[Cu-wireless] VoIP breakthrough claimed for mesh broadband

Sascha Meinrath sascha at ucimc.org
Sun Apr 18 09:38:18 CDT 2004


from:
http://www.e3.com.au/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=index&catid=&topic=10

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VoIP breakthrough claimed for mesh broadband
Posted by: jas on Friday, April 16, 2004 - 09:18 PM

Wireless broadband pioneer LocustWorld has added support for Session
Initiation Protocol (SIP) to its range of mesh networking equipment.

The move turns LocustWorld's mesh boxes, which link together to form a
wireless network, into Voice over IP (VoIP) switches. This means that
people who use a wireless network that runs on LocustWorld's mesh software
will be able to make voice calls over the Internet, rather than using
their existing landline.

Everyone connected to the same mesh will be able to call each other for
free using VoIP. They will also be able to use the same telephone number
regardless of where on the mesh they are connected.

SIP was introduced by the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) as a way
of simplifying the process of running VoIP connections across the
Internet. Networks running SIP can handle VoIP calls regardless of which
vendor created the handsets or soft phones.

"Being able to support SIP routing within the LocustWorld mesh adds a new
dimension of utility to the network, allowing users to utilise industry
standard IP telephony services over a wide coverage area. The mesh network
can now also be a large scale wireless phone network," said LocustWorld's
Jon Anderson.

Supporters of SIP say that it will let service providers transform their
traditional revenue streams by offering IP-based services that combine
elements such as telephony, email, instant messaging, and video streaming.

According to LocustWorld, there are now plenty of affordable SIP phones,
both hardware and software, on the market, with more large telcos offering
gateways between SIP and their PSTN networks.

LocustWorld first hit the headlines in 2003 after Anderson wrote a piece
of software called the MeshAP that configures a group of wireless access
points into a coherent mesh where data is passed from node to node until
it reaches its destination.

MeshAP is freely available to download from the LocustWorld site. The
company also sells meshboxes; small fanless PCs that run the MeshAP
software and act as nodes on the mesh.

These meshboxes are now being deployed worldwide, from Scotland and
Yorkshire to the Washington State and the Gulf Coast of Florida,
LocustWorld says. In many cases, community activists are using them to
bring high-speed connectivity to areas where ADSL and cable broadband
aren't available.

-- 
Sascha Meinrath
Project Manager & President      *      Project Manager
Acorn Active Media Foundation   ***     Eggplant Active Media
www.acornactivemedia.com         *      www.eggplantmedia.com


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