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Wireless
Networking in
the
Developing World
Second
Edition
A
practical guide to planning and
building low-cost
telecommunications
infrastructure
![]() Wireless
Networking in the Developing World
For
more information about this
project, visit us online at
http://wndw.net/
First
edition, January 2006
Second
edition, December
2007
Many
designations used by manufacturers
and vendors to distinguish
their
products
are claimed as trademarks.
Where those designations
appear in
this
book, and the authors
were aware of a trademark
claim, the
designations
have
been printed in all caps or
initial caps. All other
trademarks are
property
of
their respective
owners.
The
authors and publisher have
taken due care in
preparation of this
book,
but
make no expressed or implied
warranty of any kind and
assume no
responsibility
for errors or omissions. No
liability is assumed for
incidental or
consequential
damages in connection with or
arising out of the use of
the
information
contained herein.
�
2007 Hacker Friendly LLC,
http://hackerfriendly.com/
This
work is released under the
Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike
3.0
license.
For more details regarding
your rights to use and
redistribute
this
work, see http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
Contents
Where
to Begin
1
Purpose
of this
book...........................................................................................................................2
Fitting
wireless into your existing
network..........................................................................................
3
Wireless
networking
protocols.............................................................................................................3
Question
&
Answer.............................................................................................................................
5
A
Practical Introduction to Radio Physics
9
What
is a
wave?.................................................................................................................................
9
Polarization......................................................................................................................................13
The
electromagnetic
spectrum...........................................................................................................
13
Bandwidth........................................................................................................................................
15
Frequencies
and
channels.................................................................................................................
15
Behavior
of radio
waves...................................................................................................................
15
Line
of
sight......................................................................................................................................22
Power...............................................................................................................................................
24
Physics
in the real
world...................................................................................................................
26
Network
Design
27
Designing
the physical
network.........................................................................................................
51
802.11
wireless
networks..................................................................................................................
54
Mesh
networking with
OLSR..............................................................................................................
56
Estimating
capacity...........................................................................................................................65
Traffic
optimization...........................................................................................................................79
Internet
link
optimization.................................................................................................................
89
More
information..............................................................................................................................93
Antennas
& Transmission Lines
95
Cables..............................................................................................................................................
95
Waveguides......................................................................................................................................
97
Connectors
and
adapters.................................................................................................................100
Antennas
& radiation
patterns........................................................................................................
102
Reflector
theory..............................................................................................................................
114
Amplifiers.......................................................................................................................................115
Practical
antenna
designs................................................................................................................116
Networking
Hardware
135
Wired
wireless................................................................................................................................
135
Choosing
wireless
components........................................................................................................
137
Commercial
vs. DIY
solutions...........................................................................................................139
Building
an access point from a
PC..................................................................................................143
Security
& Monitoring
157
Physical
security.............................................................................................................................
158
Threats
to the
network....................................................................................................................
160
Authentication................................................................................................................................
162
Privacy...........................................................................................................................................
167
Network
Monitoring........................................................................................................................
174
What
is
normal?.............................................................................................................................
203
Solar
Power
211
Solar
energy...................................................................................................................................
211
Photovoltaic
system
components.....................................................................................................
212
The
solar
panel...............................................................................................................................
217
The
battery.....................................................................................................................................
222
The
power charge
regulator............................................................................................................
229
Converters......................................................................................................................................
231
Equipment
or
load..........................................................................................................................
232
How
to size your photovoltaic
system..............................................................................................
238
Cost
of a solar
installation...............................................................................................................246
Building
an Outdoor Node
249
Waterproof
enclosures....................................................................................................................
249
Providing
power..............................................................................................................................250
Mounting
considerations.................................................................................................................
251
Safety.............................................................................................................................................257
Aligning
antennas on a long distance
link.......................................................................................
258
Surge
and lightning
protection........................................................................................................
263
Troubleshooting
267
Building
your
team.........................................................................................................................
267
Proper
troubleshooting
technique...................................................................................................
270
Common
network
problems............................................................................................................
271
Economic
Sustainability
281
Create
a Mission
Statement.............................................................................................................
282
Evaluate
the Demand for Potential
Offerings...................................................................................283
Establish
Appropriate
Incentives......................................................................................................
284
Research
the Regulatory Environment for
Wireless..........................................................................
286
Analyze
the
Competition.................................................................................................................
286
Determine
Initial and Recurring Costs and
Pricing...........................................................................
