Thread: Amazing
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Old May 21st 05, 04:17 AM
n3soz
 
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Charles,

Did some background reading, guess I've used the wrong terminology.
I've had a few networking classes but I'm no expert. The partially
meshed topology is definitely the way to go. But the issues of selling
the concept and handling funding and logistics that I mentioned are
still a factor in any large-scale network implementation. As other
posters have mentioned, we have the bandwidth available to get this
done but money is the major obstacle. I'm just glad this conversation
is happening here. The original poster hit a nerve and clearly there is
interest in moving digital amateur radio networking forward. I'm going
to look at what I can do within my club, using our facilities - some
kind of happy medium between setting up a network in my house and
covering 500 square miles. Gotta walk before you can run.

Matt, N3SOZ

Charles Brabham wrote:
The Star network topology has been tried with Packet. It was called

TexNet.

The TexNet network did something that no other large-scale ax25

packet
network ever did - It disappeared completely, leaving hardly any

trace
behind to show that it once existed.. From 100+ linked nodes to none

in just
a few years.

I suppose that would qualify TexNet as the worst disaster in the

history of
digital amateur radio. It's untimely demise was directly related to

the use
of the obsolete Star network topology. All the other large-scale

packet
networks used the same Partially-Meshed network topology that the

Internet
utilizes, and I notice that all of those are still around to this

day.

Charles Brabham, N5PVL

Director: USPacket http://www.uspacket.org
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