DISTRIBUTED WIRELESS ONLINE ACCESS SYSTEM
20180184262 ยท 2018-06-28
Inventors
Cpc classification
H04W88/04
ELECTRICITY
H04M2215/54
ELECTRICITY
H04M15/00
ELECTRICITY
H04W40/22
ELECTRICITY
H04W40/02
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H04M15/00
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A method for providing wireless online access comprises: establishing a wireless access signal space wherein a wireless communications link is established between a secondary wireless unit and at least one primary wireless unit, thereby providing a corresponding secondary subscriber with online access by data packet transmission between the primary wireless unit and the secondary wireless unit; and receiving, from an online access provider, a credited revenue amount in return for providing online access for the secondary subscriber.
Claims
1-9. (canceled)
10. A distributed wireless online access system comprising a plurality of primary wireless units, each of which acts as a router at a node of a primary wireless network formed by the plurality of the primary wireless units, wherein: (a) multiple primary wireless units among the plurality of primary wireless units are mobile primary wireless units carried by corresponding moving vehicles; (b) the primary wireless network is arranged so that movement of one or more of the mobile primary wireless units into or out of corresponding transmission ranges of one or more other primary wireless units alters topology of the primary wireless network; and (c) the primary wireless network is arranged so as to re-route dynamically, during movement of one or more of the mobile primary wireless units carried by corresponding moving vehicles, data packet transmission through or within the primary wireless network, in response to altered topology of the primary wireless network.
11. The system of claim 10 wherein the primary wireless network is arranged so as to: (e) provide data packet transmission to or from one or more mobile secondary wireless units; and (f) re-route dynamically, during movement of one or more of the mobile secondary wireless units, data packet transmission through or within the primary wireless network, in response to the movement of one or more of the secondary wireless units.
12. The system of claim 11 wherein one or more of the mobile primary wireless units are also mobile secondary wireless units.
13. The system of claim 10 further comprising one or more portal units, wherein: (e) the one or more portal units are arranged so as to provide data packet transmission between the primary wireless network and an external communications system; and (f) the primary wireless network is arranged so as to re-route dynamically, during movement of one or more of the mobile primary wireless units, data packet transmission through or within the primary wireless network to or from the one or more portal units, in response to altered topology of the primary wireless network.
14. The system of claim 13 wherein the external communications system includes the Internet.
15. The system of claim 13 wherein one or more of the portal units are also primary wireless units.
16. The system of claim 10 further comprising an administration unit programmed and connected so as to control routing and re-routing of data packet transmission through or within the primary wireless network.
17. The system of claim 16 wherein information received by the administration unit from one or more of the mobile primary wireless units includes geo-location data, and control by the administration unit of routing and re-routing of data packet transmission is based in part on the geo-location data.
18. The system of claim 10 wherein one or more of the primary wireless units is an unlicensed wireless device in legal compliance with government regulations applicable at a location of deployment of the primary wireless unit.
19. The system of claim 10 wherein one or more of the primary wireless units is an unlicensed wireless device in legal compliance with Part 15 of Title 47 of the Code of Federal Regulations.
20. The system of claim 10 wherein one or more of the primary wireless units conforms to an IEEE 802.11 standard.
21. A method for operating a distributed online access system, the method comprising dynamically re-routing data packet transmission through or within a primary wireless network during movement of one or more mobile primary wireless units carried by corresponding moving vehicles, wherein: (a) the distributed wireless online access system comprises a plurality of primary wireless units, each of which acts as a router at a node of the primary wireless network formed by the plurality of the primary wireless units; (b) multiple primary wireless units among the plurality of primary wireless units are mobile primary wireless units carried by corresponding moving vehicles; (c) the primary wireless network is arranged so that movement of one or more of the mobile primary wireless units into or out of corresponding transmission ranges of one or more other primary wireless units alters topology of the primary wireless network; and (d) the primary wireless network is arranged so that, during movement of one or more of the mobile primary wireless units carried by corresponding moving vehicles, data packet transmission through or within the primary wireless network is dynamically re-routed in response to altered topology of the primary wireless network.
22. The method of claim 21 wherein the primary wireless network is arranged so as to provide data packet transmission to or from one or more mobile secondary wireless units, the method further comprising, during movement of one or more of the mobile secondary wireless units, dynamically re-routing data packet transmission through or within the primary wireless network in response to the movement of one or more of the secondary wireless units.
23. The method of claim 22 wherein one or more of the mobile primary wireless units are also mobile secondary wireless units.
24. The method of claim 21 wherein the distributed wireless online access system includes one or more portal units arranged so as to provide data packet transmission between the primary wireless network and an external communications system, the method further comprising, during movement of one or more of the mobile primary wireless units, dynamically re-routing data packet transmission through the or within the primary wireless network to or from the one or more portal units, in response to altered topology of the primary wireless network.
25. The method of claim 24 wherein the external communications system includes the Internet.
26. The method of claim 24 wherein one or more of the portal units are also primary wireless units.
27. The method of claim 21 wherein the distributed wireless online access system includes an administration unit programmed and connected so as to control routing and re-routing of data packet transmission through or within the primary wireless network.
28. The method of claim 27 wherein information received by the administration unit from one or more of the mobile primary wireless units includes geo-location data, and control by the administration unit of routing and re-routing of data packet transmission is based in part on the geo-location data.
