Harsh Wireless Conditions? Send In the Drone Hot Spot 20
coondoggie writes "The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) has moved along a project it says would use hot-spot enabled drones to bring wireless communications to even the most distant and harsh environments. The project known as Fixed Wireless at a Distance is designed specifically to overcome the challenge inherent with cell communication in remote areas and this week the agency awarded L-3 $16.4 million to support the next iteration of the system."
Warflying (Score:3)
Re: (Score:1)
Finally drone strike victims will be able to live tweet the experience.
What's the Name? (Score:3)
Will this be called F-WAD?
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How about a ballon on a string with an AP dangling? Could provide power up the cord power and data to the bound and costs around $1.50...
You might be able to get string for a balloon for $1.50, but it will cost $25 for a big enough balloon and roughly $40/lb of lift to buy helium to fill it.
Harsh? (Score:2)
OmG - how sensitive, have your live-feeding umilical cord ripped apart...
Denied Areas (Score:1)
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A flying WAP 800ft up has line of sight to pretty much anything in the area.
That said, while TFA doesn't mention it, the intended use of this likely involves a (ground) base station with a satellite uplink established in a clearing, which then uses WDS or similar to provide access to one or more flying relay nodes.
Interestingly, though, I don't see the advantage of "drone" in this situation. Tethered weather balloons can a
Re: (Score:2)
not a good idea (Score:2)
Why are we thinking fixed wing here? (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm sure that for short-term applications a fixed-wing drone getting its feed from satellites and flying figure-eights over a ground point is what they have in mind. But consider the potential of a quadcopter carrying an access point. Once you guide the drone up to some high point on a crag and set it down, all of the solar power collected by the device can be applied to running the AP, rather than keeping the drone flying. In all but the flattest areas there will be some high but difficult-to-access place, such as a minaret, with some cranny where a drone AP can roost. And if conditions change, you can always reposition it.
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I just recently looked into solar energy, and you don't get as much power as you would need to constantly maintain flight. But a solar powered quadcopter connected to a balloon wouldn't need as much energy. The quadcopter would only kick in to maintain position every once in awhile.
We made a "repeater tank" in 2011 for this (Score:1)
You can see a video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
Apple did this! (Score:2)
I remember seeing an Airport base station flying around. [youtube.com]
(Yes, it's a real ad. No, it's not really flying. Yes, I'm joking.)
How are these different from Facebook's drones? (Score:1)
Facebook buying 11000 drones to connect Africa [telegraph.co.uk]. What is so special about this project?