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Tetherless in Adelaide
By Scott Bradner
I just got back from the
IETF meeting in Adelaide Australia where I went fully wireless for the first
time. This stuff actually works and is a great distraction.
Internet Engineering
Task Force (IETF) meetings have supported one form or another of wireless LAN
for the past few years but since I'm a Mac user, and the Mac drivers for the
wireless cards seemed to be more funky than I was able to deal with, I've not been
a participant. But I recently bought a spiffy new Apple PowerBook complete with
a built-in Apple "AirPort" 802.11 compatible wireless card. I walked
into the Adelaide convention center where the IETF meeting was being held, woke
up my PowerBook, turned on the AirPort card (one click on a menu), selected the
AirPort as the TCP/IP port (one click on a different menu) and I was fully
connected.
Other than a few funnies
due to a misconfigured DHCP server on the first day the connection worked
flawlessly the whole week. And since the PowerBook can run for 10 hours on a
set of batteries I did not even have to be plugged into the power outlet and
was free to roam. (Except for one day when I did not notice that the hotel
housekeeping staff had turned off the little power switch next to the outlet,
apparently a feature of Australia hotels, and my batteries did not get charged
as a result.)
This is great stuff!
Very fast connectivity - theoretically 11 Mhz - just like sitting at my desk at
the office. I could sit in the sometimes boring working group meetings and keep
up with my email, check out what was happening in the real world at www.cnn.com
or on Wall Street at www.wsj.com (Note that I differentiate Wall Street and the
real world.) It’s the first time I've come back from an IETF meeting caught up
on my email. Great stuff indeed but rather distracting.
If this is what it's
like to be always on-line I may actually get less work done. It is hard to pay
attention to the meeting you are in while engaged in a furious email exchange
on a mailing list or seeing what the market is doing to the value of your
stocks. 802.11 networks are beginning to pop up in all sorts of places
including office buildings and airport lounges. Since I expect to see more, not
less, of this wireless technology I better figure out how to balance the
temptations. Now I think I'm going to get a base station for the house so I can
be in the living room pretending to be sociable while actually surfing away.
disclaimer: Harvard
tries to be sociable but the above trip was my own.