At the Stanford Spectrum Policy Conference
I'm here at the very interesting Spectrum Policy Conference. The discussions are very very interesting. Unfortunately, for the first 90 minutes, I couldn't really listen to the speakers (thank goodness they're archiving the feeds) because I was setting up an emergency Sputnik Network using the beta
Sputnik-powered Access Point I brought. I admit, I sort of figured that
there would be some problems with Stanford's Cisco-based WiFi network, based on
MAC address filtering. Basically, to get a MAC address-based network to work well, you've got to have everyone at the conference pre-register their MAC address with the IT department. Of course, this doesn't scale. Some people will miss the preregistration email, some won't bring the WiFi card they registered, some will make errors in their reporting, perhaps even the IT staff will finger-slip a few of the addresses on the list (after all it is a
gobbeldygook of 17 pseudorandom characters) or some people will register at the door, and thus won't be able to get access to the network.
Anyway, because of this, I pulled out my handy-dandy Sputnik-powered AP, grabbed a hub from one of the organizers, and within minutes had a custom captive portal set up for the conference. A bunch of people are using the network or have written about it:
Dan Gillmor,
Cory Doctorow,
David Isenberg,
Dave Winer, and others.
Now that the network is working and handling the load, I can get back to sitting back and grokking the conference. More to come.
Posted by dsifry at March 1, 2003 11:06 AM
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Dave,
Thanks for the connection help, and thank you very much for bringing your AP. I'm sorry that I didn't get to hear the rest of your Melco story.
While browsing your site tonight, I realized that you might be interested in my story of when a VC contacted me to see if I would be interested in being COO of Linuxcare!
Maybe we can get together for a beer sometime.
Thanks,
Tim