On Fri, 2008-04-18 at 07:59 -0500, Tom Poe wrote: > So, I'm out in the middle of the corn fields. Our town is roughly 3 > miles by 4 miles. There's a population of less than 8,000. Everyone > can "see" the nanostation2 from their homes. The community wireless > network is not connected to the Internet. So, let's assume everyone > has a computer and webcam. Couldn't they use something like Ekiga, > and participate in a videoconference across that network? I don't see > where the telcos/cablecos thugs have anything to do with it. Do > they? It's different people, but a similar situation. Who's going to put it together, work out the wrinkles, help people make use of it? I doubt one transceiver is going to work, apart from reception issues, there's the issue of how many can use one thing at once. RF is a black art, and networking isn't far behind. And it's not just the hardware, the software's in the same boat. Ekiga is far from simple to use, it still requires some technical nouse to figure it out. Then you'll have to deal with Windows users wanting to use something incompatible with anything but itself. Who's going to help those people, or who's going to find or build something more user-friendly? You're going to either need a band of willing volunteers, which will probably tail off rather quickly once they've found out they're in over their heads, had to deal with nitwits and late night bitching over the telephone. Or pay people to do it. Ever worked with community TV people? I have. You end up with one or two who know what they're doing, plenty who don't (some will admit it, the others think they know what they're doing, some will cause you legal problems with what they do - copyright, libel, defamation, etc.), quite a few wierdoes, lots of in-fighting, a small proportion of outsiders who're interested, some insiders and outsiders who'll sabotage or try and take over (often entailing nasty legal wrangles), ISPs and telcos which'll try and derail you, and a great majority of the public who won't care about any of it. And that's without any of the technical issues... It sounds like you're keen, so you're going to be the first one to invest time, effort and money. If you're not willing, it's already dead in the water. You'll have to convince your town to put in the equipment, even if they don't have to pay for doing so. Then you'll have to start generating interest. You'll get a few friends involved, and some will go away after a little while. You'll get a few strangers involved, and you'll wish you'd never met them. And somewhere along the line you'll have to fight off someone who wants to take over and screw it all up. -- (This computer runs FC7, my others run FC4, FC5 & FC6, in case that's important to the thread.) Don't send private replies to my address, the mailbox is ignored. I read messages from the public lists. -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list