[HamWAN PSDR] Facts about ham fundraising
Tom Hayward
esarfl at gmail.com
Thu Oct 3 13:10:01 PDT 2013
I'll take a stab at a few of these points and defer the others...
On Thu, Oct 3, 2013 at 12:27 PM, Rob Salsgiver <rob at quailsoftltd.net> wrote:
> 2) End-users (individual): We need to get more of our core online and
> well versed in the system. From those early users we need a few in each
> county or metro area that are willing to do site surveys and interact with
> other potential end users to get them onboard. We need to focus on our
> marketing, getting the message out (with success stories), and more end-user
> demonstrations – not just the equipment, but from an application standpoint.
I'll come out and do a site survey anywhere in Pierce County.
I'll run a custom propagation model for anyone anywhere. This will
tell you how tall of a tower you need to get HamWAN. HamWAN covers
everything within 100 miles of a site if you have a tall enough tower
;-)
> 3) End-users (EMCOMM): We need some served agencies online. We need
> advocates outside of the ham world. Hospitals, Red Cross, Emergency
> Management offices, Salvation Army, maybe even a mobile station. If we have
> 3-4 hospitals, Red Cross chapters, or similar served agencies successfully
> hooked up, we have a working demonstration platform to work from. Even
> then, basic connectivity isn’t. We need hams in these locations to
> demonstrate on an applications basis what can be done “when all else fails”
> over HamWAN. If we can convince 30-50 different served agencies to shell
> out the cost of a single cell phone each month to support a dedicated
> Internet connection that is disaster-resilient, then you have up to
> $2500/month coming in to support the infrastructure. Demonstrate email, web
> access, and maybe even some specialized goodies targeted at them – use
> D-RATs for a tactical “chat” interface between locations – who knows? Maybe
> interface with other digital gateways or extend over other RF links
> (D-Star?).
The Snohomish County EOC is online with HamWAN. I'd like to see other
EOCs come online, but we don't have contacts there. HamWAN could be
very useful for EOC-to-EOC communications (sending video, phone,
etc.).
If you have contacts in the EmComm world, talk to them! Or see if we
can schedule a presentation.
Heh, D-Rats is a patch to make D-Star useful. We can just show them
email, "Look, you can still use Outlook!" Service decoupled from
network: awesome.
I don't see Internet as the end goal of HamWAN. HamWAN can facilitate
communications between hams. EOC-to-EOC communication can take place
completely over the HamWAN RF network, until a hole opens up in the
earth and swallows one of our sites. Then we just route around the
outage with Internet; communication continues.
Tom KD7LXL
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