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Archive for the ‘energy’ Category

Wireless workshop, Nepal, Pokhara, 14-24 September

Wednesday, September 9th, 2009

A workshop on (not only) wireless networking in Pokhara, Sept 14-24, organized by

brings together about 30 participants from a.o. the Nepal Wireless villages, the Nepal NREN, ISOC Nepal, supporters and activists.

The first 5 days will be classroom/lab training, followed by deployments in 2-3 villages.

The workshop aims at

  • preparing the next phases of the Nepal Wireless network extension
  • empowering villagers to run and maintian their own networks
  • establishing a series of upcoming training events, by training future trainers and assembling a training hardware kit.

The workshop agenda (changes possible) is at

https://ws.edu.isoc.org/trac/wirelessu/wiki/PokharaWorkshopCurriculum

the re:bike – an introduction

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

The rebike [1] is an

autonomous mobile network hub,
powered by renewable energy.

The current version was inspired by the nice folks at reboot
who asked us to build an instance for this year’s reboot ‘action’ theme [2].

An earlier version (copenhagen connected cycle, 2003) [3] put networking equipment and solar power supply
on board a heavy bike taxi,
which has an engine and 2 support batteries to connect to.

The reboot re:bike consists of a

  • Nihola (c) family bike [4]
  • 50 watts monochrystalline solar panel
  • 35 Ah gel battery
  • 10 Amps charge controller
  • Linksys NSLU2 [5], running Debian Lenny (ARM processor), booting off USB stick – as router and host for 3G dongle
  • Huawei E160 USB dongle [6] for 3G network
  • Ubiqiti Bullet2 for wireless redistribution and routing [7]
  • a bike basket made from scrap cabling
  • a camera mount made by the reprap [8]

This current setup is designed to run about 10-20 Watts of consumer load,
for 20-30 hours without recharge.

While a simple 3G-to-wireless network hub can be run on much lower power, it is essential for the system to have some comuting and storage power, e.g. for video processing, local content and collab workspaces.

Future versions will feature

  • bike dynamo power
  • flexible solar panels integrated with the bikes rain protection hood
  • lower total power consumption, through improvement of on-board devices and software

Regardless of instance, re:bikes are built according to a few principles:

* autonomous renewable energy supplies – “Dont build anything you can not power autonomously” – “Use less power”
* free and open source software -
* open hardware designs
* to the extent possible, rebikes are built from “obtainium” – recycled materials, things you find

The wider concept of the re:bike is not limited to bicycles:

Wearable computing and networking systems are within its scope,
and a version currently in its design phase is in fact a light weight backpack kit.

Motivations and applications

In privileged environments like Copenhagen City, there s certainly no lack of networks.
In fact, collaborative reduction of networks would be a lot more needed than additional signal.
Stable grid electricity is not a problem either -
however we would like to be independent of static power grids and strictly adhere to a zero carbon footprint priciple.

So in the privileged urban context, our main interest is that in a fully mobile network node that may be used for events, interventions, urban actions, and also as an educational vehicle.

Typical applications include

* general internet access
* GPS data, streamed to the openstreetmap project [9]
* video capture

The core motivation for this development however stems from the requirements of
user owned networks in less privileged (often rural or remote) environments,
as often found in so called developing countries.
Here, solar energy (and other renewable sources) are often the only option, making reduction of power uptake even more crucial:
1 Watt of consumer load typically means

$ 50 – 150 spent on solar panels and batteries.

Both scenarios – privileged or underprivileged – share a common vision:

networks -
open – sustainable – user controlled -
running on solar/wind/hydro/human power.

In order to get closer to this vision,
the re:bike will be further developed, touring various hacking events, workshops and confererences.

It can be booked for events, based on a donation model – sometimes referred to as “Berlin payment” -
you give what you feel is appropriate,
and all incoming contributions in money, goods or work will be invested in future versions of re:bike projects.

See here [10] for a list of people who have contributed so far.

URLs

[1] http://rebike.dk

[2] http://reboot.dk

[3] http://wire.less.dk

[4] http://nihola.info/da/nihola+cykler/cigar+family/

[5] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NSLU2

[6] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huawei_E160

[7] http://ubnt.com/products/bullet.php

[8] http://reprap.org/bin/view/Main/WebHome

[9] http://www.openstreetmap.org/

[10] http://write.less.dk/?p=149

re:bike at hacknight malmö

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

Thanks to everybody at Forskningsavdelingen for a really good event.

We presented both the rebike work and and overview of international user driven  network inititatives, with focus on african projects.

