39
Georgia Bullen [email protected] @georgiamoon / @redhookwifi

Red Hook Wifi

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Red Hook Wifi

Georgia [email protected]!@georgiamoon / @redhookwifi!

Page 2: Red Hook Wifi

Creating digital networks is mostly a social process.!

Page 3: Red Hook Wifi
Page 4: Red Hook Wifi
Page 5: Red Hook Wifi

Key Aspects: Social & Technical Infrastructure !

•  Main network anchors are trusted community organizations.!

•  Solid relationship with technical support provider from outside of the community.!

•  Community-led design process emphasizes local needs and enhances engagement.!

•  Rapid prototyping of applications designed for the local area network. !

Page 6: Red Hook Wifi

2

1 4

3

5

Technology!

•  Ubiquiti Routers!–  Nanostation!–  Picostation!

•  Commotion!–  Ad Hoc Network Platform!–  OpenWRT!–  OLSRd Routing Protocol!

!!!!!https://code.commotionwireless.net/projects/commotion/wiki/Newbie_How_It_Works !

Page 7: Red Hook Wifi

Mesh networks are distributed, non-centralized, and self-healing.!

Hub  and  Spoke  Network   Mesh  Network  

Page 8: Red Hook Wifi

February 2012 – 1st Mesh Node!WAP + Internet Gateway!

Page 9: Red Hook Wifi

March 2012 – 2nd Mesh Node !Out of Range of Node #1, No Internet Gateway!Local Server with applications!

Page 10: Red Hook Wifi

Community Collaborative Design Workshops, Photo: Becky Kazansky!

Page 11: Red Hook Wifi

A resident working with Tidepools, a local Mapping Application, Photo: Becky Kazansky!

Page 12: Red Hook Wifi

Local Application Development!

Page 13: Red Hook Wifi

Red Hook Initiative: !Recovery & Communication Hub!

Page 14: Red Hook Wifi

RHI Status!

Page 15: Red Hook Wifi
Page 16: Red Hook Wifi

February 2013!

Page 17: Red Hook Wifi

February 2013!

Page 18: Red Hook Wifi

2013  

Page 19: Red Hook Wifi
Page 20: Red Hook Wifi
Page 21: Red Hook Wifi

Site Surveys!

Page 22: Red Hook Wifi
Page 23: Red Hook Wifi

Businesses   Non-­‐Profits   Schools   Parks   ExisAng/  Agreed  to  host  

Potential Partners!

Page 24: Red Hook Wifi

Broadband Adoption!FCC Form 477 Data !NYC Department of City Planning PLUTO Data!NYC Department of City Planning Buildings Data !

Page 25: Red Hook Wifi
Page 26: Red Hook Wifi
Page 27: Red Hook Wifi
Page 28: Red Hook Wifi
Page 29: Red Hook Wifi
Page 30: Red Hook Wifi
Page 31: Red Hook Wifi

October 2013!

Page 32: Red Hook Wifi

August 2013!

Page 33: Red Hook Wifi

http://redhookwifi.org! powered by Tidepools (http://tidepools.org)!

Page 34: Red Hook Wifi

Lessons Learned!

•  Social relationships are paramount.!!•  The most challenging investment is in the initial organizing

and design phase before any value is realized. !!•  Community-designed applications add value to a local

network, even at a small scale. !!•  Having relationships and anchor wireless nodes in place prior

to a disaster facilitates rapid network deployment through: !–  Already-established relationships with key community

stakeholders.!–  A heightened level of technological literacy in the community.!–  Pre-positioned wireless network equipment in the neighborhood.!

Page 35: Red Hook Wifi

What’s Next?!

sensors  

apps  

texting  

outreach  

Page 36: Red Hook Wifi

Additional Materials!

Page 37: Red Hook Wifi

Cost of the Network!

•  Donated labor from local residents and technologist. !•  Institutional support from RHI and OTI. !•  Hardware (~$50 to ~$85 each router). !•  Installation (3-5 work hours for two people per site). !•  Bandwidth (donated by RHI, Brooklyn Fiber, and FEMA). !•  Training program for local residents to maintain and expand

network as part of a municipal employment program. !

Page 38: Red Hook Wifi

Modular mesh wireless tile

The bandwidth delivered to the end user can be up to 50 Mbps, but is dependent on available bandwidth at the gateway connection. There are various models for determining how many users can share a given connection. Each user-facing access point can support up to 25 simultaneous connections, but speed will depend on available bandwidth at the gateway, interference, and other factors. Engineering study is required to determine the technical feasibility of each tile. Community participation is key in determining rooftop anchor sites and pilot "early adopter" candidates.

(1 unit) Internet GatewayConnection to the global Internet or point of presence(point-to-point wireless or fiber-optic backhaul, white space device, etc.)

(25 to 100 units) User-facing access points Omnidirectional mesh wireless nodes mounted on lightpoles, building exteriors, rooftops, or windows. Hardware = approximately $25,000

Installation labor = approximately $75,000 to $150,000

1/2 to 3/4 mile

(5 to 10 units) Gateway distribution layerPoint-to-point or -multipoint directional mesh wireless nodes.

Wired connection

Wireless connection

People in or next to the tile area can extend the network by installing their own routers.

Page 39: Red Hook Wifi

More Information!

http://redhookwifi.org!http://rhidigitalstewards.wordpress.com!http://oti.newamerica.net!http://commotionwireless.net!http://commotionwireless.net/tags/red-hook!http://tidepools.co!!