RE: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request

2006-09-20 Thread Rick Harnish








I use wunderground on my Verizon PDA phone
as well.  If you look under the Wunderground logo, you will see a link to
the pda/mobile version.  I set my home page on the pda to the local radar
map on the pda version.  It loads immediately when I open IE on my
phone.  Great map although it doesn’t have all the features of the
desktop/laptop version.

 



Rick Harnish

President

OnlyInternet Broadband & Wireless,
Inc.

260-827-2482

Founding Member of WISPA











From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Brad Belton
Sent: Monday, September 18, 2006
11:55 PM
To: 'WISPA
 General List'
Subject: RE: [WISPA] Weather
Watcher Request



 

Hello Ken,

 

Yes, it has been some time since we last
met.  I believe it was with my brother Jack more than a couple years ago
at your place near Alvarado.  I believe it may have even been before you
had a tower up!  Time flies!

 

My first mobile data card (still have it
in a drawer) was from Air America
reselling the Ricochet service.  The service was tolerable
(200Kbps-300Kbps) if you were stationary, but pretty much unusable while
driving.  I think I paid $129.00 a month or more for the service! 
Crazy, but I had to have it!

 

My second data card was Sprint’s
first generation card.  This service was far superior to Ricochet in
coverage and service while driving was terrific.  This is the card I used
while driving across country during a couple vacations.  Service started
out at about 120Kbps-200Kbps and 350-450ms latency which was a bit worse than
Ricochet.  The service did begin to slow and Sprint moved the couple cards
we had to their new service that we have now.  

 

I figure $5 a year for a weather service I
enjoy is a bargain.  I think that works out to just over a penny a
day.  The site www.wunderground.com
really is a great source of information and the five bucks eliminates the advertisements
and enables a few additional features.  You should check it out during the
next storm…I’m fairly sure the experimental “Lightning”
data is pulled from a client of ours that operates a number of remote sensors
our network provides service to.  Pretty amazing technology as they can
actually predict a lightning strike (cloud to cloud, cloud to ground or ground
to cloud) before it happens.

 

Best,

 

 

Brad

 

 

 

 

 

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Ken Chipps
Sent: Monday, September 18, 2006
8:40 PM
To: 'WISPA
 General List'
Subject: RE: [WISPA] Weather
Watcher Request

 

Hi Brad, we do need to
meet each other one of these days since we are in the same city.

 

Interesting. I may have
to look into this further. I had heard that the Sprint service was slow from
other users. What is the best way to buy the hardware and monthly service for
this? Is the Sprint website the only source?

 

Why do you pay for this
weather stuff? Why not use one of the local TV station web sites or WeatherBug?

 

Ken Chipps

 













From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Brad Belton
Sent: Monday, September 18, 2006
6:45 PM
To: 'WISPA
 General List'
Subject: RE: [WISPA] Weather
Watcher Request



 

Hello Ken,

 

Yes, Mark is
correct.  RDC is short (in my book anyway) for Remote Desktop Control aka
Terminal Services or Citrix etc…

 

Yes, I subscribe to www.wunderground.com for my weather
information.  The $5 a year it costs is well worth the money IMO (in my
opinion).  

 

Pulling current, animated
radar images over my Sprint DATA card has not given me any trouble.  Speed
test confirmation from www.testmy.net : 

 

:::.. Download Stats ..:::

Download Connection is:: 654 Kbps
about 0.65 Mbps (tested with 579 kB)

Download Speed is:: 80 kB/s

Tested From:: http://testmy.net/
(Server 1)

Test Time:: 2006/09/18 - 4:26pm 

Bottom Line:: 11X faster than 56K
1MB Download in 12.8 sec 

Tested from a 579 kB file and took
7.25 seconds to complete

Download Diagnosis:: 90% + Okay :
running at 96.04 % of your hosts average (spcsdns.net) 

D-Validation Link::
http://testmy.net/stats/id-814GRHMXW

 

 

I’ve seen well over
1Mbps before, but even then 654Kbps isn’t that bad.  Latency
typically looks like this:

 

Pinging 4.2.2.2 with 32 bytes of
data:

 

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=163ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=173ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=188ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=172ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=239ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=170ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=185ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=167ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=155ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=368ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=151ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=165ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=179ms
TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=200ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.

Re: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request

2006-09-19 Thread David E. Smith

Scott Reed wrote:
All the discussion has been good, but I would like to get back to the 
original question.  The Watcher is looking at a park and connect, not 
mobile application.  So, let's assume my network will support him 
connecting to any POP.  Any suggestions how to bill a customer that is 
only going to connect 2 to 4 times per month for 6 months a year?


To be honest, for that little usage, especially for something like 
Skywarn, I'd probably let him have access free of charge, with the 
understanding that it really is only for weather emergencies, and if I 
see traffic from his connection and it's bright and sunny outside we'll 
have to revisit the deal. Normal one-time charge for whatever equipment 
you have to provide, obviously.


David Smith
MVN.net
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WISPA Wireless List: wireless@wispa.org

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Re: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request

2006-09-19 Thread Paul Pescitelli

I agree with previous poster... I have experience in ARES (Amateur
Radio Emergency Service) they are a volunteer organization attempting
to help out the community and the national weather service by
providing real time data and updates, usually via voice repeaters.

Allow him free access and you are doing a great community service.
Monitor his activity and if he exceeds 20 hrs per month then you can
have the conversation about charging him.

regards,
Paul


On 9/19/06, Rick Harnish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:





Scott,



We charge by the time allotment that the customer chooses to purchase.  They
enter their credit card in and get turned on for that time period.  Details
can be found at www.oiwifi.com.  Click on the yellow signup button for
pricing.





Rick Harnish

President

OnlyInternet Broadband & Wireless, Inc.

260-827-2482

Founding Member of WISPA

 


From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Scott Reed
 Sent: Tuesday, September 19, 2006 8:57 AM
 To: WISPA General List

 Subject: RE: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request







The technical how-to is not the question, though I would like to take you up
on the offer.  I will hit you offline about that.

 The question is, what would you charge this person.  $x/connection,
$y/year, $z/hour, some other way.

