Sunday, February 04, 2007

Meraki Brings the Net the Final Ten Yards

This morning I decided to open the cafe to just Cindy and me. Despite a regular customer who popped by wanting a coffee, "Sorry, we're closed," we have the cozy cafe all to ourselves, and we made omelettes, read the NY Times and enjoyed lattes and good music from the ipod.

The Times did not disappoint--I found an intriguing article about a new and better way to deliver WiFi the last ten yards inside people's homes. Author Randall Stross, a professor at San Jose State, described the earliest days of electricity. There was a time when towns believed that they could use streetlights to light up people's homes. It was a fad in the 1880s, and is an apt metaphor for Wireless. There are just too many shadows and curves to expect a wireless signal, like light from a lamp post, to effectively bring either light or the internet into a home. The many municipal WiFi schemes have come up against this problem, in Google's wireless hometown of Mountain View CA, people need to bring their laptops close to a window to get a good signal.

Enter two Ph.D students from MIT, Sanjit Biswas and John Bicket. They've developed Meraki, which uses $49 boxes placed inside houses to create a shared network among neighborhoods. So far more than 15,000 users have discovered the joys of a cheap and effective way to share a signal, and of course, Google is investing in Meraki too.

In Portland, OR, Michael Burmeister-Brown set up a network in 400 low-income apartments, using just five DSL lines and 100 Meraki boxes. It works out to about $1 a month and for an investment of just $5000 and $13 per house, voila, you're on line.

Maybe the Meraki is the way we will make GoNOMAD CAFE an internet provider, right here in little old Deerfield!

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