Since Kismet is open source you might be able to either modify the software yourself, or convince a developer to do it ... I'm thinking that you would probably want Kismet to poll or receive notices from the GPS unit whenever the location changes by a certain delta d, or create a logical grid and record the signal whenever the user enters a certain grid square. Another problem I can see would be just that it would require a lot of wandering around, so you might have to do some post-processing to fill in the blanks?

simon

On Friday, August 22, 2003, at 08:25 PM, Chris Snell wrote:


Hi All,


I'm a Geography undergraduate student here in Texas and have access to some pretty neat GIS cartography software. I went wardriving around my neighborhood tonight and got a sampling of access points (SSID, MAC, signal strength, WEP, etc). I wrote a little Perl script to convert KisMac's output into an ArcMap-friendly format and plotted some access points overlaid above a street map of my town. I didn't spend much time on this but the results were pretty neat. I now have a visual representation of every visible AP in my area. Now I would like to take this to the next step: I want to make a rasterized map of WiFi signals that covers my neighborhood in greater detail. I want to walk up and down my street, GPS and iPAQ (or powerbook) in hand and get multiple samples for every access point I find. I want to plot these samples and create visualizations of the wireless signal "fields" in my area.

Here's my problem: all the WiFi-sniffing software that I've used creates only one record of each access point found. I need something that will record SSID, MAC, and (most importantly) signal strength and location for every packet that it sniffs. I realize that this will probably be a lot of data.

Has anybody here experimented with this stuff already?

Chris

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