Intraweb!

Jul. 14th, 2005 01:02 am
crschmidt: (geeky)
[personal profile] crschmidt
Speakeasy came through! This morning, woke up, plugged in DSL modem, and it lit up. Hooray, DSL!

Of course, it wasn't quite that simple. First, Speakeasy apparently doesn't do DHCP for its static IP customers. I liked this about MV: They did everything for me. Still, the information was on the packing slip, so I was able to put it in without a problem... except then it didn't work. Called Speakeasy support, got told that it was the wrong info. (Strange, since my userid was printed right on there...)

once I updated it, everything worked fine for about an hour, until Jenn woke up and got on dialup...

Since we don't have filters right now, that completely ruined the DSL line: 95% packet loss. (I didn't realize how neccesary those filters were.) Got Jenn offline and set everything up: the modem and router are now in her room, wireless seems to reach all over the house, wires reaching to kristan and jenn's computers. still have to work out something for zeus and hermes, but that'll be okay later, and I'm set for now.

So, the commune has internet! I plan on leaving the wireless open for the neighborhood (barring abuse), thanks to Speakeasy's TOS which supports the idea of sharing the internet. I'll probably set up a website that will advertise itself or something too. Maybe set up 192.168.1.1 and move the router: smart people will try that. I dunno, what would people suggest to try and set up a community site based around people who connect to a wireless router? Is there a way to send people to a captive page when they first show up? Is there some sveasoft firmware option for things like that?

I'd really like to be able to build a free wireless "neighborhood" around our hub, so people who stop by and grab access know who's providing it, and why, rather than just thinking I'm a moron who doesn't know how to set things up. I could provide things like local copies of software using zeus, or a local wiki... hrm.

Anyone have any experience setting up non-captive portals?
(deleted comment) (Show 1 comment)

(no subject)

Date: 2005-07-14 04:18 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sc00ter.livejournal.com
I'm suprised that the dial-up worked without the filters on the DSL. Without the filters my TiVo can't make it's daily call (not that it's hooked up much to the phone line anyway).

You can clearly near the DSL "noise" too when you pick up the phone without a filter.

(no subject)

Date: 2005-07-14 05:53 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bobert225.livejournal.com
Chris: If you disable the router's DHCP and are okay with using a spare computer as the DHCP server, there's software called "m0n0wall" that you could use. It's a BSD-based firewall/DHCP embedded OS package that runs off a CD and stores its data to a floppy. It'll let you set up a captive portal, with whatever page content you want, and let you code hard/soft-timeouts (i.e., (soft) re-display portal page after $x hours of a person's MAC address not being on your network, but do not display the page as long as they're active, or (hard) automatically re-display the portal every $x hours, regardless of inactivity.

http://www.m0n0.ch/wall/ (http://www.m0n0.ch/wall/) is the website, check it out!

(no subject)

Date: 2005-07-14 06:23 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mendel.livejournal.com
Captive page is a good idea. NoCat is the usual one I've seen in use. You've got an SSID to play with too; be sure to stick something in there making it clear that it's free to use.

That said I think if I were to offer free wireless at home I'd keep it on a separate subnet from my home network, and secure the latter. WRT54Gs are cheap.

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