 Scott Reed
 Owner
 NewWays
 Wireless Networking
 Network Design, Installation and Administration
 www.nwwnet.net


 -- Original Message ---
 From: "David Weddell" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
 To: "'WISPA General List'" 
 Sent: Tue, 19 Sep 2006 06:42:53 -0400
 Subject: RE: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request

 > Come up and see what we are doing on our WiFi Network. We have the
ability to sell service by the hour, 4 hours, 8 hours, 1 day, 1
week……whatever time period you want to use. We do this on our network today.
I will get with you offline to discuss details, but we are doing this today
on our network. It allows truckers to get online while they are in town
waiting on a load or for any of our fixed wireless customers to travel
around on our network in any town that we service.
 >
 >
 > Regards,
 > David Weddell
 > Director of Sales
 >
 > 260 827 2551 Office
 > 800 363 4881  Ext 2551
 > 260 273 7547 Cell
 >
 > www.onlyinternet.net
 > www.oibw.net
 >
 >
 >
 



 > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Scott Reed
 > Sent: Tuesday, September 19, 2006 6:34 AM
 > To: WISPA General List
 > Subject: Re: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request
 >
 > All the discussion has been good, but I would like to get back to the
original question.  The Watcher is looking at a park and connect, not mobile
application.  So, let's assume my network will support him connecting to any
POP.  Any suggestions how to bill a customer that is only going to connect 2
to 4 times per month for 6 months a year?
 >
 > Scott Reed
 > Owner
 > NewWays
 > Wireless Networking
 > Network Design, Installation and Administration
 > www.nwwnet.net
 >
 > -- Original Message -------
 > From: "Scott Reed" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
 > To: WISPA General List 
 > Sent: Mon, 18 Sep 2006 20:28:01 -0500
 > Subject: Re: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request
 >
 > > That's one thing I need to ask him. I am not sure he needs to drive and
connect. It may be park and connect. I will find out.
 > >
 > > I am doing the same thing for the county Mobile Command Center. They
take it to a disaster, park and connect. I am still working on that one, but
there are not a lot a disasters in our area, so the first one was free.
 > >
 > > Scott Reed
 > > Owner
 > > NewWays
 > > Wireless Networking
 > > Network Design, Installation and Administration
 > > www.nwwnet.net
 > >
 > > -- Original Message ---
 > > From: "David E. Smith" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
 > > To: WISPA General List 
 > > Sent: Mon, 18 Sep 2006 16:32:15 -0500
 > > Subject: Re: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request
 > >
 > > > Scott Reed wrote:
 > > > > I have had a request for service from our local SkyWarn volunteer
watcher. He
 > > > > needs service in his vehicle during potetial storms so he can see
the radar
 > > > > while watching the sky. Does anyone provide similar service? If so,
how do you
 > > > > charge for installation, service, etc.?
 > > >
 > > > Honestly, for someone who's gonna be THAT mobile, I'd recommend a
cell
 > > > phone PCMCIA card. Yes, I work for a WISP, but I know what problems I
 > > > can (and cannot) solve, and at least for my network, that sort of
 > > > roaming is firmly in the "cannot" category.

RE: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request

2006-09-19 Thread Rick Harnish








Scott,

 

We charge by the time allotment that the
customer chooses to purchase.  They enter their credit card in and get turned
on for that time period.  Details can be found at www.oiwifi.com.  Click on the yellow signup
button for pricing.

 



Rick Harnish

President

OnlyInternet Broadband & Wireless,
Inc.

260-827-2482

Founding Member of WISPA











From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Scott Reed
Sent: Tuesday, September 19, 2006
8:57 AM
To: WISPA
 General List
Subject: RE: [WISPA] Weather
Watcher Request



 

The technical how-to is not the question, though I would like to take
you up on the offer.  I will hit you offline about that. 

The question is, what would you charge this person.  $x/connection, 
$y/year, $z/hour, some other way. 

Scott Reed 
Owner 
NewWays 
Wireless Networking 
Network Design, Installation and Administration 
www.nwwnet.net 


-- Original Message ---

From: "David Weddell" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
To: "'WISPA General List'"
 
Sent: Tue, 19 Sep 2006 06:42:53 -0400 
Subject: RE: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request 

> Come up and see what we are doing on our
WiFi Network. We have the ability to sell service by the hour, 4 hours, 8
hours, 1 day, 1 week……whatever time period you want to use. We do
this on our network today. I will get with you offline to discuss details, but
we are doing this today on our network. It allows truckers to get online while
they are in town waiting on a load or for any of our fixed wireless customers
to travel around on our network in any town that we service. 
>   
> 
> Regards, 
> David Weddell 
> Director of Sales 
>   
> 260 827 2551 Office 
> 800 363 4881  Ext 2551 
> 260 273 7547 Cell 
>   
> www.onlyinternet.net 
> www.oibw.net 
>   
> 
> 








> From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Scott Reed 
> Sent: Tuesday, September 19,
2006 6:34 AM 
> To: WISPA General List 
> Subject: Re: [WISPA] Weather
Watcher Request

>   
> All the discussion has been good, but I would like to get back to
the original question.  The Watcher is looking at a park and connect, not
mobile application.  So, let's assume my network will support him
connecting to any POP.  Any suggestions how to bill a customer that is
only going to connect 2 to 4 times per month for 6 months a year? 
> 
> Scott Reed 
> Owner 
> NewWays 
> Wireless Networking 
> Network Design, Installation and Administration 
> www.nwwnet.net 
> 
> -- Original Message -------

> From: "Scott Reed" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
> To: WISPA General List
 
> Sent: Mon, 18 Sep 2006 20:28:01 -0500 
> Subject: Re: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request 
> 
> > That's one thing I need to ask him. I am not sure he needs to drive
and connect. It may be park and connect. I will find out. 
> > 
> > I am doing the same thing for the county Mobile Command Center. They
take it to a disaster, park and connect. I am still working on that one, but
there are not a lot a disasters in our area, so the first one was free. 
> > 
> > Scott Reed 
> > Owner 
> > NewWays 
> > Wireless Networking 
> > Network Design, Installation and Administration 
> > www.nwwnet.net 
> > 
> > -- Original Message
--- 
> > From: "David E. Smith" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
> > To: WISPA
 General List  
> > Sent: Mon, 18 Sep 2006 16:32:15 -0500 
> > Subject: Re: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request 
> > 
> > > Scott Reed wrote: 
> > > > I have had a request for service from our local SkyWarn
volunteer watcher. He 
> > > > needs service in his vehicle during potetial storms so he
can see the radar 
> > > > while watching the sky. Does anyone provide similar
service? If so, how do you 
> > > > charge for installation, service, etc.? 
> > > 
> > > Honestly, for someone who's gonna be THAT mobile, I'd recommend
a cell 
> > > phone PCMCIA card. Yes, I work for a WISP, but I know what
problems I 
> > > can (and cannot) solve, and at least for my network, that sort
of 
> > > roaming is firmly in the "cannot" category. 
> > > 
> > > Obviously, WISP wifi roaming is possible; there was a thread
about it a 
> > > couple weeks ago, where someone did a lot of voodoo with
Mikrotik. But 
> > > unless your whole network already happens to support that, or
the 
> > > customer is rather patient, just recommending a cell card is
probably 
> > > gonna make everyone happier. (The customer gets the service
they're 
> > > looking for, and you've saved many man-hours rebuilding your
network :) 
> > > 
>

Re: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request

2006-09-19 Thread Tom Andrews
When it comes to the safety and security of our community and customers we 
give the service away for free. There are several police officers who use 
our service from their cars and I have had experimental systems set up on 
fire trucks. They have yet to cause a problem, don't use hardly any 
bandwidth and in the event of a true emergency I don't care if they suck up 
all my bandwidth if it helps save a life.