287
Secure
the
Financing.......................................................................................................................
291
Evaluate
the Strengths and Weaknesses of the Internal
Situation.....................................................
293
Putting
it All
Together.....................................................................................................................
294
Conclusion......................................................................................................................................
297
Case
Studies
299
General
advice................................................................................................................................299
Case
study: Crossing the divide with a
simple bridge in
Timbuktu....................................................
302
Case
study: Finding solid ground in
Gao..........................................................................................
305
Case
Study: Fantsuam Foundation's Community
Wireless
Network...................................................308
Case
study: The quest for affordable
Internet in rural
Mali..............................................................
319
Case
study: Commercial deployments in East
Africa.........................................................................
325
Case
study: Dharamsala Community Wireless Mesh
Network...........................................................
332
Case
study: Networking M�rida
State..............................................................................................
334
Case
study:
Chilesincables.org.........................................................................................................
345
Case
study: Long Distance
802.11....................................................................................................
355
Appendix
A: Resources
371
Appendix
B: Channel Allocations
379
Appendix
C: Path Loss
381
Appendix
D: Cable Sizes
382
Appendix
E: Solar Dimensioning
383
About
This Book
This
book is part of a set of
related materials about the
same topic: Wireless
Networking
in the Developing World. The
WNDW project
includes:
�
Printed books, available on
demand
�
Several translations, including
French, Spanish, Portuguese,
Italian, Arabic,
and
others
�
A DRM-free PDF and HTML
version of the book
�
An archived mailing list for
discussion of the concepts
and techniques
described
in the book
�
Additional case studies,
training course material,
and related
information
For
all of this material and
more, see our website at
http://wndw.net/
The
book and PDF file are
published under a Creative Commons
Attribution-
ShareAlike
3.0 license.
This allows anyone to make
copies, and even sell
them
for
a profit, as long as proper attribution is given to
the authors and any
deriva-
tive
works are made available under
the same terms. Any
copies or derivative
works
must
include
a prominent link to our
website, http://wndw.net/.
See
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
for more
information about
these
terms. Printed copies may be
ordered from Lulu.com, a
print-on-demand
service.
Consult the website
(http://wndw.net/) for details
on ordering a printed
copy.
The PDF will be updated
periodically, and ordering from the
print-on-
demand
service ensures that you
will always receive the
latest revision.
The
website will include
additional case studies,
currently available
equip-
ment,
and more external website
references. Volunteers and
ideas are wel-
come.
Please join the mailing
list and send
ideas.
The
training course material was
written for courses given by
the Associa-
tion
for Progressive Communications
and the Abdus Salam
International
See
http://www.apc.org/wireless/
and
Center
for Theoretical
Physics.
http://wireless.ictp.trieste.it/
for
more details on those
courses and their
material.
Additional information was
provided by the International
Network
for
the Availability of Scientific
Publications, http://www.inasp.info/.
Some
of
this material has been
incorporated directly into
this book. Additional
ma-
terial
was adapted from How
To Accelerate Your
Internet, http://bwmo.net/.
Credits
This
book was started as the
BookSprint project at the
2005 session of
WSFII,
in London, England (http://www.wsfii.org/). A core
team of seven
people
built the initial outline
over the course of the
event, presented the
results
at the conference, and wrote
the book over the
course of a few
months.
Throughout the project, the
core group has actively
solicited con-
tributions
and feedback from the
wireless networking community.
Add your
own
feedback and updates to the
WNDW wiki at http://wiki.wndw.net/.
�
Rob
Flickenger was
the lead author and
editor of this book. Rob
has written
and
edited several books about
wireless networking and
Linux, including
Wireless
Hacks (O Reilly
Media) and How
To Accelerate Your Internet
(http://bwmo.net/). He is proud
to be a hacker, amateur mad
scientist, and
proponent
of free networks
everywhere.
�
Corinna
"Elektra" Aichele. Elektra
s main
interests include
autonomous
power
systems and wireless
communication (antennas, wireless
long
shots,
mesh networking). She made a
small linux distro based on
slack-
ware
geared to wireless mesh
networking. This information is of
course
redundant
if one reads the book...
http://www.scii.nl/~elektra
�
Sebastian
B�ttrich (http://wire.less.dk/) is a
generalist in technology
with
a
background in scientific programming
and physics. Originally from
Ber-
lin,
Germany, he worked with
IconMedialab in Copenhagen from
1997 until
2002.
