Mesh

Revision as of 11:40, 29 March 2013 by Tunabananas (talk | contribs)

510pen (pronounced five-one-open, based on the local area code 510) was initiated in 2009 with a series of mesh routers located in private homes and local businesses around Oakland. The project went on hiatus due to shifting priorities of the primary organizers. 510pen has recently been rebooted in the form of a small commited group working out of the downtown Oakland hackerspace sudo room. The sets of problems being worked on can be split into social and technical:

Technical:

  • Building a backbone of point-to-point line of sight rooftop wifi mesh nodes to bootstrap the reach of the network.
    • The mesh right now has very few nodes that are directly connected (as opposed to connected over the Internet), which makes the usefulness of the mesh questionable in disaster and extreme censorship scenarios.
    • We've been focusing on finding a simple and inexpensive solution for point to point rooftop nodes in order to create a far reaching backbone of high-bandwidth interconnected nodes. Currently we're testing a solution using recycled small satelitte dishes with cheap usb wifi adapters mounted and weatherproofed at the dish's point of focus. Inexpensive computers such as a raspberry pi can then, when hooked up to one or more of these nodes, connect rooftops more than a mile apart. Finding people willing to host rooftop equipment and others willing to donate unused satelitte dishes has become another way we engage with the local community.
  • Mesh coverage of local areas from connected nodes using powerful omnidirectional wifi equipment.
    • 510pen currently uses a variety of mesh routers from open-mesh.com. Some of them have good coverage, but they are all currently mounted indoors, which inhibits street coverage and mesh links between blocks.
    • Better outdoor omnidirectional routers need to be purchased, tested and installed.
  • Low bandwidth disaster recovery mesh.
    • The likeliest disaster scenario in the bay area is a mayor earthquake. Such an event is likely to disrupt many wifi nodes, and especially finely tuned point to point links.
    • We're building a separate mesh using low-bandwidth, long range radio communication that will run something like a decentralized twitter, where short text messages can be shared and synchronized as radio links are available.
    • To implement this, we're using $12 off the shelf tv tuners that can be used as receive-only general-purpose digital radios. Transmission is stil being worked out, but the current idea is that receive-hardware is cheap enough that 2 gig bootable usb sticks, tv tuners and very simple home-made antennas can be distributed both before and after a disaster, and that these will allow people to set up local stations where updates about local resources such as shelters, food and power can be accessed, while stations capable of transmitting new messages will be fewer (possibly requiring more expensive hardware) but will announce their locations such that anyone can walk to a local transmit station if they want to send a message out on the mesh.

Social:

  • Illustrated instructables for adapting recycled/reused items for DIY hardware.
  • Community-Based Participatory Action Research:
    • Reaching out to existing community organizations in the San Antonio neighborhood for collaboration.
    • UX research - interviewing residents, community surveys, synthesis and analysis.
  • More?

Meetup Info

Meeting Minutes

Projects

  • 510pen - East Bay community wireless mesh network spawned in 2009 by Mark Burdett
  • Tidepools - Jenny Ryan is designing local use cases for a community mobile mapping application built to run on mesh networks.