop if you will). If people want mobility/end user wireless  
 they
 can hang an 802.11 AP off the ethernet port of whatever CPE. Wimax
 directly to the end device doesn't make much sense to me, in most
 markets and use cases. Obviously if you are supporting a highly  
 mobile
 workforce (say public sector type stuff) then it makes a lot more  
 sense.

 It got me thinking... if one was a new WISP entering an  
 un(der)served
 market, it seems that it would not make sense to deploy standard  
 802.11
 gear, but rather Wimax gear in 3650Mhz. Is this an accurate  
 assessment?

 One particular area that I'm targeting, doesn't have any broadband
 available (other then 3g from Verzion). So they would need to  
 purchase
 CPE anyway, and it wouldn't be anything they could get from Best Buy
 (DSL or Cable modem).

 I'm in the process of negotiating access to the excluded areas (in
 Southern California), but it's been slow going. Once I gain access  
 it
 will open up many areas to some sorely needed competition.

 So who are the vendors in this space worth considering?
 What are peoples experiences with the sales process (both pre and  
 post
 sales engineering)
 etc etc.



 
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Re: [WISPA] router to load balance 2 wan connections

2009-04-22 Thread Charles Wyble
Excellent questions to ask.

I would recommend a mid range cisco router. Say the 1800 or 2800 series.

Also Vyata makes some nice kit.

Jeff Broadwick wrote:
 Hi Alan,
 
 Do you anticipate needing BGP now, or in the future?
 
 What are the link speeds?
 
 How much overall throughput will the router need to handle?
 
 What pricepoint are you looking for?
 
 Jeff
 ImageStream 
 
 -Original Message-
 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
 Behalf Of Alan Long
 Sent: Wednesday, April 22, 2009 5:20 PM
 To: 'WISPA General List'
 Subject: [WISPA] router to load balance 2 wan connections
 
 I am looking for a router to load balance 2 wan connections and support 450
 users behind the router. I will be bringing in 2 external circuits from
 different providers and want to be able to use both. Any have any experience
 with gear to handle this?
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
  http://www.aerowire.net 
 
  
 
  
 
 
 
 Alan Long
 Director of Network Operations 
 
 Aerowire
  
 http://maps.yahoo.com/py/maps.py?Pyt=Tmapaddr=687+North+Dean+Roadcsz=Aubu
 rn%2C+AL+36830country=us 687 North Dean Road Auburn, AL 36830 
 
 
  mailto:alan.l...@aerowire.net alan.l...@aerowire.net 
 
 
 tel: 
 mobile: 
 
  
 http://www.plaxo.com/click_to_call?lang=ensrc=jj_signatureTo=3342759998E
 mail=along5...@yahoo.com 3342759998
  
 http://www.plaxo.com/click_to_call?lang=ensrc=jj_signatureTo=336092E
 mail=along5...@yahoo.com 336092 
 
  
 
 
 
  
 https://www.plaxo.com/add_me?u=30065206883src=client_sig_212_1_card_joini
 nvite=1=en Always have my latest info
 
  http://www.plaxo.com/signature?src=client_sig_212_1_card_sig=en Want a
 signature like this?
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
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Re: [WISPA] 3650Mhz and Wimax Vendors

2009-04-22 Thread Charles Wyble
This is what I'm looking for. Thank you!!

Ben Wiechman wrote:
 We've looked at several different vendors for WiMAX and have been running
 Alvarion in 2.5GHz for almost 18 months now. Aperto seems to have a decent
 RF platform, as does Redline and Alvarion. We had two main issues with
 Aperto: ugly Tranzeo CPE and their EMS. Maybe some things have changed by
 the EMS was required to configure each base station and MS as it entered the
 network, however ran only on windows and didn't run as a service. So one
 clown closing the window and your network was dead in the water. Redline
 appears to have a solid product as well as does Alvarion.
 
 As was stated earlier the biggest reason to look at WiMAX is for
 differentiated services. If voice or a high quality data play is in your
 business plan it makes sense. If you are suffering from interference issues,
 and spectrum is becoming much more polluted everywhere, so 3650 does help in
 that regard.
 
 With access to 2.5GHz spectrum for us WiMAX was an option we considered
 purely for the penetration. The bulk of our subscriber base was only
 accessible using 900MHz access points, and we quickly outgrew the capacity
 of the Canopy APs we have been using and also are suffering increasingly
 from interference from a number of sources: RFID, baby monitors, a couple
 lingering paging companies, GPS correction for farming, saturation due to
 excessive numbers of Access POints to try to meet bandwidth demands, etc. We
 also didn't feel that we would be able to offer services other than basic
 broadband access across the Canopy platform. The 16e standard is valuable
 for us due to the penetration provided by MIMO and beamforming that are
 available within the standard. We could care less about the mobility (and
 added overhead) but its hard to get one without the other.
 
