On Sun, Jul 27, 2008 at 1:12 PM, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> We can hack the MAC on atheros based chipsets.


If "hacking th MAC" is your thing I guess you can. I would rather pay for
companies to produce the properly designed and tested radio platforms and
sell Internet access to my customers. If I wanted to "hack the MAC" I would
join the local amateur radio club where many of us could "hack the MAC"
together and learn from each other about radio theory and such. Sometimes I
wish I had the time, money and patience (not to mention engineering
background) to do this. What I know is how to deliver Internet to my
customers so "hacking the MAC" is probably not a priority for me and most
WISPs out there.


>
>
> Well, could, if we could get some funding together and some sharp minds...



I think that is what vendors are supposed to do. I pay them to build the
radios, test them and make improvements. My mind is plenty sharp but I am
not an engineer of radio technology and design. If I wanted to do that then
I would learn those things and build equipment to sell to people who build
networks and sell service (like WISPs).


>
>
> MIMO interests me too.   Again, the same "hackable" chipsets...


MIMO is a big part of what WiMax brings to the table. It is not that WiMax
is MIMO or vice versa. It is that the WiMax vendors have spent the time and
money to properly design MIMO into WISP type networks. It is not cheap but
it is very good. Being able to process the signals of multiple antennas to
improve delivery and reception of signals is an amazing piece of technical
wizardry that does not break the laws of physics but it takes them to the
edge of what is possible.

Delivering the best possible link in all circumstances is something I want
in my network. I am going to be making the move to WiMax soon to be able to
do this. I want highly reliable networks that people can trust for voice
services as well as data. I want to have mobility in my network. I want my
cell phone on my hip to connect to my own network. I intend to make this
happen and bring all the things I have learned in a decade of Internet
access business into this new mobile data and voice world. I believe WISPs
have a unique opportunity to skip past the cellular operators who are just
now learning what IP is all about. We know it. We do not have to support a
legacy technology that is outdated as the cell carriers are right now. WiMax
is what the cell companies want in 2 more generations of their networks. We
can build it now. Of course some of you may just want to "hack the MAC". I
think I will go and upstage the national cell carriers instead.
Scriv




>
>
>
>
>
> ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
> <insert witty tagline here>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: "'WISPA General List'" <wireless@wispa.org>
> Sent: Sunday, July 27, 2008 1:04 AM
> Subject: Re: [WISPA] Mini-pci WIMAX cards and drivers... Available
> anywhere?
>
>
> > And if you could get then what you do with them??  Wimax mini-pci are
> > client
> > side only there is no way to use them as a Wimax base stations. The
> > protocol
> > does not allow for it and there is allot more to a base then a radio and
> > software.  This is not to say someone could not hack a radio and hal to
> do
> > something that is not Wimax :) But they would still need a license from
> > Wavesat to do this.
> >
>
>
>
>
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