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Bill Sodeman writes about management, mobile computing and information systems

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Entries tagged as 'afghanistan'

Cellular base station uses wind and solar power

ism tech

Posted Friday, 11 April 2008

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Cnet has a report on a cellular base station that can switch among wind, solar and diesel generators. This Gizmodo article has a few more details about E-site.

It’s an interesting concept that would be useful in developing countries. In Africa, diesel generators are often used to provide coverage. A cleaner alternative would be welcome.

As I pointed out on 29 March 2008, power isn’t the only problem that mobile phone carriers face in developing countries. Terrorists, insurgents, and other groups may target cellular base stations to knock out coverage or make a political statement. On the other hand, these same groups often rely on mobile phones.

E-sites also make sense for Hawaii. Oahu has good mobile phone coverage, but there are many parts of this island and the neighbor islands that are served by one carrier, if coverage is even available. Adding wind and solar power generation capabilities to existing base stations can also improve reliability during brownouts, blackouts, and seismic events. The wind and solar generators can be used to charge backup batteries, or to provide primary power.

Tags: afghanistan, Africa, electricity, mobile, power, reliability, solar, telecom, wind

Taliban members want mobile phone service restored

all

Posted Saturday, 29 March 2008

From the AP: Taliban members in Afghanistan want their mobile phone service restored. The problem: it was the Taliban who attacked the towers in the first place!

The government has been shutting down cell phone networks at night because of Taliban attacks on cell phone towers. Even some Taliban fighters now regret the disruptions and are demanding that service be restored by the companies.

The communication blackout follows a campaign by the Taliban, which said the U.S. and NATO were using the fighters’ cell phone signals to track them at night and launch pinpoint attacks.

About 10 towers have been attacked since the warning late last month - seven of them seriously - causing almost $2 million in damage, the telecom ministry said. Afghanistan’s four major mobile phone companies began cutting nighttime service across the south soon after.

Tags: afghanistan, mobile, reliability