Just my 2 cents. I have worn all the uniforms and have done weather 
spotting. Having access to data at the right time and fast makes a big 
difference.



- Original Message - 
From: "Scott Reed" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

To: "WISPA General List" 
Sent: Tuesday, September 19, 2006 08:56
Subject: RE: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request


The technical how-to is not the question, though I would like to take you up 
on the offer.  I will hit you offline about that.


The question is, what would you charge this person.  $x/connection, 
$y/year, $z/hour, some other way.


Scott Reed
Owner
NewWays
Wireless Networking
Network Design, Installation and Administration
www.nwwnet.net 


--
WISPA Wireless List: wireless@wispa.org

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RE: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request

2006-09-19 Thread Scott Reed




The technical how-to is not the question, though I would like to take you up on the offer.  I will hit you offline about that.

The question is, what would you charge this person.  $x/connection,  $y/year, $z/hour, some other way.

Scott Reed 


Owner 


NewWays 


Wireless Networking 


Network Design, Installation and Administration 


www.nwwnet.net 




-- Original Message 
---

From: "David Weddell" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 


To: "'WISPA General List'"  


Sent: Tue, 19 Sep 2006 06:42:53 -0400 


Subject: RE: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request 



> Come up and see what we are doing on 
our
WiFi Network. We have the ability to sell service by the hour, 4 hours, 
8
hours, 1 day, 1 week……whatever time period you want to use. We 
do
this on our network today. I will get with you offline to discuss details, 
but
we are doing this today on our network. It allows truckers to get online 
while
they are in town waiting on a load or for any of our fixed wireless 
customers
to travel around on our network in any town that we 
service.

>  


> 
> Regards,

> David 
Weddell

> Director of 
Sales

>  


> 260 827 2551 
Office

> 800 363 4881  Ext 
2551

> 260 273 7547 
Cell

>  


> www.onlyinternet.net

> www.oibw.net

>  


> 
> 





> From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
On Behalf Of Scott Reed
> 

Sent: Tuesday, September 19, 
2006
6:34 AM
> 

To: WISPA
 General List
> 

Subject: Re: [WISPA] 
Weather
Watcher 
Request

>  


> All the discussion has been good, but I would like to get back to 
the
original question.  The Watcher is looking at a park and connect, 
not
mobile application.  So, let's assume my network will support 
him
connecting to any POP.  Any suggestions how to bill a customer that 
is
only going to connect 2 to 4 times per month for 6 months a year? 
> 

> 

Scott Reed 
> 

Owner 
> 

NewWays 
> 

Wireless Networking 
> 

Network Design, Installation and Administration 
> 

www.nwwnet.net 
> 

> 

-- Original Message 
---

> 

From: "Scott Reed" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
> 

To: WISPA General 
List
 
> 

Sent: Mon, 18 Sep 2006 20:28:01 -0500 
> 

Subject: Re: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request 
> 
> 

> That's one thing I need to ask him. I am not sure he needs to drive 
and
connect. It may be park and connect. I will find out. 
> 

> 
> 

> I am doing the same thing for the county Mobile
 Command Center.
They take it to a disaster, park and connect. I am still working on that 
one,
but there are not a lot a disasters in our area, so the first one was free. 

> 

> 
> 

> Scott Reed 
> 

> Owner 
> 

> NewWays 
> 

> Wireless Networking 
> 

> Network Design, Installation and Administration 
> 

> www.nwwnet.net 

> 

> 
> 

> -- Original Message 
---

> 

> From: "David E. Smith" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
> 

> To: WISPA General 
List
 
> 

> Sent: Mon, 18 Sep 2006 16:32:15 -0500 
> 

> Subject: Re: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request 
> 

> 
> 

> > Scott Reed wrote: 
> 

> > > I have had a request for service from our local 
SkyWarn
volunteer watcher. He 
> 

> > > needs service in his vehicle during potetial storms so he 
can
see the radar 
> 

> > > while watching the sky. Does anyone provide similar service? 
If
so, how do you 
> 

> > > charge for installation, service, etc.? 
> 

> > 
> 

> > Honestly, for someone who's gonna be THAT mobile, I'd recommend 
a
cell 
> 

> > phone PCMCIA card. Yes, I work for a WISP, but I know what problems 
I

> 

> > can (and cannot) solve, and at least for my network, that sort of 

> 

> > roaming is firmly in the "cannot" category. 
> 

> > 
> 

> > Obviously, WISP wifi roaming is possible; there was a thread about 
it
a 
> 

> > couple weeks ago, where someone did a lot of voodoo with 
Mikrotik.
But 
> 

> > unless your whole network already happens to support that, or the 

> 

> > customer is rather patient, just recommending a cell card is 
probably

> 

> > gonna make everyone happier. (The customer gets the service they're 

> 

> > looking for, and you've saved many man-hours rebuilding your 
network
:) 
> 

> > 
> 

> > David Smith 
> 

> > MVN.net 
> 

> > -- 
> 

> > WISPA Wireless List: wireless@wispa.org 
> 

> > 
> 

> > Subscribe/Unsubscribe: 
> 

> > http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless 
> 

> > 
> 

> > Archives: http://lists.wispa.org/pipermail/wireless/ 
> 

> --- End of Original Message 
---

>

RE: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request

2006-09-19 Thread David Weddell








Come up and see what we are doing on our
WiFi Network. We have the ability to sell service by the hour, 4 hours, 8
hours, 1 day, 1 week……whatever time period you want to use. We do
this on our network today. I will get with you offline to discuss details, but
we are doing this today on our network. It allows truckers to get online while
they are in town waiting on a load or for any of our fixed wireless customers
to travel around on our network in any town that we service.

 



Regards,

David Weddell

Director of Sales

 

260 827 2551 Office

800 363 4881  Ext 2551

260 273 7547 Cell

 

www.onlyinternet.net

www.oibw.net

 











From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Scott Reed
Sent: Tuesday, September 19, 2006
6:34 AM
To: WISPA
 General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Weather
Watcher Request



 

All the discussion has been good, but I would like to get back to the
original question.  The Watcher is looking at a park and connect, not
mobile application.  So, let's assume my network will support him
connecting to any POP.  Any suggestions how to bill a customer that is
only going to connect 2 to 4 times per month for 6 months a year? 

