On 31 Mar 2005 12:12:05 -0800, "sf" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
>I'm a member of a group that will soon be placing several free wireless
>hotspots in urban areas. These spots will all be in outdoor public
>regions, mainly in parks or shopping/downtown areas.
Our local group is:
http://www.thirdbreak.org
Been doing just that for a while. The major problem is cost of the
wired backhaul.
Outdoor is a problem because it's very difficult to see the PDA or
laptop screen in the bright sunlight. Trees are a big help, but block
2.4Ghz.
>We're on the hunt
>for some cool or unique uses for wireless to promote these areas.
>
>A few we're throwing around:
>
>-webcams of city concerts or festivals
Bandwidth hogs if you use a built in server. Each connection gets an
individual stream. Imagine 50 users on one web cam server. If you do
this, be sure to use a reflecting server to redistribute the video.
>-web kiosks
These are vandal magnets. Careful with the security.
>-extending access to city bus routes for passengers of the buses
I get car sick when I try to type in a car or bus.
>-adding gps to city busses and putting up kiosks showing where the
>busses are and when they will arrive.
Many metro buses already have this but there seems to be some kind of
reluctance to publicly distribute the data. Same with freeway traffic
information. Policies vary radically by state and county.
>-VOIP
Visualize turning your outdoor hot spot paradise into a giant phone
booth. You'll have people yacking (for free) on the phone all day
long. Not a problem for outdoors, but a serious problem for indoor
hot spots like coffee shops.
>Any other ideas? Nothing is too "out there" since that is what we're
>looking for!
Bluetooth to 802.11b/g gateway.
VPN termination in the local wireless routers to eliminate sniffing.
Local weather station at each access point. Nothing fancy. Just
temperature, humidity, wind speed, and maybe wind direction.
Local wireless diagnostic page. Tells user their signal strength, S/N
ratio, and packet loss. Doesn't do much for Joe Sixpack, but really
turns on the geeks.
TDOA (time difference of arrival) location tracking. We know where
you are.
Locally generated streaming audio and video advertising "channel".
Nobody will listen to it, but the local merchants may buy into it.
--
Jeff Liebermann
(E-Mail Removed)
150 Felker St #D
http://www.LearnByDestroying.com
Santa Cruz CA 95060 AE6KS 831-336-2558