 If you've got clean spectrum and are only looking to deploy basic data
 access WiMAX probably doesn't make sense. If you have access to licensed
 spectrum, want to deploy differentiated services, or are looking at 3650
 WiMAX may make sense. 16d will have less overhead and less cost: the
 complexities of the mobile platform are not there, nor do you need
 additional network components like an ASN-GW, and typically provisioning is
 greatly simplified. The problem you run into on the 16e side is that every
 vendor is only thinking about Clearwire and not considering the WISP and the
 price point a WISP is able to justify.
 
 Ben Wiechman
 Wisper High Speed Internet
 
 On Wed, Apr 22, 2009 at 4:30 PM, Pat O'Connor p...@inlandnet.com wrote:
 
 Anybody use Airspan for Wimax?



 Michael Baird wrote:
 It was interesting, but I was hoping for some more first hand experience
 reporting. Essentially the only explanation for improved range was a
 lower noise floor, which isn't a wimax thing, but a 3.65 thing. I think
 a lot of the 802.16d/e talk is market speak, I'm trying to get through
 that and establish technical reasons why one or the other is superior.

 Regards
 Michael Baird

 So the recent thread on Wimax was quite interesting. I need to read up
 on the different technologies involved. I believe that a fixed
 deployment is sufficient for many many many needs and markets (wireless
 local loop if you will). If people want mobility/end user wireless they
 can hang an 802.11 AP off the ethernet port of whatever CPE. Wimax
 directly to the end device doesn't make much sense to me, in most
 markets and use cases. Obviously if you are supporting a highly mobile
 workforce (say public sector type stuff) then it makes a lot more sense.

 It got me thinking... if one was a new WISP entering an un(der)served
 market, it seems that it would not make sense to deploy standard 802.11
 gear, but rather Wimax gear in 3650Mhz. Is this an accurate assessment?

 One particular area that I'm targeting, doesn't have any broadband
 available (other then 3g from Verzion). So they would need to purchase
 CPE anyway, and it wouldn't be anything they could get from Best Buy
 (DSL or Cable modem).

 I'm in the process of negotiating access to the excluded areas (in
 Southern California), but it's been slow going. Once I gain access it
 will open up many areas to some sorely needed competition.

 So who are the vendors in this space worth considering?
 What are peoples experiences with the sales process (both pre and post
 sales engineering)
 etc etc.




 
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Re: [WISPA] DFS Radar Question

2009-04-20 Thread Charles Wyble
The WiSPY picks up radar signals?

Eje Gustafsson wrote:
 The Wi-SPY devices are fairly affordable. And they support remote monitoring
 both with Windows and Linux. So you could set one up in a small linux box
 that you leave on site and just let it log and you can view the data
 remotely from your Windows machine over the network or go and pickup the
 unit and view the log data that way. So will do just what you want. 
 Also the frequency resolution the Wi-Spy devices offer is better then what I
 normally set my real SA on when I check out radio cards or check out
 signals. Very capable devices IMO there is no reason why a WISP shouldn't
 have at least one of these in their toolbox. I can understand why many do
 not want to buy a expensive spectrum analyzer for $3k+ for the simpler ones
 but in all reality be able to track down signal sources and interference as
 a WISP is a must. I know some people are using like Canopy SM's to do this
 but they interface is slow and clunky and don't log any data. 
 
 
 / Eje Gustafsson
 WISP-Router, Inc.
 http://store.wisp-router.com/items.asp?Cc=WiFiToolsBc=
 
 
 
 -Original Message-
 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
 Behalf Of Adam Goodman
 Sent: Monday, April 20, 2009 3:51 PM
 To: sc...@brevardwireless.com; WISPA General List
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] DFS Radar Question
 
 I had some trouble with radar (think it was radar) last year.
 Interferences could be from many sources. It sa problem because you
 can't just go sit there for a couple of weeks with a spectrum analyzer
 listening for noise. It would be nice if there was a reasonably priced
 logger. Or with Internet connectivity. All this is probably a pipe
 dream as I have never seen anything with such functionality.
 
 
 
 
 On Mon, Apr 20, 2009 at 4:37 PM, Scott Carullo
 sc...@brevardwireless.com wrote:
 Anyone know of a radio that can just listen passively and scan through
 channels and report back on radar signals heard on what frequencies?  That
 would be a great tool to have to scope out certain areas of interest to
 know ahead of time what radar DFS issues might be present...

 Scott Carullo
 Brevard Wireless
 321-205-1100 x102

  Original Message 
 From: Blair Davis the...@wmwisp.net
 Sent: Monday, April 20, 2009 4:30 PM
 To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] Gell Cell?


 
 
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Re: [WISPA] Ya Know......

2009-04-16 Thread Charles Wyble
Alright. Shut this thread down. Or take it off list.

Don't gripe on list about an issue between two individuals. Use a blog 
or something. Seriously.

Bob Moldashel wrote:
 After reading this again.
 
 No...
 