He holds a Ph.D. in quantum
physics from the Technical
University
of
Berlin. His physics
background includes fields
like RF and microwave
spectroscopy,
photovoltaic systems, and
advanced maths.
He
is also a performing and
recording musician.
�
Laura M.
Drewett is a
Co-Founder of Adapted Consulting
Inc., a social en-
terprise
that specializes in adapting
technology and business
solutions for
the
developing world. Since
Laura first lived in Mali in
the 1990s and
wrote
her
thesis on girls education
programs, she has strived to
find sustainable
solutions
for development. An expert in
sustainability for ICT
projects in de-
veloping
world environments, she has
designed and managed
projects for a
diversity
of clients in Africa, the
Middle East and Eastern
Europe. Laura
holds
a Bachelors of Arts with
Distinction in Foreign Affairs
and French from
the
University of Virginia and a
Master s
Certificate in
Project Management
from
the George Washington
University School of
Business.
�
Alberto
Escudero-Pascual and
Louise
Berthilson are
the founders of
IT
+46, a
Swedish consultancy company
with focus on information
technol-
ogy
in developing regions. IT +46 is
internationally known for
promoting and
implementing
wireless Internet infrastructure in
rural areas of Africa and
Lati-
noamerica.
Since 2004, the company
has trained over 350
people in 14
countries
and released over 600
pages of documentation under
Creative
Commons
License. More information
can be found at http://www.it46.se/
�
Carlo
Fonda is a member of
the Radio Communications
Unit at the Abdus
Salam
International Center for
Theoretical Physics in Trieste,
Italy.
�
Jim
Forster has
spent his career in software
development, mostly
work-
ing
on operating systems and
networking in product companies. He
has
experience
with several failed startup
companies in Silicon Valley,
and
one
successful one, Cisco
Systems. After a lot of
product development
work
there, his more recent
activities involve projects
and policies for
im-
proving
Internet access in developing
countries. He can be reached
at
jrforster@mac.com.
�
Ian
Howard. After
flying around the world
for seven years as a
paratrooper
in
the Canadian military, Ian
Howard decided to trade his
gun for a computer.
After
finishing a
degree in environmental sciences at
the University of Wa-
terloo
he wrote in a proposal, "Wireless
technology has the
opportunity to
bridge
the digital divide. Poor
nations, who do not have
the infrastructure
for
interconnectivity as we do, will
now be able to create a
wireless infra-
structure."
As a reward, Geekcorps sent
him to Mali as the Geekcorps
Mali
Program
Manager, where he led a team
equipping radio stations
with wire-
less
interconnections and designed
content sharing
systems.
He
is now a consultant on various
Geekcorps programs.
�
Kyle
Johnston, http://www.schoolnet.na/
�
Tomas
Krag spends
his days working with
wire.less.dk, a registered
non-
profit,
based in Copenhagen, which he
founded with his friend
and col-
league
Sebastian B�ttrich in early
2002. wire.less.dk specialises in
com-
munity
wireless networking solutions,
and has a special focus on
low-cost
wireless
networks for the developing
world.
Tomas
is also an associate of the
Tactical Technology
Collective
http://www.tacticaltech.org/, an
Amsterdam-based non-profit
"to
strengthen
social technology movements
and networks in developing
and
transition
countries, as well as promote
civil society s
effective,
conscious
and
creative use of new
technologies." Currently most of
his energy goes
into
the Wireless Roadshow
(http://www.thewirelessroadshow.org/), a
pro-
ject
that supports civil society
partners in the developing
world in planning,
building
and sustaining connectivity
solutions based on
license-exempt
spectrum,
open technology and open
knowledge.
�
Gina
Kupfermann is graduate engineer in
energy management and holds
a
degree
in engineering and business. Besides her
profession as financial con-
troller
she has worked for various
self-organised community projects and
non-
profit
organisations. Since 2005 she is
member of the executive board of
the
development
association for free networks, the
legal entity of freifunk.net.
�
Adam
Messer.
Originally trained as an insect
scientist, Adam
Messer
metamorphosed
into a telecommunications professional
after a chance
conversation
in 1995 led him to start
one of Africa's first
ISPs. Pioneering
wireless
data services in Tanzania,
Messer worked for 11 years
in eastern
and
southern Africa in voice and
data communications for
startups and
multinational
cellular carriers. He now
resides in Amman,
Jordan.