Scott Reed 
Owner 
NewWays 
Wireless Networking 
Network Design, Installation and Administration 
www.nwwnet.net 


-- Original Message ---

From: "Scott Reed" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
To: WISPA General List
 
Sent: Mon, 18 Sep 2006 20:28:01 -0500 
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request 

> That's one thing I need to ask him. I am not sure he needs to drive and
connect. It may be park and connect. I will find out. 
> 
> I am doing the same thing for the county Mobile
 Command Center.
They take it to a disaster, park and connect. I am still working on that one,
but there are not a lot a disasters in our area, so the first one was free. 
> 
> Scott Reed 
> Owner 
> NewWays 
> Wireless Networking 
> Network Design, Installation and Administration 
> www.nwwnet.net 
> 
> -- Original Message ---

> From: "David E. Smith" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
> To: WISPA General List
 
> Sent: Mon, 18 Sep 2006 16:32:15 -0500 
> Subject: Re: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request 
> 
> > Scott Reed wrote: 
> > > I have had a request for service from our local SkyWarn
volunteer watcher. He 
> > > needs service in his vehicle during potetial storms so he can
see the radar 
> > > while watching the sky. Does anyone provide similar service? If
so, how do you 
> > > charge for installation, service, etc.? 
> > 
> > Honestly, for someone who's gonna be THAT mobile, I'd recommend a
cell 
> > phone PCMCIA card. Yes, I work for a WISP, but I know what problems I

> > can (and cannot) solve, and at least for my network, that sort of 
> > roaming is firmly in the "cannot" category. 
> > 
> > Obviously, WISP wifi roaming is possible; there was a thread about it
a 
> > couple weeks ago, where someone did a lot of voodoo with Mikrotik.
But 
> > unless your whole network already happens to support that, or the 
> > customer is rather patient, just recommending a cell card is probably

> > gonna make everyone happier. (The customer gets the service they're 
> > looking for, and you've saved many man-hours rebuilding your network
:) 
> > 
> > David Smith 
> > MVN.net 
> > -- 
> > WISPA Wireless List: wireless@wispa.org 
> > 
> > Subscribe/Unsubscribe: 
> > http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless 
> > 
> > Archives: http://lists.wispa.org/pipermail/wireless/ 
> --- End of Original Message ---

> 
--- End of Original Message ---









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Re: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request

2006-09-19 Thread Scott Reed




All the discussion has been good, but I would like to get back to the original question.  The Watcher is looking at a park and connect, not mobile application.  So, let's assume my network will support him connecting to any POP.  Any suggestions how to bill a customer that is only going to connect 2 to 4 times per month for 6 months a year?

Scott Reed 


Owner 


NewWays 


Wireless Networking 


Network Design, Installation and Administration 


www.nwwnet.net 




-- Original Message 
---

From: "Scott Reed" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 


To: WISPA General List  


Sent: Mon, 18 Sep 2006 20:28:01 -0500 


Subject: Re: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request 



> 

That's one thing I need to ask him.  I am not sure he needs to 
drive and connect.  It may be park and connect.  I will find 
out.

> 
> I am doing the same thing for the county Mobile Command 
Center.  They take it to a disaster, park and connect.  I am still working on 
that one, but there are not a lot a disasters in our area, so the first one was 
free.

> 
> Scott Reed 

> 

Owner 

> 

NewWays 

> 

Wireless Networking 

> 

Network Design, Installation and Administration 

> 

www.nwwnet.net 

> 
> -- Original Message 

---

> 

From: "David E. Smith" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 

> 

To: WISPA General List  

> 

Sent: Mon, 18 Sep 2006 16:32:15 -0500 

> 

Subject: Re: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request 

> 
> > Scott Reed wrote: 

> > 

> I have had a request for service from our local SkyWarn volunteer watcher. 
 
He  

> > 

> needs service in his vehicle during potetial storms so he can see the radar 

 

> > 

> while watching the sky.  Does anyone provide similar service?  If 

so, how do you  

> > 

> charge for installation, service, etc.? 

> > 

> > 

Honestly, for someone who's gonna be THAT mobile, I'd recommend a cell 

> > 

phone PCMCIA card. Yes, I work for a WISP, but I know what problems I 

> > 

can (and cannot) solve, and at least for my network, that sort of 

> > 

roaming is firmly in the "cannot" category. 

> > 

> > 

Obviously, WISP wifi roaming is possible; there was a thread about it a 

> > 

couple weeks ago, where someone did a lot of voodoo with Mikrotik. But 

> > 

unless your whole network already happens to support that, or the 

> > 

customer is rather patient, just recommending a cell card is probably 

> > 

gonna make everyone happier. (The customer gets the service they're 

> > 

looking for, and you've saved many man-hours rebuilding your network :) 

> > 

> > 

David Smith 

> > 

MVN.net 

> > 

--  

> > 

WISPA Wireless List: wireless@wispa.org 

> > 

> > 

Subscribe/Unsubscribe: 

> > 

http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless 

> > 

> > 

Archives: http://lists.wispa.org/pipermail/wireless/ 

> --- 

End of Original Message 

---

> 



--- End of Original Message 
---






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RE: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request

2006-09-18 Thread David Weddell








I use my Verizon Air Card in my car if I
can’t reach our WiFi towers. I use a free service for weather at www.nrtc.coop and download the True Weather
site. Go to that website, click on Utility Solutions, put your mouse over
Weather Services and you will see a link pop up to “Co-op Cast”.
Follow that link and it will ask for your local Zip Code. It also give National
Weather, Temperatures, Wind and many other features. 

 

I am not sure if this is what you are
looking for but it is FREE.

 



Regards,

David Weddell

Director of Sales

 

260 827 2551 Office

800 363 4881  Ext 2551

260 273 7547 Cell

 

www.onlyinternet.net

www.oibw.net

 











From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Scott Reed
Sent: Monday, September 18, 2006
4:42 PM
To: WISPA
 General List
Subject: [WISPA] Weather Watcher
Request



 

I have had a request for
service from our local SkyWarn volunteer watcher.  He needs service in his
vehicle during potetial storms so he can see the radar while watching the
sky.  Does anyone provide similar service?  If so, how do you charge
for installation, service, etc.? 

Scott Reed 
Owner 
NewWays 
Wireless Networking 
Network Design, Installation and Administration 
www.nwwnet.net 








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RE: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request

2006-09-18 Thread Rick Harnish








Remote Desktop

 





Rick Harnish

President

OnlyInternet Broadband & Wireless,
Inc.

260-827-2482

Founding Member of WISPA













From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, September 18, 2006
6:28 PM
To: WISPA
 General List; 'WISPA General List'
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Weather
Watcher Request



 

Two
questions. What is RDC? Is the data rate for the Sprint card high enough to
download color weather radar images quickly?

