Shared Community WiFi Networking Blog From A Toronto Co-op ISP

Monday, February 26, 2007

Macintosh OS X Compatibility Reports-- Contribute!


Hello, all Wireless Nomad members who are Macintosh users -- over the last month or so I've had a couple of reports of weird behavior on Macintosh computers when logging in to the WiFi wireless. None of the five Macintosh computers I have access to encounter any problems, but I'm looking for feedback from anybody that has any issues.

So, if you have a Macintosh, and have encountered any wireless login strangeness over the last month, post a comment below, it can be anonymous if you like, and it would almost certainly be helpful!

LAN Router Config Ideas-- Contribute!


The co-op is looking at a project where we get some funding to have someone create a user interface so members can have more control over the Wireless Nomad wireless router in their home.

If any of you have ideas about what should go into this control panel, ways it should work, features you'd like to see, post below as a comment, so we can get this discussion going. Obviously, this is not a formal process yet, but just a way to get some basic ideas out in the open. In a month or so we will get a wiki set up or something like that, and look for more formal specifications.

Saturday, February 24, 2007

RIAA declares war on open WiFi

From BoingBoing:

"The RIAA is asking a judge to rule that anyone who provides bandwidth should be responsible for all the activities of his users. This would doom open WiFi -- and all other public networking efforts. But who needs anonymous speech, anyway? After all anonymity fuels irresponsible behavior, like founding the United States."

>LINK

Friday, February 16, 2007

WiFi Info and News Links

Last night, Johnny asked for some links to learn more about WiFi. Thinking others might also be interested, here are some of my favourites! (Of course, this list is not even close to complete!)


Glen Fleishman's Blog



Esme Vos + the MuniWireless group-- see Wireless Nomad in the latest magazine issue!



CRACIN-- a major WiFi research group in Canada



CWIRP-- a subset of CRACIN



Sasha Meinrath's group doing really great mesh WiFi work



Toronto's informal WiFi gathering each month



Toronto's Free Cafe WiFi group, much like ISF



Montreal's Free Cafe WiFi group, much like WT. ISF was one of the first WiFigroups in Canada



Tech law and policy clinic at U of Otttawa



And of course, Wireless Nomad!



Enjoy, if there's something missing, let me know, it can be added!

Last night's meeting

Great meeting last night: just awesome to see the effort and enthusiasm people are putting in.

See everyone next time, Wednesday, 14 March 2007, same time, same place.

Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Bernier's Troubling Stand on Net Neutrality

Prof. Geist writes;

"Since being named Minister of Industry last February, Maxime Bernier has set his sights on reforming Canada's telecommunications laws. In only twelve months, he has overruled the CRTC on its plans for Internet telephony regulation and introduced a sea change in the CRTC's approach, mandating that the Commission "rely on market forces to the maximum extent feasible and to regulate telecommunications services only when necessary." Indeed, the emphasis on market forces has been so great, that the Minister from the Beauce might be better characterized as the Minister from Bell."


LINK

Washington Post Says Open Wi-Fi Attracts Criminals

"The article presents a sensational opening! Child porn being downloaded! A warrant! Pounding on a door! But it’s only an elderly lady, and she’s not even stealing music. No, we get the specious fact that the police are powerless to apprehend a villain because the elderly lady is fiendishly operating an unprotected Wi-Fi access point. “Perhaps one of those neighbors, authorities said, was stealthily uploading photographs of nude children. Doing so essentially rendered him or her untraceable,” the reporter writes. Not so much: Traditional police work coupled with an exact geographic location should have provided enough clues."

As Fleishman points out, what do they know in Washigton about anything, really?


LINK

Thursday, February 08, 2007

FEBRUARY MONTHLY MEETING--THIS THURSDAY!

FEBRUARY MONTHLY MEETING

When:
Thursday, February 15, 2007, 7:00 PM - 9:00PM

Where:
Linux Caffe
326 Harbord Street
Toronto , ON M6G 3A4
416-534-2116

See you there!

What the Canadian Government Really Thinks About Net Neutrality


From Micahel Geist's Blog:

"The Canadian Press is out this evening with an important story that reveals the government's true view on net neutrality. Based on documents obtained under the Access to Information Act, they provide a clear picture of an Industry Minister and policy makers content to leave the issue alone, despite acknowledging that major telcos such as Bell and Telus are "determined to play a greater role in how Internet content is delivered" and that "they [Bell and Telus] believe they should be the gatekeepers of content, with the freedom to impose fees for their role."


michaelgeist.ca

Wednesday, February 07, 2007

User Experience with Rogers "WiMax"

On the /36 Toronto WiFi Meetup Group:

"I know it's an old thread but I thought I'd throw a little feedback here of the experiences on Bell's WiMax solution over the past couple of months.
Background: We're (partner and I) are running these as remote internet boxes to run workstations for advertising, hence not actively sitting using the boxes..."