�
Juergen
Neumann (http://www.ergomedia.de/) started
working with in-
formation
technology in 1984 and since
then has been looking
for ways to
deploy
ICT in useful ways for
organizations and society. As a
consultant for
ICT
strategy and implementation, he
has worked for major
German and
international
companies and many
non-profit projects.
In 2002 he co-
founded
www.freifunk.net, a campaign
for spreading knowledge and
social
networking
about free and open
networks. Freifunk is globally
regarded as
one
of the most successful
community-projects in this field.
�
Ermanno
Pietrosemoli has
been involved in planning
and building com-
puter
networks for the last
twenty years. As president of
the Latin American
Networking
School, Escuela Latinoamericana de
Redes "EsLaRed",
www.eslared.org.ve, he has
been teaching wireless data
communications
in
several countries while
keeping his base at M�rida,
Venezuela.
�
Fr�d�ric
Renet is a co-founder of
Technical Solutions at Adapted
Consulting,
Inc.
Fr�d�ric has been involved in
ICT for more than 10 years
and has worked
with
computers since his childhood. He
began his ICT career in the
early
1990s
with a bulletin board system (BBS) on an
analog modem and has
since
continued
to create systems that enhance
communication. Most recently,
Fr�d�ric
spent more than a year at
IESC/Geekcorps Mali as a consultant.
In
this
capacity, he designed many innovative
solutions for FM radio broadcast-
ing,
school computer labs and
lighting systems for rural
communities.
�
Marco
Zennaro, aka
marcusgennaroz, is an electronic engineer
working at
the
ICTP in Trieste, Italy. He
has been using BBSes
and ham radios
since
he
was a teenager, and he is
happy to have merged the
two together work-
ing
in the field of
wireless networking. He still
carries his Apple
Newton.
Support
�
Lisa
Chan (http://www.cowinanorange.com/) was
the lead copy
editor.
�
Casey
Halverson (http://seattlewireless.net/~casey/) provided
technical
review
and suggestions.
�
Jessie
Heaven Lotz (http://jessieheavenlotz.com/)
provided several
updated
illustrations
for this edition.
�
Richard
Lotz (http://greenbits.net/~rlotz/) provided
technical review and
suggestions.
He works on SeattleWireless projects
and would like to
take
his
node (and his house)
off the grid.
�
Catherine
Sharp (http://odessablue.com/) provided
copy edit support.
![]() �
Lara
Sobel designed
the cover for WNDW
2nd Edition. She is an
artist
currently
living in Seattle,
WA.
�
Matt
Westervelt (http://seattlewireless.net/~mattw/) provided
technical re-
view
and copy edit
support.
Matt
is the founder of
SeattleWireless
(http://seattlewireless.net/) and is an
evangelist for FreeNetworks
worldwide.
About
the solar power
guide
The
source material for the
Solar Power chapter was
translated and
developed
by Alberto Escudero-Pascual. In 1998,
the organization
Engineering
without Borders (Spanish
Federation) published the first
version
of
a handbook titled "Manual de
Energ�a Solar Fotovoltaica y
Cooperaci�n al
Desarrollo".
The handbook was written
and published by members of
the
NGO
and experts of the Institute
of Energy Solar of the
Polytechnical
University
of Madrid. By curiosities of life,
none of the members of
the
editorial
team kept the document in
electronic format and more
editions were
never
made. They have passed
almost ten years from
that very first
edition
and
this document is an effort to
rescue and to extend the
handbook.
As
part of this rescue
operation Alberto would like
to thank the
coordinators
of
the first
original edition and his
mentors in his years at
University: Miguel
�ngel
Eguido Aguilera, Mercedes
Montero Bartolom� y Julio
Amador. This
new
work is licensed under
Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike
3.0.
We
hope that this material
becomes a new departure
point for new
editions
including
new contributions by the
community.
This
second and extended edition
of the solar power guide
has received
valuable
input from Fr�d�ric Renet
and Louise
Berthilson.
Special
thanks
The
core team would like to
thank the organizers of
WSFII for providing
the
space,
support, and occasional
bandwidth that served as the
incubator for this
project.
We would especially like to
thank community networkers
everywhere,
who
devote so much of their time
and energy towards
fulfilling the promise
of
the
global Internet. Without
you, community networks
could not exist.
The
publication of this work has
been supported by Canada s International
Development
Research Centre, http://www.idrc.ca/. Additional
support was
provided
by NetworktheWorld.org.
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