[HamWAN PSDR] HamWAN use cases [was: hamwan.net DDNS]
Bart Kus
me at bartk.us
Thu Apr 17 20:03:16 PDT 2014
> First of all, after discussing HamWAN with Scott Honaker in the first
> two months of this year, I went to the Puyallup "Mike & Key" show for
> the explicit purpose of checking out HamWAN. *It wasn't easy*; after
> walking both floors, I returned to the show management table and
> asked for the HamWAN table location. After locating the table, I was
> surprised to a bunch of used stuff for sale (just like all the other
> tables), a few flyers, and a "funny looking" radio. Of course, having
> seen the radio that Scott had, I knew what to expect, but for someone
> just roaming the aisles, it was easy to miss what was there, even if
> someone had an interest in data radios.
>
We had a really good presence last year with 2 tables, a banner, 3
bodies staffing the tables, demo modems + dishes on display, and a full
cell site setup on a 10ft tower section in the middle. We were also
closer to the doors.
It was a lot of work, and we didn't have the bodies to pull it off this
year. I'm not sure it would have made any large difference - many of
the faces were the same as last year. Very few people who I did try to
talk to about HamWAN were interested. I'm shifting marketing strategy
here right now.
> When I exhibited at Puyallup several years ago, I was demonstrating my
> own (free) D-Star radio and not selling anything.
You have a free d-star radio? What? :) URLs!
>
> If you are going to interest people in HamWAN, you've got to have a
> better physical "presentation" of equipment. You're aiming at a
> narrow-enough audience (those interested in digital data) as it is;
> you've got to have something attracts interest, and as a result, gets
> the message out that high-speed data is possible for a $200
> investment. Don't try to sell anything; simply say that the web site
> describes how to find the equipment. Have setup and working equipment
> there (see below for my interest in portable demo equipment).
>
Yup, totally agree that's how you do a good booth. We do have portable
demo gear as well. Little 21dBi dishes with modems dangling off em.
> Second, have *pictures* on the HamWAN web site of the radio/modem, and
> *especially* the antennas (with dimensions). No one likes to click on
> a bunch of manufacturer links to get a first impression of what a
> setup would look like. Even now I don't know (because I haven't taken
> the time to drill down through the various links and compare them)
> what alternative antennas are available. That's even since I have
> some interest in buying two more radios and setting them up for
> portable demos, with antennas that are of manageable size for portable
> demos (diameter about one foot). One can always explain that best
> results are with a bigger antenna (a concept not unknown to amateur
> radio).
>
Wanna throw a better web site presentation together in this regard? I
can hook you up with editor access.
> Third, and perhaps the most important, develop some "use cases" and
> document them to generate interest. As Tom pointed out above,
> replacement of one's general-purpose ISP is not a *use* case.
> Emergency communications, with clearly-described capabilities (both
> now and in the future), would be useful. The ability to communicate
> with a local DEM is a plus. Nowhere in the flyer does it mention that
> the SnoCo DEM is a major node. That information is *very helpful*,
> even if one is not interested in the SnoCo DEM, because it shows that
> a local EOC has bought into the concept with *funding and an
> established node*. This implies that it is less likely for HamWAN to
> disappear if the leaders lose interest (like has happened in
> Connecticut to another part of the 44.x.x.x network). No one wants to
> be an orphan; document who is involved. List on the web site who
> (with their permission) has a working setup. *Post pictures of working
> sites (nodes and users)!* I know the list is small now, but amateurs
> like to talk to other amateurs who have taken the plunge. In this
> regard, push reading the mailing list archives.
>
These are all good ideas. Again, want to make them happen?
> ps: Monday at 5pm my next-door neighbor removed some tree roots near
> our common boundary, and cut through my Frontier fiber-optic cable.
> At first I thought, you have HamWAN. Then, I realized that almost
> everything I do over the Internet (except browsing) uses SSL: eMail,
> filing my IRS tax return, updating my server database with live D-Star
> usage data. A quick drive to the local Comcast office, and I had
> high-speed Internet ($40/mo) access by 7pm. Yesterday Frontier laid a
> temporary replacement fiber cable above ground (that should get buried
> within two weeks), and I have normal fiber optic service again. So, I
> now have three gateways to the Internet (four, if I can ever connect
> to the K7LWH D-Star DD node). Yes, I'm keeping the Comcast link.
Triple-homed for the win! What kind of speeds do you get on the
Frontier? I heard they really rolled back since it was FiOS.
--Bart
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