From Amazon
Certain cities--Singapore is one example--have begun to outfit gathering places, like airport lounges and downtown coffee shops, as "hot spots" that are served by wireless Internet antennas. It's possible for anyone with an IEEE 802.11b card in a laptop to sit down in one and have Internet access immediately. The author of
Building Wireless Community Networks, Rob Flickenger, thinks this is a great idea. He's written this small, thin volume to explain to readers why wireless networking is a community asset, and to bring them up to speed on the technologies available for creating wireless hot spots. "Community" here means a collection of people, as in a town or neighbourhood.
Wireless networking protocols are complicated, but IEEE 802.11b and the products that have sprung up around it (like Apple's AirPort and similar offerings from Lucent Technologies and Cisco Systems) are pretty easy to set up and integrate into a network. Flickenger's treatment deals with these admirably, but places more emphasis on configuring operating systems (notably Linux) to work as wireless gateways for transient users. The really fun reading has to do with custom antennas, though. He explains--no kidding--how to convert a Pringles potato-chip can into an antenna for wireless networking, and goes into detail on how to work around the challenges posed by topography and manmade obstacles. This is a smart book about one of the most exciting frontiers in computer networking. --David Wall
Topics covered: means of delivering wireless network access (mainly Internet access) to rooms, buildings, communities, and whole geographic regions of up to a few miles in diameter. Design and placement of access points, as well as configuration of network nodes, is covered in detail, as are the legal and political aspects of building a wireless network for general community use.
Review
A book well worth reading by anyone who is concerned about community access to the Internet. --
Major Keary, Book News, 2002 No 6An excellent nuts-and-bolts survey of the issues, problems, and technologies that concentrates on 802.11b- based solutions. --
Thom Stark, IBM Developer Works, Jan 2002Considering the small size of the reference, Flickenger is
to be congratulated on packing so much in without sacrificing either readability or the plot. --
Davey Winder, kewney.com, Jan 2002Flickenger provides a blueprint to setting up wireless community networks... --
Computers in Libraries, Feb 2002It's an easy call to say that this book contains between thousands and tens of thousands of dollars worth of advice on each of those constructive topics. --
Glenn Fleishman, weblogger.com, Feb 2002Pick up Rob Flickenger's thin but information-dense
Building Wireless Community Networks and you'll
be ready to get on the air. --
Don Marti, Linux Journal, Jan 2002The perfect do-it-yourself manual for what many think is the future of the non-commercial Net --
NetSurfer Digest, Jan 17 2002This will give you a great insight of the current status of Wireless Community Networks. --
Erik Bussink, Geneva Wireless Community Network, April 2002