Public Lab Wiki documentation



Getting sensor data to the internet

This is a revision from September 11, 2014 18:49. View all revisions
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Satellite

Iridium satellite

  • satellite modem network that has had a monopoly for a while, lots of .gov use.
  • Range-- everywhere outdoors, some indoor locations.
  • CONS: $$$$ FYI, lowest cost option is $0.20 for a 50-character text.

EXAMPLES: * http://www.rock7mobile.com/products-rockblock.php

Direct RF to Internet

Wi-fi

(Internet at a coffee shop near you.) * Range- 300 ft on the best of days - * Benefits - pretty widely available, familiar, localize * Not-so-beneficial - often private, limited range, device can get forced out (this is why routers need resetting)

GSM

(the mobile phone protocol.) * Range - pretty much line of site to tower. * Benefits - Its EVERYWHERE (see: Verizon commercial), * CONS: Cost much money per message * ISSUES: There are a million standards * WHERE TO FIND COVERAGE http://www.mobileworldlive.com/maps

RF Data Transfer

Zigbee (Xbee) IEEE 802.15 standard.

Pro: Mid-range depending on router placement, only one device (router) needs access to the internet. Arduino libraries available. CONS: Not simple to set up

APRS

  • Requires amateur radio license.
  • no encrypted transmissions/ all data public
  • no commercial content

900Mhz radio

bluetooth:

  • short range protocol supported by a range of devices, available as microcontroller serial modems.

bluetooth LE:

blue tooth low energy is a new bluetooth standard supported by fewer devices. Now integrated into some system on a chip packages from ARM.

NFC

very short range, low power system built on RFID.