'what a neat idea' department,
if you live in or near a
city, it’s hard to imagine not finding a cell signal, telecommunication
companies spend hundreds of millions of dollars on cell towers and bulky base
stations, the trouble is, they’ll only install them in places where the network
will get ample use, sparsely populated areas usually don’t qualify, and that
means more than an estimated one billion people worldwide lack access to
reliable phone and Internet service, enter the Endaga CCN1, Kurtis Heimerl enabled entrepreneurs to build their
own wireless networks, a postdoctoral student at the University of California
at Berkeley, Heimerl packed a Linux computer, a 900 MHz power amplifier, and a
2G cellular-network antenna into a microwave-size box called Endaga CCN1, it
costs a relatively modest sum of $6,000 and is simple to set up, plug in power
and Internet, mount the unit to a tree or pole, and voilà: connection, Endaga
can connect up to 1,000 people within a six-mile radius, now that's what I call
a neat idea.
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