We hope to involve those interested in future hacking work.

rebike_talk_malmoe, 11 july 2009

rebike_talk_malmoe, 11 july 2009

Maker Faire, Ghana August 14-16

Tuesday, July 7th, 2009

Maker Fair Ghana, August 14-16

reboot11: action in africa

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009

slides from a talk given at reboot11, on 26 june 2009.

topics: action, (user owned) networks, new technology & new business models in africa.

(PDF, 3.2 MB)

reboot11_-_action_in_africa_-_compressed

riding the re:bike

Friday, June 26th, 2009

after day 1 did not go so well – we had troubles with hardware, a dead router – the terrific group work on day 2 made it possible to finish the re:boot:cycle or re:bike.

the re:bike - solar panel, bullet & basket, cams, ..

the re:bike - solar panel, bullet & basket, cams, ..

it now provides

  • an internet uplink via 3G
  • a local wifi cloud via a Ubiquiti Bullet

all run fully autonomous from solar power (55 W panel, 35 Ah battery, for now)

next steps:

  • all kinds of apps over usb – video, gps to openstreetmap, power stats
  • a version with flexible solar panels … wrap it in light

we will make all technical info and a gallery available here, soon – for now we will ride the bike to the reboot afterparty.

thanks to everybody who was part of this (and to those we have forgotten, pls add your comments or write to us at wire_at_less_dk):

  • catherine miller (reinvented – the wonderful basket)
  • luisa carbonelli (the wonderful basket)
  • morgan roderick
  • olle jonsson
  • peter madsen mygdal
  • reboot at large
  • siert wijnia (reprap)
  • thomas madsen mygdal
  • tilmannn singer
  • torben oleander

we are tomas antvorskov krag and sebastian buettrich, wire.less.dk .

next plans and how to get involved:

check out the project wiki and/or send us a mail: wire atandsoforthyouknow  less dot dk

here is Vilhelm’s first ride on the bike:

re:boot:cycle: work day one

Friday, June 26th, 2009

re:boot:cycle: a solar/human powered wifi gps bike

the powering is finished and working nicely.

batteries filled with daylight power.

work on bike

work on bike

a waterproof basket is being made out of scrap metal.

we have issues with the 3G router though – it ceased to function and needs to be replaced.

25062009013

we d be grateful for helping hands and brains.

re:boot:cycle: a solar/human powered wifi gps bike

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

for the june 25/25 reboot in copenhagen, we are building a solar/human powered wifi network bicycle.

where to find it/us:

  • outside the Kedelhallen reboot venue, all day, 25/26 June.
  • you are very welcome to drop by and help / get involved. we will build solely on location. so there will be work :)

what does it do?

  • provide uplink via a  3G (mobile data) connection
  • redistribute access to a local wifi cloud / mesh network
  • record  GPS and send real time data to the openstreetmap project

applications:

  • ad-hoc networks for (urban) interventions
  • GPS mapping
  • video mapping
nihola transport bike / c nihola.info

nihola transport bike / c nihola.info

solarland slp 50, c solarland

solarland slp 50, c solarland

material / gear:

  • a nihola transport bike
  • power: 55 watts solar panel
  • power: 35-80 Ah battery
  • power: 12 volts bike dynamo, optional
  • networking gear / uplink:
    Huawei 3G router running factory firmwar e/ Linksys NSLU2 running OpenWRT or debian, with a Huawei E220 3G modem hanging off i
  • networking gear / wifi cloud:
    various Ubiqiti (e.g. Bullet), open-mesh, Linksys routers
  • data collection: GPS
  • data colection: video cam, optional

related projects:

Zooming in on emptiness: Videos on the nature of matter and powers of ten

Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009

On the occasion of a friend asking me for videos illustrating the nature of matter and the universe and all that stuff, i made a little list. this is it:

classic: powers of then





From quarks to outer space (very good!)





Atoms2Universe *Zoom OuT* – an artist rendering … more classical music than physics





cosmic zoom – the classic with the boy in a rowing boat on a lake





the ultimate zoom shot – 47 secs for the whole ride

South african Mail & Guardian on the future of solar energy on the continent

Sunday, September 28th, 2008

“From household solar panels to thermal generators big enough to power a town, sun power has enjoyed explosive growth around the world.

Everywhere, that is, except on the sun-drenched continent of Africa.

With an average daily dose of five-to-seven kilowatts per hour (kWh) for every square metre, Africa has more potential for producing energy from the sun than almost anywhere on Earth, with the possible exception of northern Australia or the Arabian peninsula.

…..

But on a macro scale, solar power is almost untapped [in Africa]. Why so?

Most reasons boil down to money.”

Read more: http://www.mg.co.za/article/2008-09-28-africa-awash-in-sunlight-but-not-solar-energy


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