Alonzo wrote to All <=-
With the recent string of cataclysmic disasters hitting the USA lately
and the complete collapse of the Verizon network due to a cyber attack,
I have been thinking about how fragile the Internet is and how all BBS activity could grind to a halt with little warning.
Packet BBS could be a great way to keep communities together in
times of disaster. My question is, do any of you have experience
with packet radio? If so, could you give me a few pointers? I
hardly know where to start, Thanks.
That's the natural progression of things.
By putting everything into "one basket", you reduce maintenance costs. But that also creates a single point of failure. So when the failures occur, you split everything back out again - to a certain point.
Of course, that works until some manager says "we should put everything into one basket to save money (i.e. so I can get a bonus)".
Verizon is learning from their mistake and will correct it over time.
Packet BBS could be a great way to keep communities together in
times of disaster. My question is, do any of you have experience
with packet radio? If so, could you give me a few pointers? I
hardly know where to start, Thanks.
The best I can do is point to KA9Q. I used this software back in the pre-internet days over dial up. It was an MS-DOS software package that was originally intended to be used over packet radio for just what you want to do.
I would assume that it's descendants are out there and much easier to
set up and use than the 1987 version.
... ...I multi-task, I read in the bathroom.
There are a ton of youtube videos out there about the subject. When I have the
ability I do want to put one up myself. Raspberry PI takes very little energy.
Can you run a packet BBS in the US without a HAM license? I was thinking someone here in the past was running one and the answer was "no" when
this question was asked, but I may be getting mixed up again. ;)
With the recent string of cataclysmic disasters hitting the USA lately
and the complete collapse of the Verizon network due to a cyber attack,
I have been thinking about how fragile the Internet is and how all BBS activity could grind to a halt with little warning.
So I have been seriously thinking about starting a packet BBS. Packet BBS uses shortwave but of course you still need electricity. A small
generator would be enough to run it from a laptop.
Can you run a packet BBS in the US without a HAM license? I was thinking someone here in the past was running one and the answer was "no" when
this question was asked, but I may be getting mixed up again. ;)
The best I can do is point to KA9Q. I used this software back in the pre-internet days over dial up. It was an MS-DOS software package that was originally intended to be used over packet radio for just what you want to do.
Can you run a packet BBS in the US without a HAM license? I was thinking someone here in the past was running one and the answer was "no" when
I don't think any of that is evidence that the _Internet_
is "fragile". If anything, that the Internet has continued
to work unimpeded in the areas not affected by storms and
such shows just how resilient it is.
I don't think any of that is evidence that the _Internet_
is "fragile". If anything, that the Internet has continued
to work unimpeded in the areas not affected by storms and
such shows just how resilient it is.
Since the Internet is completely dependent on phone carriers,
I would say it is fragile. No phone line = no Internet.
You need a ham license to run one on the ham frequencies, but I
don't see any reason one couldn't run packet on CB or another
unlicensed band.
You would need a ham license however I've been seeing these "LoRa" setups that >use license-free frequencies. It's something I've been wanting to get into but
haven't had the time.
I used to see some YT videos where people were talking about LoRa and I assumed it was a wi-fi alternative. More recently, I saw a video by someone who usually reports on shortwave radio so I figured I must be mistaken.
I don't know for certain, but I thought I read somewhere that digital operation on CB was prohibited in the US (though legal in most of the EU).
Since the Internet is completely dependent on phone carriers,
I would say it is fragile. No phone line = no Internet.
Since the Internet is completely dependent on phone carriers,
I would say it is fragile. No phone line = no Internet.
That is absolutely untrue.
Since the Internet is completely dependent on phone carriers,
I would say it is fragile. No phone line = no Internet.
That is absolutely untrue.
Maybe it is true where they live? It hasn't been true here for years.
Now, no cable connection to feed your wifi router might be true here.
Can you run a packet BBS in the US without a HAM license? I was thinking5 DW> someone here in the past was running one and the answer was "no" when
this question was asked, but I may be getting mixed up again. ;)
Since the Internet is completely dependent on phone carriers,
I would say it is fragile. No phone line = no Internet.