Thanks Scott for your reply and all the explanations.
I live in Switzerland, so sadly joining the hacker space is not an option.
The question about the parts for the "portable node" is still unanswered.
Thanks for suggesting the option about a developer kit.
What would it cost to send 3 boards to Switzerland?
Just a rough estimate would be sufficient. Thanks.
Cheers,
Xavier
On Tue, Sep 4, 2018 at 6:49 PM <scott(a)peoplesopen.net> wrote:
Xavier,
I'm glad that you're excited about the Disaster Radio project. I think
that all working on the project would agree that disaster scenarios aren't
the only use case. In fact most of us want to use it for every day life. We
chose the name for a variety of reasons, one of which was in homage to
Disasteradio, the computer music artist, who in turn took the name from a
1950's Crystal Radio kit. But in the end, it's just a name, and after
awhile you just need to move on and get working on the real deal.
As to your other questions, we're sorry our documentation doesn't cover
all of the iterations and scenarios one would want to use it as of yet. We
are still iterating on the project, trying to work out a couple of designs
that work best. Tonight we will be working on the antenna design for the
solar powered home station, testing out some different options to see which
gives us the best coverage, yet still makes mounting easily feasible. We're
also working on mobile unit for people that want to have one on hand at all
times.
This is an open source project, so we are all working on this in the free
time, funding it from our own pockets. Hopefully we'll get to a few stable
designs that we can start making available to the general public, in an
easily assembled package design that doesn't require excessive soldering
skills. In the meantime we make as much of our progress openly available so
that those that can contribute feel comfortable reproducing our work at
home.
I'm not sure where you are located, but if you're ever in the Bay Area of
California, we'd love to have you over to our hacker space, Sudoroom, where
we can walk you through putting together a board. Alternatively I can try
and ship you a pre-soldered pair of development kits if you want to cover
costs of the board and shipping. Not sure what the costs are right now, but
I can find out if you're interested.
I'll look getting answers to all of the filed issues on github, along with
more public facing information for all of you all that are interested in
the project. In the meantime, thanks for reaching out to us. We look
forward to having more available soon. It helps to know that others are
interested.
Thanks again,
Scott
September 4, 2018 8:45 AM, "Xavier Fiechter" <xavierfiechter(a)gmail.com
<%22Xavier%20Fiechter%22%20%3Cxavierfiechter(a)gmail.com%3E>> wrote:
Hi all
I stumbled upon the disaster.radio a few days ago while researching mesh
networks, community owned networks and off grid communication systems.
Without being asked: I love the concept of disaster.radio, but I think
disaster.radio should go beyond the "disaster" use case. It will be easier
to gain more attention for this interesting project in the long run by
having the recreational activities (like hiking, outdoor activities,
traveling, sailing, ...) in mind. Or in other words: the term disaster is
so negatively affected.
From my (limited, external) point of view the disaster.radio is like a
stationary Gotenna relay station with an endless solar powered power
supply. Everybody should install one on the office, the garden or at home.
I started going through the hardware part list and checked out where I can
find the parts.
I did a lot of Raspberry and Arduino projects before so this is not
completely unfamiliar to me, but pardon me, but this is absolutely for
hardware "nerds" – ahm, I meant experts. ;-) Further more – one must master
the soldering iron.
A starter kit or a simple kit with less parts, would be great. The
question was asked on Github, here:
https://github.com/sudomesh/disaster-radio/issues/12, as well.
It seems others would love the get their foot into this without investing
too much time and effort to building the hardware in the first place. Not
all of us are into hardware and considering such a network as an
infrastructure and are willing to build on top of it.
After digging a bit deeper a saw the "portable node" presented on YouTube
in this video:
https://youtu.be/0dosXMXaU94?t=3m52s . A tutorial to get
this small portable nodes up and running would be awesome. I'm interested
to contribute in this area. Everybody should be able to have a little node
attached to there van, the backpack or where they want.
What parts are used for this "portable node"? And where can I order the
parts?
My second question is: What is the goal of this project? Is this an
experiment or the next "big thing"? Is there an open roadmap?
A reaction on filed Github issues would be great to get this project
going...
Cheers,
Xavier
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