CTS 095: Deploying Wi-Fi During Natural Disasters - Clear To Send: Wireless Network Engineering




Clear To Send: Wireless Network Engineering show

Summary: Ian Beyer and Jonathan Boyle discuss helping others by deploying Wi-Fi communications.<br> <br> When a natural disaster hits the first thing everyone needs is reliable communications. Ian Beyer and Jonathan Boyle join the podcast to talk about their experiences in deploying Wi-Fi for first responders, families, and departments running critical operations.<br> Ian Beyer is the Region 7 Technology Manager for Team Rubicon.<br> Jonathan Boyle is the Region 7 Director for IT Disaster Resource Center (ITDRC).<br> If we look at Hurricane Harvey, there was a record rainfall. Team Rubicon National Operations Center in Dallas, TX began planning for response. This started before Harvey made landfall.<br> Team Rubicon is a Veteran-led disaster response organization with 50,000 volunteers. They work with major tech vendors such as Palantir, Motorola, Inmarsat, ITDRC, Google, and more.<br> ITDRC’s mission is to provide communities with the technical resources necessary to continue operations and begin recovery after a disaster. Much of their efforts are made possible due to the partnerships and cooperation with numerous partners such as Dish network, Google, Ruckus, Fortinet, Cambium Networks, Dell, Cisco Meraki, HP, Intel, CiscoTACOPS, and more. ITDRC has 900+ volunteers nationwide.<br> In this episode, Ian and Jonathan discuss what it is like to deploy where communications is needed. It all starts with volunteers with the right skillsets to configure and deploy the right technology.<br> In most scenarios, many engineers are fortunate to have a clean and safe environment to work in. The volunteers at Team Rubicon and ITDRC run into many Wi-Fi challenges. There’s interference everywhere, hotspots running around, neighbors in the building, etc.<br> In many cases, the backhaul can be the most challenging. Cradlepoints are often used with hotspots for connectivity. With many people using that connection it can get congested and spotty.<br> As Ian will talk about, sometimes RRM is your friend in these hostile conditions.<br> At the time of this recording, ITDRC had volunteers deployed in Puerto Rico. We hope to have an update in the near future after those efforts have been completed.<br> To hear the full dialog, listen to the episode today!<br> Links and Resources<br> <br> * <a href="https://blog.ianbeyer.com/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">Ian’s blog</a><br> * <a href="http://twitter.com/canerdian" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">@canerdian</a><br> * <a href="http://twitter.com/doubleoboyle" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">@doubleoboyle</a><br> * <a href="http://teamrubiconusa.org" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">Team Rubicon</a><br> * <a href="https://itdrc.org" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">ITDRC</a><br> <br>