IPv6, interNAT, Wi-Fi (not mobile)
2003-03-25 15:53:14
Speaking of that ... I've been active in the community networking
community for a little while and I've started to interest myself in
mesh and/or ad-hoc wireless situations. (note that I'm specifically not
interested in mobility). The application I'm interested in particularly
is using WiFi to bring internet broadband to areas where it's not
accessible currently. That could be either last-mile areas or rural
areas. The concept of setting up a "mesh" network (surely an overloaded
term if there is one ...) in the wifi community maps roughly speaking
to "fixed ad-hoc wireless" in the research community, AFAICT.
With that in mind, there is currently only one publicly available,
deployed "mesh" solution called Locustworld MeshAP, that uses private
IPv4 subnets like 10.0.x.x and 192.168.x.x for all of the meshed access
points and something called "WIANA" <http://wiana.org> to manage the
nodes. Not very scaleable or friendly IMHO. Other private or community
WLANs are mostly hand-configured ... there's another one by Seattle
Wireless that I haven't looked closely at yet.
In addition I recently had to cope with the hassles of setting up an
H.323 connection (with ohphoneX) from behind a firewall at both ends
and immediately concluded that people on any kind of wireless mesh that
uses NAT are going to be severely limited since they aren't truly a
part of the internet.
So I would like to request discussion on this subject. I have a lot
more to say about it but maybe I'll stop here for now ;-)
simon
On Tuesday, March 25, 2003, at 05:10 PM, Lloyd Wood wrote:
InterNAT
--
www.simonwoodside.com -- 99% Devil, 1% Angel
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