Ken
Chipps

>-Original Message-
>From: Brad Belton [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Sent: Monday, September 18, 2006 05:48 PM
>To: ''WISPA General List''
>Subject: RE: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request
>
>Agreed, cellular data is really the best solution available today and
>probably always will be for the mobile user.
>
>I'm reading and sending mail at the office via RDC and a Sprint Data card
>right now. Sitting in the passenger seat traveling at 70Mph+ and haven't
>missed a ping yet in over two hours. I've been inside buildings, on
>rooftops, in vehicle and out of vehicle. Just can't beat having it and it
>is only getting better.
>
>Best,
>
>Brad
>
>-Original Message-
>From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
>Behalf Of David E. Smith
>Sent: Monday, September 18, 2006 4:32 PM
>To: WISPA General List
>Subject: Re: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request
>
>Scott Reed wrote:
>> I have had a request for service from our local SkyWarn volunteer
watcher.
>He 
>> needs service in his vehicle during potetial storms so he can see the
>radar 
>> while watching the sky. Does anyone provide similar service? If so,
how
>do you 
>> charge for installation, service, etc.?
>
>Honestly, for someone who's gonna be THAT mobile, I'd recommend a cell
>phone PCMCIA card. Yes, I work for a WISP, but I know what problems I
>can (and cannot) solve, and at least for my network, that sort of
>roaming is firmly in the "cannot" category.
>
>Obviously, WISP wifi roaming is possible; there was a thread about it a
>couple weeks ago, where someone did a lot of voodoo with Mikrotik. But
>unless your whole network already happens to support that, or the
>customer is rather patient, just recommending a cell card is probably
>gonna make everyone happier. (The customer gets the service they're
>looking for, and you've saved many man-hours rebuilding your network :)
>
>David Smith
>MVN.net
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>WISPA Wireless List: wireless@wispa.org
>
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>
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>
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>
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>






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RE: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request

2006-09-18 Thread Brad Belton








Hello Ken,

 

Yes, it has been some time since we last
met.  I believe it was with my brother Jack more than a couple years ago
at your place near Alvarado.  I believe it may have even been before you
had a tower up!  Time flies!

 

My first mobile data card (still have it
in a drawer) was from Air America reselling the Ricochet service.  The
service was tolerable (200Kbps-300Kbps) if you were stationary, but pretty much
unusable while driving.  I think I paid $129.00 a month or more for the
service!  Crazy, but I had to have it!

 

My second data card was Sprint’s
first generation card.  This service was far superior to Ricochet in
coverage and service while driving was terrific.  This is the card I used
while driving across country during a couple vacations.  Service started
out at about 120Kbps-200Kbps and 350-450ms latency which was a bit worse than
Ricochet.  The service did begin to slow and Sprint moved the couple cards
we had to their new service that we have now.  

 

I figure $5 a year for a weather service I
enjoy is a bargain.  I think that works out to just over a penny a day. 
The site www.wunderground.com really
is a great source of information and the five bucks eliminates the
advertisements and enables a few additional features.  You should check it
out during the next storm…I’m fairly sure the experimental “Lightning”
data is pulled from a client of ours that operates a number of remote sensors
our network provides service to.  Pretty amazing technology as they can
actually predict a lightning strike (cloud to cloud, cloud to ground or ground
to cloud) before it happens.

 

Best,

 

 

Brad

 

 

 

 

 

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Ken Chipps
Sent: Monday, September 18, 2006
8:40 PM
To: 'WISPA General List'
Subject: RE: [WISPA] Weather
Watcher Request

 

Hi Brad, we do need to
meet each other one of these days since we are in the same city.

 

Interesting. I may have
to look into this further. I had heard that the Sprint service was slow from
other users. What is the best way to buy the hardware and monthly service for
this? Is the Sprint website the only source?

 

Why do you pay for this
weather stuff? Why not use one of the local TV station web sites or WeatherBug?

 

Ken Chipps

 









From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Brad Belton
Sent: Monday, September 18, 2006
6:45 PM
To: 'WISPA General List'
Subject: RE: [WISPA] Weather
Watcher Request



 

Hello Ken,

 

Yes, Mark is
correct.  RDC is short (in my book anyway) for Remote Desktop Control aka
Terminal Services or Citrix etc…

 

Yes, I subscribe to www.wunderground.com for my weather
information.  The $5 a year it costs is well worth the money IMO (in my
opinion).  

 

Pulling current, animated
radar images over my Sprint DATA card has not given me any trouble.  Speed
test confirmation from www.testmy.net : 

 

:::.. Download Stats ..:::

Download Connection is:: 654 Kbps
about 0.65 Mbps (tested with 579 kB)

Download Speed is:: 80 kB/s

Tested From:: http://testmy.net/
(Server 1)

Test Time:: 2006/09/18 - 4:26pm 

Bottom Line:: 11X faster than 56K
1MB Download in 12.8 sec 

Tested from a 579 kB file and took
7.25 seconds to complete

Download Diagnosis:: 90% + Okay :
running at 96.04 % of your hosts average (spcsdns.net) 

D-Validation Link::
http://testmy.net/stats/id-814GRHMXW

 

 

I’ve seen well over
1Mbps before, but even then 654Kbps isn’t that bad.  Latency
typically looks like this:

 

Pinging 4.2.2.2 with 32 bytes of
data:

 

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=163ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=173ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=188ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=172ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=239ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=170ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=185ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=167ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=155ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=368ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=151ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=165ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=179ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=200ms
TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=162ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=180ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=181ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=160ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=175ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=159ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=146ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=185ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32
time=143ms TTL=237

 

Ping statistics for 4.2.2.2:

    Packets: Sent =
23, Received = 23, Lost = 0 (0% loss),

Approximate round trip times in
milli-seconds:

    Minimum = 143ms,
Maximum = 368ms, Average = 181ms

 

Tracert looks like this:

 

Tracing route to
vnsc-bak.s

Re: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request

2006-09-18 Thread Butch Evans

On Mon, 18 Sep 2006, David E. Smith wrote:

Obviously, WISP wifi roaming is possible; there was a thread about 
it a couple weeks ago, where someone did a lot of voodoo with 
Mikrotik. But unless your whole network already happens to support


Voodoo?  LOL.  What we did was not magic, but was certainly not an 
"off the shelf" solution.  ;-)


that, or the customer is rather patient, just recommending a cell 
card is probably gonna make everyone happier. (The customer gets 
the service they're looking for, and you've saved many man-hours 
rebuilding your network :)


While I must say that it would not require "rebuilding the network" 
(a Mikrotik client is all that is required for the solution I 
built), it is pretty likely that the coverage area would be much 
better with the cell card.


--
Butch Evans
Network Engineering and Security Consulting
573-276-2879
http://www.butchevans.com/
Mikrotik Certified Consultant
(http://www.mikrotik.com/consultants.html)
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Re: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request

2006-09-18 Thread David E. Smith
On Mon, September 18, 2006 5:28 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> Two questions. What is RDC? Is the data rate for the Sprint card high
> enough to download color weather radar images quickly?

I'd assume RDC is Remote Desktop, Windows' answer to PC Anywhere and VNC.

