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the economies of scale of a Worldcon, and how to make this topic relevant to Nanog
- Subject: the economies of scale of a Worldcon, and how to make this topic relevant to Nanog
- From: jra at baylink.com (Jay Ashworth)
- Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2012 13:00:59 -0400 (EDT)
- In-reply-to: <[email protected]>
----- Original Message -----
> From: "Jo Rhett" <jrhett at netconsonance.com>
> Those of us who feel Internet access is mission critical carry LTE
> network devices or make other arrangements. Obviously the growth of
> smartphones and tablets is starting to change that equation, but at
> the moment none of the Worldcons have done a very good job of
> providing useful online interaction so there's no actual use for
> onsite data related to the conference itself. Obviously I would love
> to see this change.
And this is pretty much precisely why I'm hammering the nail; there's
*lots* of stuff that could -- and properly should -- be technology
assisted at the world's largest gathering of science fiction enthusiasts.
> Now, if we want to make this topic relevant to Nanog, the operative
> question is the feasability of a data provider putting good wireless
> gear near these facilities and selling data access to attendees. For a
> useful comparison, the 2010 Worldcon in Melbourne had an expensive
> wifi service in the building that kept falling over. A cell provider
> across the street put up banners advertising cheap data service, and
> put people on the sidewalk in from of the convention selling pay as
> you go SIM cards with data service. They made brisk business. *THIS*
> is where us network operators can provide good networking service to a
> large facility, and pretty much kill the expensive data plans operated
> by the facility.
Assuming you can get close enough -- which won't be geographically
practical for ... oh, wait; you're envisioning 3G, not WLAN. Yeah,
I suppose that might work... until you consider that I will, personally,
be bringing both laptops, my tablet, and my phone, all of which want
to talk to the outside world. I would bet that I'm not all *that*
unusual in that, at a Worldcon, based on some attendee conversations
I've had at Anticipation and the much less well attended NASfic 10,
ReConstruction.
A lot of this, too, depends on what the concom negotiated with the
property about wifi access already.
> Instead of building up and tearing down a network for each convention,
> put an LTE tower near the facility and sell to every group that uses
> the convention center.
Can I get 12000 sessions on a single LTE tower?
That's my benchmark for the moment, in the absence of real numbers. :-)
Alas, this property has already just rebuilt it's wifi, I'm told. Course,
the con is in 2015, so they may rebuild *again* by then.
Cheers,
-- jra
--
Jay R. Ashworth Baylink jra at baylink.com
Designer The Things I Think RFC 2100
Ashworth & Associates http://baylink.pitas.com 2000 Land Rover DII
St Petersburg FL USA #natog +1 727 647 1274