- Get a grip or you don't get the job
- Desktops of the future here today
- Researcher hides IE attack on Web
- Cisco third quarter 2008 channel stuffing
- Sci-Fi's goofiest gadgets and technology
Sprint, Clearwire in WiMAX venture; Indian workers don't want U.S. jobs. Listen now!
Qwest taps Verizon as wireless carrier; Apple wins big in Consumer Reports survey. Listen now!
Most companies have a solid disaster recovery plan in place to handle a "complete failure" of its Active Directory, which is really quite rare. What most recovery plans are missing, and the most common scenario, is a means to efficiently restore single directory objects. In this paper, we'll explore what most disaster recovery plans already address, highlight potential weak points, and suggest solutions that help fill those gaps-without requiring you to completely re-do your existing plan.
Get the latest on storage technologies that allow IT professionals to better cope with new IT demands. Learn how storage technologies can help you successfully tackle e-Discover, regulatory compliance, green data center initiatives and the data explosion. Get all the details now.
Watch Raven Zachary, Research Director for Open Source at the 451 Group, an independent IT analyst firm, discuss the emergence of enterprise Linux and the role of Oracle Unbreakable Linux support.
Microsoft, don't hold your breath that the EU will pat you on the shoulder and forgive the $1.3 fine...- Microsoft Subnet
Intel recently demonstrated a modified 802.11 radio link with a data rate of around 6 Mbps and a range of more than 60 miles.
Intel achieved this extraordinary range using off-the-shelf hardware, including parabolic antennas, for its project, dubbed the rural connectivity platform (RCP). The key innovation was a change, borrowed from cellular networks, to the underlying 802.11 media-access-control layer that allowed for a more efficient signal, and translates into longer reach.
RCP is one of several research projects intended to extend the Internet into rural areas, especially in developing countries. The idea is to use low-cost, low-power Wi-Fi radios to bridge between wired Internet connections in a city and wired and wireless connections in small, rural villages. RCP's unprecedented range minimizes the need for lots of wireless nodes to span those distances.
RCP has been in development by Intel Research and Intel's Emerging Markets Platform Group for about two years, and has been talked about online for about a year. There are pilot RCP deployments in a handful of countries: India, Vietnam, Panama and South Africa. Earlier this month, the chip maker demonstrated the link in operation during an open house at its Berkeley Research Lab in California. In the demonstration, users viewed a live video image streamed over a 5.8GHz RCP connection from a camera about 1.5 miles away.
Wi-Fi is being used in outdoor settings, especially in municipal wireless-mesh networks, from such companies as BelAir Networks and Firetide. Typically, these radio nodes use a combination of high-power radios and high-gain, directional antennas to enable the Wi-Fi signal to reach, at best, a mile or two. (Compare wireless mesh products.)
As Intel notes, the 802.11 protocol becomes inefficient as the ends of the wireless connection get farther apart. In part this is because when one 802.11 radio sends data, it then waits for an acknowledgement from the receiving radio. If it doesn’t hear that acknowledgement within a certain amount of time, the sending radio assumes the data was lost or dropped, and resends it. The longer the distance, the more likely the sending radio won't get the acknowledgement in time.