Not really sure if this is useful or not, but I'd be willing to donate a spot on my
roof for an antenna. I'm part way up the hills, and have a line of sight view of Lake
Merritt, chunks of downtown, and a wide swath of the flats of Oakland, Emeryville, and
Berkeley. Not sure if I can see the sudoroom, as it is probably obscured by some taller
buildings between here and there.
Is this useful? Perhaps as a relay between different neighborhoods or something?
-steve
On Jun 17, 2013, at 11:02 AM, Miguel Vargas <unroar(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Reading that description I'd say our mesh network
project at sudoroom is probably farther along than what he's offering for giving help,
though it would still be great to get his help. We recently purchased 100 routers and our
putting together plans for doing outreach in a neighborhood, which is probably going to be
San Antonio in Fruitvale.
If anybody is thinking of donating please consider giviving to our local project instead
at
https://www.wepay.com/donations/oakland-community-mesh-network
On Mon, Jun 17, 2013 at 10:23 AM, Tony Barreca <tony.barreca(a)gmail.com> wrote:
There's an active Mesh Network project in Oakland once again, the central locus of
which is at Sudoroom.
On Mon, Jun 17, 2013 at 3:05 AM, howard dyckoff <howarddy(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Most of the Mesh network activity was previously confined to SF.
I think there was some activity in North Oakland 2-3 years back.
If I recall correctly, the cells have to be within half a mile or a third of a mile of
each other.... pls verify, I'm sure the range has increased gradually.
And I think the min cost of a local neighborhood transmitter and antennae was between
$500 and $1000 a few years ago. I hope that pricing is better now.
The problem, I think , is that the areas most in need of this have fewer and less
successful neighborhood associations and fewer households that could afford to setup mesh
nodes.
That's unfortunate since this could provide really inexpensive internet access for
everyone.
I am sure "Business Improvement Districts" could be involved, but there are few
of them operating in East and West Oakland. We'd need a big grant to cover those
areas -- or a lot of neighborhood organizing.
And we'd have to plan for some of the equipment being stolen. As an example, the new
library at 81st Ave, where we held an event earlier this year, had many of its computers
stolen a few weeks after it opened.
But I don't want to be too negative here. I would definitely support this effort.
On Sat, Jun 15, 2013 at 7:14 PM, Eddie Tejeda <eddie(a)codeforamerica.org> wrote:
Hey everyone!
Checkout this cool project by Preston Rhea, from Open Technology Institute at the New
America Foundation. He's thinking that Oakland will be one of the pilot cities. There
are existing local mesh network projects in the area, right? People know how those
projects are doing? This could be a collaborative opportunity.
http://crowdhitch.millennialtrain.co/campaign/detail/1330
The project is to spread locally-managed community wireless mesh networks around the
country. I'll teach local technologists and community organizers how to use regular
Wi-Fi routers and free, open source software to build their own community Internet
infrastructure.
The project will use Commotion, a free, open source software project designed to make it
easy for anyone to set up their own mesh network. We'll share tools and methods for
participatory technology pedagogy, and the routers that we set up together will remain
with the locals to seed their own mesh networks. With these seeds spread, people in each
city can continue to grow locally-managed Internet networks and spur innovation on a
shared platform accessible to any resident.
--
Eddie A. Tejeda
@eddietejeda
2012 Fellow, Code for America
http://codeforamerica.org
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