LINK

Tuesday, February 06, 2007

WiFi liberator? Or WiFi invader?

From BoingBoing: Share closed WiFi with the Wifi Liberator

"Wifi Liberator lets you retransmit the pay-for-use WiFi at airports and cafes to your friends for free; it's an art-project from Jonah Brucker-Cohen:
Wifi Liberator is an open-source toolkit for a laptop computer that enables its user to "liberate" pay-per-use wireless networks and create a free, open node that anyone can connect to for Internet access. The project is presented as a challenge to existing corporate or "locked" private wireless nodes to encourage the proliferation of free networks and connectivity across the planet."
------------------------------------
A very interesting piece of software,and some interesting ideas behind it.

However, a couple of points I think are definitely worth some critical examination:

1. If paid networks are destroyed, there could easily be no correlation in an increase in free access networks. If the people in control can make money for something, it likely won't happen. Free access WiFi has all kinds of problems and advantages, from a legal perspective, technical perspective (network administrators don't like other people using their network), and business perspective (free access WiFi still cost money to provide, and people using chairs and tables are taking up space, and there may or may not be a correlation to increased revenue from that use of space).

2. Running WiFi access points with decent Internet connectivity, access control, and some sort of billing system to allow those who want the system to be able to pay for it (assuming it is not to be a tax on coffee, like many café WiFi models) is not especially cheap or easy. Sure, many volunteer groups do it, but all the community wireless groups either assume or accept that the best/only way to pay for the Internet conductivity is to have a venue pay for it from revenue obtained from selling something else. If you want to have a billing system, that means you need security, and customer support. Security and customer support can be very expensive, compared to the basic cost of WiFi hardware. There's much to debate about the different ways of obtaining sufficient resources to allow an Internet connection to a location and a functional and reliable WiFi sharing system at that same location -- surely, however, the entire concept of paid access cannot be entirely wrong. Hardly anybody complains about having to pay for Internet access at their home or business, and it is basically the same idea.

3. Internet access will not be the same as the air we breathe. Air is a natural resource, existing outside of human ingenuity and effort. The Internet, however, is a massive engineering project created by thousands of hard-working and very clever technicians, supported by a huge number of entrepreneurs, accounting and legal professionals, visionary philosophers and academics, and, content-wise, just about everybody on the planet that has a connection. the "air we breathe" is not a physical human construct, and would do pretty well without any future human involvement (mostly, we destroy the air we breathe with pollution...). The Internet, in contrast, is not a natural resource with a physical embodiment existing outside of human effort; nor is it a static construct, like the great pyramids in Egypt, that can just sit there for hundreds and hundreds of years. Keeping the Internet going requires a huge amount of human input, and that's not even talking about improving the Internet! Dynamic machines like cars and computers need guidance and maintenance, and skilled human labor is one of the most expensive things around.

That said, it's obviously stupid to charge $10 an hour to have someone check their e-mail. It is not economically efficient, even though it might make the service provider quite a bit of money. Hotels exploit their captive audiences, and rip them off for Internet access charges. Still, one or two dollars an hour is probably a reasonable rate, and one that I think a lot of people would consider fair if they really thought about it. The old saying that "if it's worth using, it's worth paying for" has some truth in it -- of course, it doesn't say how much should be paid as a practical measurement or what would be actually fair today, but it might be a good start to counteract what in many ways is a dream of free Internet access, based on some questionable assumptions. Still, the next time I have to pay $10 to connect to the Internet for one hour, I will definitely give this software try, and maybe do a bit of good while doing so.


LINK

Thursday, February 01, 2007

Another Spanish WiFi system: Whisher Comment

Glenn Fleishman has something to add:


LINK

Bandwidth Hogs, BitTorrent, and Net Neutrality

A couple of interesting stories on ArsTechina today:

"A tiny segment of Internet users generate almost half of all Internet traffic..."

Bandwidth Hogs



"While this litany of legal services can lead to cries for ISPs to stop shaping BitTorrent traffic, the reality remains that a large percentage of this traffic is still illicit file-swapping. And whether it's legal or not, no ISP is thrilled to have 80 percent of their network capacity given over to serving BitTorrent downloads."

BitTorrent