http://gigaom.com/2006/07/19/open-source-wireless-mesh/

Earthlink and Tropos might be looking to make millions off of muni  
wireless, but members of the open source community are hard at work  
trying to make wireless networking free. And they just got some funds  
to help their cause. Sascha Meinrath, of the Champaign-Urbana  
Community Wireless Network, CUWIN, just called me this morning to say  
his open source wireless mesh project received a $500,000 grant from  
the National Science Foundation. Sascha says he plans to use the  
money to add staff, scour the globe for open source partners, and  
boost research and testing.

The organization had been applying to the NSF for 4 years now, and  
previously Sascha had been paying much of the research fees out of  
pocket–so the news is good for him on a lot of levels! A project like  
this could help make wireless broadband available for communities  
that can’t afford it and address the real digital divide. Not just  
recreate the economics of the traditional phone and cable operators  
with a slightly less monthly subscriber fee.



I thought maybe the NSF was starting to pay attention to an open  
source wireless project because of what wireless networking was shown  
to do in recovery efforts in Hurricane Katrina and the East Asian  
tsunami. Sascha said he wasn’t sure why the NSF approved them this time.

The open source code addresses the networking layer that improves the  
strength and reduces redundancies of the wireless signal. The code is  
in beta form and freely available on the organization’s web site.  
Making this technology freely available to anyone might make some  
companies with nice profits from wireless mesh, a tad unhappy. But  
the companies that are confident in their own technology probably  
won’t mind.

Sascha said he has also been talking to a few companies for  
partnerships. For example, he says possible partnerships could be  
wireless hand held device makers looking to test products over a test  
mesh network, that don’t want to pay a lot to use an already  
established network owned by a for-profit company.

Allan Leinwand, a partner at Panorama Capital, is an open source  
networking advocate and funded Vyatta the open source router company.  
He says a funding like this is really exciting for the open source  
network community, but that it’s also a big leap to turn a project  
into a widely used product.

The CUWIN project is really small, so whether the code will become  
popular is unclear. Sascha said his group started as “a bunch of  
geeks in my living room and grew to an international community.”  
Maybe these funds could help the technology follow suit.




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