And the Sprint cards are, I'm told, surprisingly good. Some folks have
reported getting data rates in excess of 1Mbps - not blazing fast, but
beats the pants off dialup, and pretty good if you're speeding down the
highway. The average speeds seem to be 512k or thereabouts, unless you're
in a major metropolitan area (which will have newer better tower gear,
thus better speeds), which still ain't nothing to sneeze at.

David Smith
MVN.net

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RE: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request

2006-09-18 Thread Jonathan Schmidt
Also, agreed,
the Sprint card is used by our field engineering and at two of the
past dozen conferences where we had a booth, that card was better
than the congested Internet connection that they provided to the
exhibitors.

. . . j o n a t h a n

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Behalf Of Brad Belton
Sent: Monday, September 18, 2006 4:48 PM
To: 'WISPA General List'
Subject: RE: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request


Agreed, cellular data is really the best solution available today and
probably always will be for the mobile user.

I'm reading and sending mail at the office via RDC and a Sprint Data card
right now.  Sitting in the passenger seat traveling at 70Mph+ and haven't
missed a ping yet in over two hours.  I've been inside buildings, on
rooftops, in vehicle and out of vehicle.  Just can't beat having it and it
is only getting better.

Best,

Brad

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of David E. Smith
Sent: Monday, September 18, 2006 4:32 PM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request

Scott Reed wrote:
> I have had a request for service from our local SkyWarn volunteer watcher.
He
> needs service in his vehicle during potetial storms so he can see the
radar
> while watching the sky.  Does anyone provide similar service?  If so, how
do you
> charge for installation, service, etc.?

Honestly, for someone who's gonna be THAT mobile, I'd recommend a cell
phone PCMCIA card. Yes, I work for a WISP, but I know what problems I
can (and cannot) solve, and at least for my network, that sort of
roaming is firmly in the "cannot" category.

Obviously, WISP wifi roaming is possible; there was a thread about it a
couple weeks ago, where someone did a lot of voodoo with Mikrotik. But
unless your whole network already happens to support that, or the
customer is rather patient, just recommending a cell card is probably
gonna make everyone happier. (The customer gets the service they're
looking for, and you've saved many man-hours rebuilding your network :)

David Smith
MVN.net
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RE: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request

2006-09-18 Thread Ken Chipps








Hi Brad, we do need to meet each other one
of these days since we are in the same city.

 

Interesting. I may have to look into this
further. I had heard that the Sprint service was slow from other users. What is
the best way to buy the hardware and monthly service for this? Is the Sprint
website the only source?

 

Why do you pay for this weather stuff? Why
not use one of the local TV station web sites or WeatherBug?

 

Ken Chipps

 









From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Brad Belton
Sent: Monday, September 18, 2006
6:45 PM
To: 'WISPA General List'
Subject: RE: [WISPA] Weather
Watcher Request



 

Hello Ken,

 

Yes, Mark is correct.  RDC is short
(in my book anyway) for Remote Desktop Control aka Terminal Services or Citrix
etc…

 

Yes, I subscribe to www.wunderground.com for my weather
information.  The $5 a year it costs is well worth the money IMO (in my
opinion).  

 

Pulling current, animated radar images
over my Sprint DATA card has not given me any trouble.  Speed test confirmation
from www.testmy.net : 

 

:::.. Download Stats ..:::

Download Connection is:: 654 Kbps about 0.65 Mbps (tested
with 579 kB)

Download Speed is:: 80 kB/s

Tested From:: http://testmy.net/ (Server 1)

Test Time:: 2006/09/18 - 4:26pm 

Bottom Line:: 11X faster than 56K 1MB Download in 12.8 sec 

Tested from a 579 kB file and took 7.25 seconds to complete

Download Diagnosis:: 90% + Okay : running at 96.04 % of your
hosts average (spcsdns.net) 

D-Validation Link:: http://testmy.net/stats/id-814GRHMXW

 

 

I’ve seen well over 1Mbps before,
but even then 654Kbps isn’t that bad.  Latency typically looks like
this:

 

Pinging 4.2.2.2 with 32 bytes of data:

 

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=163ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=173ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=188ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=172ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=239ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=170ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=185ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=167ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=155ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=368ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=151ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=165ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=179ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=200ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=162ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=180ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=181ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=160ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=175ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=159ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=146ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=185ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=143ms TTL=237

 

Ping statistics for 4.2.2.2:

    Packets: Sent = 23, Received = 23, Lost =
0 (0% loss),

Approximate round trip times in milli-seconds:

    Minimum = 143ms, Maximum = 368ms, Average
= 181ms

 

Tracert looks like this:

 

Tracing route to vnsc-bak.sys.gtei.net [4.2.2.2]

over a maximum of 30 hops:

 

  1   171 ms   157 ms  
162 ms  68.28.177.69

  2
*   
*    * Request
timed out.

  3   191 ms   183 ms  
190 ms  68.28.187.54

  4   326 ms   162 ms   156
ms  68.28.187.6

  5
*   
*    * Request
timed out.

  6
*   
*    * Request
timed out.

  7   162 ms   158 ms  
164 ms  68.28.187.97

  8   168 ms   153 ms  
160 ms  68.28.187.18

  9   194 ms   162 ms  
157 ms  sl-gw11-atl-0-1.sprintlink.net [144.223.140.69]

 10   171 ms   161 ms  
157 ms  sl-bb22-atl-5-0.sprintlink.net [144.232.12.85]

 11   161 ms   159 ms  
188 ms  sl-bb25-atl-9-0.sprintlink.net [144.232.12.38]

 12   173 ms   193 ms  
189 ms  sl-bb22-fw-15-0.sprintlink.net [144.232.8.21]

 13   186 ms   186 ms  
184 ms  sl-bb27-fw-12-0.sprintlink.net [144.232.11.33]

 14   180 ms   183 ms  
187 ms  sl-st20-dal-13-0.sprintlink.net [144.232.20.83]

 15   384 ms   173 ms  
167 ms  interconnect-eng.Dallas1.Level3.net [64.158.168.73]

 16   166 ms   193 ms  
206 ms  so-1-2-0.bbr1.Dallas1.Level3.net [209.244.15.16]

 17   180 ms   183 ms  
192 ms  ge-11-0.core1.Dallas1.Level3.net [4.68.122.40]

 18   423 ms   224 ms  
199 ms  vnsc-bak.sys.gtei.net [4.2.2.2]

 

Trace complete.

 

 

As with most things YMMV.  (Your
Mileage May Vary)  

 

Best,

 

 

Brad

 

 

 

 

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Mark McElvy
Sent: Monday, September 18, 2006
5:52 PM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: RE: [WISPA] Weather
Watcher Request

 

Remote Desktop Connection
I would suspect…

 



Mark McElvy
AccuBak Data
Systems, Inc.
573.729.9200 - Office
573.729.9203 - Fax
573.247.9980 - Mobile
http://www.accubak.com/
http://www.accubak.net/
Nationwide
Internet Access
Accurate backups for your critical data! 















