Things that might not happen: cellphones
Jul. 11th, 2007 03:10 pmiPhones have 802.11foobarg transceivers, in addition to their cell radios. And they have Bluetooth radios as well. Lots of nifty phones have these three, and it's plausible to assume that a majority of phones will have them by, say, 2010 or 11 or so.
With just a tiny bit more smarts, these phones can act as mesh routers. Given a nominal 80 foot range for 20Mb/s of throughput, most office buildings and city streets at rush hour will have huge capacities available.
T-Mobile now offers (and there is no reason not to think that other carriers won't follow them) a cellplan including free connectivity when your phone uses an 802.11foobarg connection instead of the cell. And unlimited data plans run about $20/month as an add-on.
Carriers, of course, won't like this. But for everyone else, it's a win.
Oh, and the OpenMoko phone (dev version now, consumer in the fall) will run Linux and has the 802.11foobarg and GSM cell radios necessary to do all this.
With just a tiny bit more smarts, these phones can act as mesh routers. Given a nominal 80 foot range for 20Mb/s of throughput, most office buildings and city streets at rush hour will have huge capacities available.
T-Mobile now offers (and there is no reason not to think that other carriers won't follow them) a cellplan including free connectivity when your phone uses an 802.11foobarg connection instead of the cell. And unlimited data plans run about $20/month as an add-on.
Carriers, of course, won't like this. But for everyone else, it's a win.
Oh, and the OpenMoko phone (dev version now, consumer in the fall) will run Linux and has the 802.11foobarg and GSM cell radios necessary to do all this.