Optical data link
Scope
This page covers technologies to link two places or buildings via an optical data link.
Suitable places to use an optical link
It may be useful in places where...
- Outdoor Wi-Fi is not permitted by a county's radio legislation.
- A line-of-site link is possible.
- The two places to be linked are about 1.5 KM/1 Mile or less apart (with the Ronja system below).
- Cheap hardware is required.
- A system with no subscription-fee is required.
- There is only occasional dense fog.
Example locations
- School-to-school links in urban/suburban areas.
- School-to-school links between nearby villages.
- School to nearby ISP office link, where the phone lines don't support high-speed access.
- Commercial Building (Business, Radio station, etc) to ISP office link, where schools are allowed internet access and to pick up files on removable media (Sneakernet).
- Multi-stage optical links with relays from building-to-building to reach a school or village.
- Optical network involving many schools/buildings/houses and optionally, an ISP office.
Technologies
Ronja cheap home-made optical link
The Ronja (Reasonable Optical Near Joint Access) website describes how to build a 100 US Dollar optical data link to connect two buildings up to 1.4KM/0.87 Miles apart at 10Mbps. The 'Ronja About page' describes the system (see text and the 4 .pdf files) and the 'Ronja Home page' has the equipment details. The site has designs for Printed Circuit Boards. The software is free.
The system uses an infra-red LED and lens, not a laser, so is 'eye-safe' and invisible to anyone in the area.
The system uses cheap parts, but is labor-intensive for amateurs to build. There are enough OLPC schools for it to be worthwhile having some systems mass-produced.
See Wikipedia: RONJA for more details.
Other systems
Please add any other systems here.
--Ricardo 16:05, 20 August 2007 (EDT)