John Flanagan wrote:
>The community
> has to pay for the connection which is about €160 which divided by 20
> or more people is not much a month. They are also getting a
> government grant for the setup costs of the network.
>
To answer your question, the Draytek 2600+ ADSL modem/router allows port
throttling, but it only has 4 ports. I'm sure there's more choices out
there though.
BUT...for your info...
A commercial company (Invisible Networks) tried this in my area using
802.11a kit and a 2Mbit leased line prior to the local exchange going
broadband.
They got sufficient interest and started to implement the network across
5 villages, installing access points and repeats, but then went bust
before completion.
When the project was first mooted I couldn't see that it made commercial
sense - the business model looked wrong and with the local BT exchange
slated for broadband in 4 months time I kinda guessed that people would
lose interest and slope off to their own ADSL solution.
If, as you imply, some of the locals can't get any form of xDSL
connection then maybe your situation's different, but I'd be wary of how
any user-base churn will affect individual's running costs say, for
example, if 5 people decide to drop out for whatever reason - what
happens to the running costs - does everyone pay more or does some poor
schmuck (ie you) carry the balance.
It would be very wise, as others suggest, to look at others who have
implemented a similar solution.
I would ensure you have checked out:
ISP Acceptable use policies for sharing a connection and also charging
for a service.
The type and nature of the contract the users sign.
Your indemnity for service-delivery related issues, especially in terms
of what users might..ahem..download etc.
Your SLA for maintaining the whole lot (do you fancy a call at 3am
because Fred's connection's down?), especially relating to what you
don't cover (ie: it turns out that Fred's got a virus that's trashed
part of his hard disk), and what fault tolerance can be expected (are
you going to have a backup circuit, UPSs etc and spare kit?), also what
level of uptime/outage users can expect.
DTI rules for the use of outdoor transmitting equipment.
Your insurance/professional indemnity should you set foot in someone's
house to install or fix something.
Go have a look around:
http://www.meshbroadband.co.uk
Good luck.