 What would have been better for Bob in the first place is if the other 
 party (who is a WISPA member) would have conducted themselves in a 
 professional manner and sent payments when he said he was going to and 
 not play' me. I suppose I should be professional and return his 
 deposit too??? Maybe I should give him interest on his $500 too while I 
 had it in my bank.
 
 I almost sent the money I promised to donate to WISPA on the sale of 
 this link out of the deposit.  Fortunately for me and unfortunately for 
 WISPA I didn't.
 
 So what the other party did was unprofessional. So...If this is a 
 professional organization maybe he shouldn't be a member because he 
 doesn't meet the professional criteria.
 
 I didn't name any names so I don't know what the issue is.  So many 
 people here bitch about the FCC, the rules, manufacturer's handling of 
 RMA's, repairs, price, delivery, tower companies, throughput, RF 
 interference, etc, etc.
 
 Please don't single me out.  It won't work.  And I don't want to be the 
 person who points out when others are being unprofessional.
 
 -B-
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Matt Liotta wrote:
 Except of course that isn't professional. And, while I have many times  
 wanted to complain about some other WISP in public I won't because it  
 isn't professional. What would have been better for Bob in the first  
 place and for the rest of us always; would be simply for each other to  
 treat their peers with respect. This is supposed to be a professional  
 organization after all.

 -Matt

 On Apr 16, 2009, at 4:42 PM, Brad Belton wrote:

   
 Geesh...that sucks Bob.  I'd almost say a public flogging of the  
 perp is in
 order...grin

 Brad


 -Original Message-
 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org]  
 On
 Behalf Of Bob Moldashel
 Sent: Thursday, April 16, 2009 3:28 PM
 To: WISPA General List
 Subject: [WISPA] Ya Know..

 The world is really full of losers.

 After 6 weeks of BS and a down payment check of $500 I once again have
 another happy list member backing out of the purchase of the 200 Mb
 Dragonwave link that I have. Nothing like wasting my time. The reason
 given is that he doesn't feel that  the link will perform at 1 mile  
 EVEN
 WITH 4' FREAKIN' DISHES  There is nothing worse than someone who
 can't just say something like I can't afford it or something real  
 like
 that.  No...the excuse is a 23 Ghz. FD link won't work over 1 mile in
 the southwest RELIABLY.AUGH

 And get this.He wants his deposit back! I have to laugh

 I will not identify who the person or entity is as they are on this
 list.  I will let him defend himself if he wishes too.  (BTW:  I have
 ALL the e-mails so I can support my side so please don't try to come  
 up
 with another story dude...)

 OKNow.   Here is the last chance if someone wants it.

 Dragonwave 200 Mb Airpair all outdoor link, 23 Ghz.  FDX with your
 choice of 2' (new) or 4' used antennas. The link was in service for a
 little over 1 year.  has a fiber interface and power supplies for each
 side.  I will guarantee it will work as advertised.  I will also give
 anyone that is sincerely interested the serial numbers and you can  
 call
 Dragonwave and see for yourself that this link never had a problem.

 The first $7K gets it.  You pay shipping. No discount for radios only.
 if you want just the equipment less antennas...Still $7K

 Its a good deal if you have money.  I am not financing this so please
 don't ask.

 Sorry for the rant.

 Offlist  (lakel...@gbcx.net) or my cell 516-551-1131 anytime

 Bob


 
 
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Re: [WISPA] Insurance on equipment

2009-04-16 Thread Charles Wyble
Why would one find another insurer?

I do believe they can do a search on claims you have filed and charge 
accordingly. So changing insurers most likely won't help.



Josh Luthman wrote:
 What we do and what I've been suggested is hold onto an insurance policy and
 use it when you really have to.  If an AP or two and some CPEs go bad, don't
 claim it as it your rates will rise or the policy may be canceled.
 
 If you lost an entire tower and hundreds of thousands of dollars (or
 whatever size completely kicks your bucket) then claim it and prepare to
 find another insurer.
 
 Josh Luthman
 Office: 937-552-2340
 Direct: 937-552-2343
 1100 Wayne St
 Suite 1337
 Troy, OH 45373
 
 Those who don't understand UNIX are condemned to reinvent it, poorly.
 --- Henry Spencer
 
 
 On Thu, Apr 16, 2009 at 5:33 PM, Alan Long alan.l...@aerowire.net wrote:
 
 All gear.

 
 Aerowire
 Alan Long
 Director of Network Operations
 alan.l...@aerowire.net
 687 North Dean Road
 Auburn, AL 36830
 tel: 3342759998
 mobile: 336092
 
 -Original Message-
 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
 Behalf Of Charles Wyble
 Sent: Thursday, April 16, 2009 4:30 PM
 To: WISPA General List
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] Insurance on equipment

 I'm guessing you mean AP gear and not CPE? Or do you mean CPE as well?




 Alan Long wrote:
 Anyone have information/experience with insuring your equipment against
 damage. My main concern is weather related damage.








 
 
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