From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PRO

Re: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request

2006-09-18 Thread Scott Reed




That's one thing I need to ask him.  I am not sure he needs to drive and connect.  It may be park and connect.  I will find out.

I am doing the same thing for the county Mobile Command Center.  They take it to a disaster, park and connect.  I am still working on that one, but there are not a lot a disasters in our area, so the first one was free.

Scott Reed 


Owner 


NewWays 


Wireless Networking 


Network Design, Installation and Administration 


www.nwwnet.net 




-- Original Message 
---

From: "David E. Smith" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 


To: WISPA General List  


Sent: Mon, 18 Sep 2006 16:32:15 -0500 


Subject: Re: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request 



> Scott Reed wrote: 
> 

> I have had a request for service from our local SkyWarn volunteer watcher.  
He  
> 

> needs service in his vehicle during potetial storms so he can see the radar 
 
> 

> while watching the sky.  Does anyone provide similar service?  If 
so, how do you  
> 

> charge for installation, service, etc.? 
> 
> 

Honestly, for someone who's gonna be THAT mobile, I'd recommend a cell 
> 

phone PCMCIA card. Yes, I work for a WISP, but I know what problems I 
> 

can (and cannot) solve, and at least for my network, that sort of 
> 

roaming is firmly in the "cannot" category. 
> 
> 

Obviously, WISP wifi roaming is possible; there was a thread about it a 
> 

couple weeks ago, where someone did a lot of voodoo with Mikrotik. But 
> 

unless your whole network already happens to support that, or the 
> 

customer is rather patient, just recommending a cell card is probably 
> 

gonna make everyone happier. (The customer gets the service they're 
> 

looking for, and you've saved many man-hours rebuilding your network :) 
> 

> 

David Smith 
> 

MVN.net 
> 

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> 

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> 
> 

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End of Original Message 
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RE: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request

2006-09-18 Thread Brad Belton








Hello Ken,

 

Yes, Mark is correct.  RDC is short (in my book
anyway) for Remote Desktop Control aka Terminal Services or Citrix etc…

 

Yes, I subscribe to www.wunderground.com for my weather
information.  The $5 a year it costs is well worth the money IMO (in my opinion). 


 

Pulling current, animated radar images over
my Sprint DATA card has not given me any trouble.  Speed test confirmation
from www.testmy.net : 

 

:::.. Download Stats ..:::

Download Connection is:: 654 Kbps about 0.65 Mbps (tested
with 579 kB)

Download Speed is:: 80 kB/s

Tested From:: http://testmy.net/ (Server 1)

Test Time:: 2006/09/18 - 4:26pm 

Bottom Line:: 11X faster than 56K 1MB Download in 12.8 sec 

Tested from a 579 kB file and took 7.25 seconds to complete

Download Diagnosis:: 90% + Okay : running at 96.04 % of your
hosts average (spcsdns.net) 

D-Validation Link:: http://testmy.net/stats/id-814GRHMXW

 

 

I’ve seen well over 1Mbps before,
but even then 654Kbps isn’t that bad.  Latency typically looks like
this:

 

Pinging 4.2.2.2 with 32 bytes of data:

 

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=163ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=173ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=188ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=172ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=239ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=170ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=185ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=167ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=155ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=368ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=151ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=165ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=179ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=200ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=162ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=180ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=181ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=160ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=175ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=159ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=146ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=185ms TTL=237

Reply from 4.2.2.2: bytes=32 time=143ms TTL=237

 

Ping statistics for 4.2.2.2:

    Packets: Sent = 23, Received = 23, Lost =
0 (0% loss),

Approximate round trip times in milli-seconds:

    Minimum = 143ms, Maximum = 368ms, Average
= 181ms

 

Tracert looks like this:

 

Tracing route to vnsc-bak.sys.gtei.net [4.2.2.2]

over a maximum of 30 hops:

 

  1   171 ms   157 ms  
162 ms  68.28.177.69

  2
*   
*    * Request
timed out.

  3   191 ms   183 ms  
190 ms  68.28.187.54

  4   326 ms   162 ms  
156 ms  68.28.187.6

  5
*   
*    * Request
timed out.

  6
*   
*    * Request
timed out.

  7   162 ms   158 ms  
164 ms  68.28.187.97

  8   168 ms   153 ms  
160 ms  68.28.187.18

  9   194 ms   162 ms  
157 ms  sl-gw11-atl-0-1.sprintlink.net [144.223.140.69]

 10   171 ms   161 ms  
157 ms  sl-bb22-atl-5-0.sprintlink.net [144.232.12.85]

 11   161 ms   159 ms  
188 ms  sl-bb25-atl-9-0.sprintlink.net [144.232.12.38]

 12   173 ms   193 ms   189
ms  sl-bb22-fw-15-0.sprintlink.net [144.232.8.21]

 13   186 ms   186 ms  
184 ms  sl-bb27-fw-12-0.sprintlink.net [144.232.11.33]

 14   180 ms   183 ms  
187 ms  sl-st20-dal-13-0.sprintlink.net [144.232.20.83]

 15   384 ms   173 ms  
167 ms  interconnect-eng.Dallas1.Level3.net [64.158.168.73]

 16   166 ms   193 ms  
206 ms  so-1-2-0.bbr1.Dallas1.Level3.net [209.244.15.16]

 17   180 ms   183 ms  
192 ms  ge-11-0.core1.Dallas1.Level3.net [4.68.122.40]

 18   423 ms   224 ms  
199 ms  vnsc-bak.sys.gtei.net [4.2.2.2]

 

Trace complete.

 

 

As with most things YMMV.  (Your
Mileage May Vary)  

 

Best,

 

 

Brad

 

 

 

 

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Mark McElvy
Sent: Monday, September 18, 2006
5:52 PM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: RE: [WISPA] Weather
Watcher Request

 

Remote Desktop Connection
I would suspect…

 



Mark McElvy
AccuBak Data
Systems, Inc.
573.729.9200 - Office
573.729.9203 - Fax
573.247.9980 - Mobile
http://www.accubak.com/
http://www.accubak.net/
Nationwide
Internet Access
Accurate backups for your critical data! 











From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, September 18, 2006
5:28 PM
To: WISPA General List; 'WISPA
General List'
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Weather
Watcher Request



 

Two questions. What is RDC? Is the data rate for the
Sprint card high enough to download color weather radar images quickly?

Ken Chipps

>-Original Message-
>From: Brad Belton [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Sent: Monday, September 18, 2006 05:48 PM
>To: ''WISPA General List''
>Subject: RE: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request
>
>Agreed, cellular data is really the best solution available today and
>probably always will be f

RE: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request

2006-09-18 Thread Mark McElvy








Remote Desktop Connection I would suspect…

 



Mark McElvy
AccuBak Data
Systems, Inc.
573.729.9200 - Office
573.729.9203 - Fax
573.247.9980 - Mobile
http://www.accubak.com/
http://www.accubak.net/
Nationwide
Internet Access
Accurate backups for your critical data! 











