The Serval BatPhone: Making Mesh Mobile Telephony Practical, Anywhere, Any Time.
Presenter(s):
Paul Gardner-Stephen
URL:
http://
2011.linux.conf.au/programme/schedule/view_talk/
137
During disaster and unrest, regular the cellular/mobile phone system may not be available. We've made an open-source mesh mobile telephony system that can fix this.
Conventional mobile telephone networks rely on the availability of significant and expensive infrastructure. While this model makes it possible for the resulting networks to offer strong service guarantees, it is not applicable to all situations.
In remote and developing areas there may not be sufficient economicy density to support the capital and operating costs of the infrastructure.
These scenarios cover perhaps 1/3 of the global population at any
point in time, and thus deserve consideration. Recent developments of smart phones running
Linux and with the hardware capabilities to support complex software make it possible to consider solutions using commodity mobile telephones.
This is what we have pursued with the
Serval BatPhone, which includes the first port of
Asterisk to
Android, and our revolutionary Distributed Numbering
Protocol (Serval
DNA), which allows mesh users to use their existing phone numbers and connect opportunistically and seamlessly to the
PSTN.
We present what we understand to be the world's first infrastructure-independent mesh mobile telephony system, which also allows subscribers to retain their existing telephone numbers while on-mesh, connects to the global PSTN, and is made freely available under an open-source license, and runs on selected mobile telephone handsets.
The presentation culminates with live indoor and outdoor demos of the technology, dealing with a dead cellular/mobile tower scenario, allowing global dialling from ordinary cell phones, without relying on the local cell tower, or any other piece of hardware -- except perhaps for a balloon, some string, and naturally, some duct tape.
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