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by jrockway
4376 days ago
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Well, they don't tell you the bitrate. WSPR is a protocol that can make worldwide contact on the HF bands (3-30MHz) with 0.01mW of power. The catch is that it takes 2 minutes to send a message like "KD2DTW/FN30". 900MHz signals don't propagate like HF (by refracting off the top of the ionosphere), but they do have interesting propagation characteristics like bouncing off of passing airplanes. If you have a protocol that can extract signals from below the noise floor, and enough erasure coding (reed-solomon, etc.) to handle bursts without connectivity, you can build an urban network fairly easily. The only problem is that it's not that useful. My guess is that they are like FitBit and just plan to blanket every home with one of these things, and allow devices to roam to whatever access point is closest (like when you walk past someone's house with a FitBit, and notice yours has synced). |
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It also seems to be based on ZigBee (that is, ZigBee devices can be retrofitted) so it's 2.4ghz, 915mhz or 868mhz.
Like you said, there are plenty of ways to go one way (from a powerful transmitter). But those are noisy frequencies for a weak transmitter to make it several miles...
Anyways, agreed that the plan is probably fitbit-style. But the crazy specs make it seem a bit like snake oil to me...