From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, September 18, 2006
5:28 PM
To: WISPA General List; 'WISPA
General List'
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Weather
Watcher Request



 

Two
questions. What is RDC? Is the data rate for the Sprint card high enough to
download color weather radar images quickly?

Ken
Chipps

>-Original Message-
>From: Brad Belton [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Sent: Monday, September 18, 2006 05:48 PM
>To: ''WISPA General List''
>Subject: RE: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request
>
>Agreed, cellular data is really the best solution available today and
>probably always will be for the mobile user.
>
>I'm reading and sending mail at the office via RDC and a Sprint Data card
>right now. Sitting in the passenger seat traveling at 70Mph+ and haven't
>missed a ping yet in over two hours. I've been inside buildings, on
>rooftops, in vehicle and out of vehicle. Just can't beat having it and it
>is only getting better.
>
>Best,
>
>Brad
>
>-Original Message-
>From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
>Behalf Of David E. Smith
>Sent: Monday, September 18, 2006 4:32 PM
>To: WISPA General List
>Subject: Re: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request
>
>Scott Reed wrote:
>> I have had a request for service from our local SkyWarn volunteer
watcher.
>He 
>> needs service in his vehicle during potetial storms so he can see the
>radar 
>> while watching the sky. Does anyone provide similar service? If so, how
>do you 
>> charge for installation, service, etc.?
>
>Honestly, for someone who's gonna be THAT mobile, I'd recommend a cell
>phone PCMCIA card. Yes, I work for a WISP, but I know what problems I
>can (and cannot) solve, and at least for my network, that sort of
>roaming is firmly in the "cannot" category.
>
>Obviously, WISP wifi roaming is possible; there was a thread about it a
>couple weeks ago, where someone did a lot of voodoo with Mikrotik. But
>unless your whole network already happens to support that, or the
>customer is rather patient, just recommending a cell card is probably
>gonna make everyone happier. (The customer gets the service they're
>looking for, and you've saved many man-hours rebuilding your network :)
>
>David Smith
>MVN.net
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>WISPA Wireless List: wireless@wispa.org
>
>Subscribe/Unsubscribe:
>http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless
>
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>
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>
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>






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Re: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request

2006-09-18 Thread chipps
Two questions. What is RDC? Is the data rate for the Sprint card high enough to download color weather radar images quickly?
Ken Chipps>-Original Message->From: Brad Belton [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>Sent: Monday, September 18, 2006 05:48 PM>To: ''WISPA General List''>Subject: RE: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request>>Agreed, cellular data is really the best solution available today and>probably always will be for the mobile user.>>I'm reading and sending mail at the office via RDC and a Sprint Data card>right now. Sitting in the passenger seat traveling at 70Mph+ and haven't>missed a ping yet in over two hours. I've been inside buildings, on>rooftops, in vehicle and out of vehicle. Just can't beat having it and it>is only getting better.>>Best,>>Brad>>-Original Message->From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On>Behalf Of David E. Smith>Sent: Monday, September 18, 2006 4:32 PM>To: WISPA General List>Subject: Re: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request>>Scott Reed wrote:>> I have had a request for service from our local SkyWarn volunteer watcher.>He >> needs service in his vehicle during potetial storms so he can see the>radar >> while watching the sky. Does anyone provide similar service? If so, how>do you >> charge for installation, service, etc.?>>Honestly, for someone who's gonna be THAT mobile, I'd recommend a cell>phone PCMCIA card. Yes, I work for a WISP, but I know what problems I>can (and cannot) solve, and at least for my network, that sort of>roaming is firmly in the "cannot" category.>>Obviously, WISP wifi roaming is possible; there was a thread about it a>couple weeks ago, where someone did a lot of voodoo with Mikrotik. But>unless your whole network already happens to support that, or the>customer is rather patient, just recommending a cell card is probably>gonna make everyone happier. (The customer gets the service they're>looking for, and you've saved many man-hours rebuilding your network :)>>David Smith>MVN.net>-- >WISPA Wireless List: wireless@wispa.org>>Subscribe/Unsubscribe:>http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless>>Archives: http://lists.wispa.org/pipermail/wireless/>>-- >WISPA Wireless List: wireless@wispa.org>>Subscribe/Unsubscribe:>http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless>>Archives: http://lists.wispa.org/pipermail/wireless/>
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RE: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request

2006-09-18 Thread Brad Belton
Agreed, cellular data is really the best solution available today and
probably always will be for the mobile user.

I'm reading and sending mail at the office via RDC and a Sprint Data card
right now.  Sitting in the passenger seat traveling at 70Mph+ and haven't
missed a ping yet in over two hours.  I've been inside buildings, on
rooftops, in vehicle and out of vehicle.  Just can't beat having it and it
is only getting better.

Best,

Brad

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of David E. Smith
Sent: Monday, September 18, 2006 4:32 PM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request

Scott Reed wrote:
> I have had a request for service from our local SkyWarn volunteer watcher.
He 
> needs service in his vehicle during potetial storms so he can see the
radar 
> while watching the sky.  Does anyone provide similar service?  If so, how
do you 
> charge for installation, service, etc.?

Honestly, for someone who's gonna be THAT mobile, I'd recommend a cell
phone PCMCIA card. Yes, I work for a WISP, but I know what problems I
can (and cannot) solve, and at least for my network, that sort of
roaming is firmly in the "cannot" category.

Obviously, WISP wifi roaming is possible; there was a thread about it a
couple weeks ago, where someone did a lot of voodoo with Mikrotik. But
unless your whole network already happens to support that, or the
customer is rather patient, just recommending a cell card is probably
gonna make everyone happier. (The customer gets the service they're
looking for, and you've saved many man-hours rebuilding your network :)

David Smith
MVN.net
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Re: [WISPA] Weather Watcher Request

2006-09-18 Thread David E. Smith
Scott Reed wrote:
> I have had a request for service from our local SkyWarn volunteer watcher.  
> He 
> needs service in his vehicle during potetial storms so he can see the radar 
> while watching the sky.  Does anyone provide similar service?  If so, how do 
> you 
> charge for installation, service, etc.?

Honestly, for someone who's gonna be THAT mobile, I'd recommend a cell
phone PCMCIA card. Yes, I work for a WISP, but I know what problems I
can (and cannot) solve, and at least for my network, that sort of
roaming is firmly in the "cannot" category.

Obviously, WISP wifi roaming is possible; there was a thread about it a
couple weeks ago, where someone did a lot of voodoo with Mikrotik. But
unless your whole network already happens to support that, or the
customer is rather patient, just recommending a cell card is probably
gonna make everyone happier. (The customer gets the service they're
looking for, and you've saved many man-hours rebuilding your network :)

David Smith
MVN.net
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