+1. :)
I see lots of benefits not only from the disaster perspective, but also as a first
connectivity element in very far comunities.
Btw i am taking a bunch of the prototypes to the African CN Summit to play around!
On August 24, 2018 11:51:15 PM CDT, Jenny Ryan <jenny(a)peoplesopen.net> wrote:
Greetings all!
Apologies for the n00b and last-minute nature of this submission! Nico
just
informed me of the proper procedure. I had submitted an earlier draft
of
this proposal via the ZoomGrants interface on the ISOC website just
prior
to the original August 10th deadline, but hadn't passed it through the
CNSIG chapter first.
The proposal is for financial support for the development of basic mesh
routing on disaster.radio hardware. Disaster.Radio is a long-range,
low-power, low-bandwidth communications network built on open software
and
hardware. More info on the project can be found here:
https://disaster.radio
We are already in communication with groups across the US as well as
organizations in Canada, India, Brazil, Argentina, Nigeria, Puerto
Rico,
Hawaii and New Zealand who are interested in building
disaster-resilient
communications networks and utilizing the hardware. We've also begun
having
discussions with some first responder and human rights organizations,
such
as the Human Rights Foundation. Given the low cost (< $50 USD) and open
soft/hardware nature of the project, its potential global impact is
clear.
Regarding the project's relationship to community networks, we are in
conversations with the folks behind Libre Router about adding a LoRa
radio
to the next iteration of their open hardware WiFi mesh routers. We plan
to
deploy disaster.radio nodes (and in truth have already deployed
several) in
tandem with our community WiFi network here in Oakland, California, and
are
chatting with multiple other community wireless projects about
deploying
Disaster.Radio networks for backup, off-grid communications.
Support from the CNSIG would be greatly appreciated! This is an urgent
request, as the deadline was evidently today. Gratitude to both Nicos
for
their efforts to get this pushed to the larger ISOC through the CNSIG!
:)
<3
Jenny Ryan
People's Open Network <https://peoplesopen.net>
*Building a community-owned and -operated wireless network in Oakland,
California!*
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