29. The method of claim 21 wherein one or more of the primary wireless units is an unlicensed wireless device in legal compliance with government regulations applicable at a location of deployment of the primary wireless unit.
30. The method of claim 21 wherein one or more of the primary wireless units is an unlicensed wireless device in legal compliance with Part 15 of Title 47 of the Code of Federal Regulations.
31. The method of claim 21 wherein one or more of the primary wireless units conforms to an IEEE 802.11 standard.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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[0041]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
[0042] For purposes of the present written description and/or claims, the term online access shall denote an activity which is performed by sending and/or receiving text, data, graphics, images, commands, requests, queries, and so forth over a communications network through an interface device. This will preferably mean using a computer connected to the Internet, but may also include other interface devices (including but not limited to: computers, workstations, terminals, televisions, wireless devices, hand-held or palm-top devices, electronic organizers, telephones, wireless telephones, messaging units, and the like; combinations thereof; and/or functional equivalents thereof) and other networks (Internet, Internet 2, next-generation Internet, other successors to the Internet, World-Wide Web, telephone networks, local- or wide-area networks, wireless networks, optical networks, satellite-based networks, and the like; combinations thereof; and/or functional equivalents thereof). The connection or link between the interface device and the communications network may be direct (i.e., hard-wired, or wired) or indirect (i.e., wireless, or through an intervening network). It is this latter scenario that is the primary subject matter of the present invention.
[0043] For purposes of the present written description and/or claims, wireless transmitter and wireless receiver shall generally denote devices which may send and receive, respectively, signals that propagate through free space in the form of electro-magnetic radiation. The electro-magnetic radiation is typically in the RF or microwave region, although other portions of the electro-magnetic spectrum may be utilized as well. For purposes of the present written description and/or claims, a wireless connection or a wireless link is a connection or link utilizing wireless transmitters and receivers. For purposes of the present written description and/or claims, a hard-wired, wired, or direct connection or link shall denote a connection or link in which a signal is propagated along a transmission device of some sort, for example electronic signals propagating along a wire or cable, or an optical signal propagating along an optical fiber.
[0044]
[0045] Each primary wireless unit preferably comprises: a wireless receiver for receiving a data packet transmitted from at least one other of the plurality of primary wireless units; a wireless transmitter for transmitting a data packet to at least one other of the plurality of primary wireless units; and a processing unit programmed for routing a received in-transit data packet for transmission to another of the plurality of primary wireless units. Each data packet preferably includes routing information, and this routing information may be processed by the primary wireless unit to determine which other primary wireless unit is the next destination for the data packet. Each primary wireless unit at a node of the primary wireless network therefore functions as a router for the primary wireless network. The routing is preferably implemented dynamically, meaning that which of multiple available routes may be chosen may be based on information that may be changing with time, such as primary unit availability or primary unit transient reception/transmission speed. In a typical implementation of the present invention, a primary wireless unit may comprise a personal computer (desktop or portable) with wireless transmitter and receiver hardware connected thereto. The transmitter and receiver may be separate units or integrated as a single unit, and whether separate from or integrated with one another may be separate from and connected to the computer or may be integrated into the computer. Other functionally equivalent embodiments of a primary wireless unit transmitter/receiver/processor combination may be employed.
[0046] Each portal unit may preferably comprise a link to the external communications system for transmitting data packets to the external communications system and for receiving data packets transmitted from the external communications system, a wireless transmitter for transmitting data packets to a primary wireless unit of the primary wireless network, and a wireless receiver for receiving data packets transmitted from a primary wireless unit of the primary wireless network. Any suitable link to the external communications system may be employed, and the link may typically comprise a wired, high-speed link or connection to the external communications system. In a common implementation of the present invention, the external communications system comprises the Internet, and the link to the external communications comprises a direct (i.e., wired) high-speed connection to the Internet backbone, thereby enabling distributed, high-speed wireless online access to the Internet through any of the primary wireless units of the primary wireless network. In a typical implementation of the present invention, the portal unit may comprise a server computer with connected wireless transmitter and receiver (as separate connected units or integrated with the server) and high-speed network interface hardware for connecting directly to the Internet backbone. Other functionally equivalent embodiments of a portal unit transmitter/receiver/processor/network interface combination may be employed. A single transmitter/receiver/processor combination may serve as both a portal unit and a primary wireless unit.
[0047] The plurality of primary wireless units forming the primary wireless network may preferably be sufficiently densely distributed geographically (relative to the maximum transmission range) that most of the primary wireless units are linked to at least two other primary wireless units. In this way the resulting primary wireless network may provide multiple network paths connecting pairs of primary wireless units within the network. This redundancy enhances the overall reliability of the primary wireless network in the event that nodes and/or links in the network become non-functional. In this event data packet traffic may be re-routed through the network around the disruption.
[0048] The distributed wireless online access system may further comprise an administration unit for performing the routing and/or re-routing of data packet transmission through the primary wireless network as described hereinabove. The administration unit may comprise: a wireless transmitter for transmitting queries and/or commands to primary wireless units; a wireless receiver for receiving wireless unit status data, wireless network status data, data packet transmission data, other query acknowledgements, and/or command acknowledgements from wireless units; a programmed processor for generating commands and/or queries and processing wireless unit status data, wireless network status data, data packet transmission data, other query acknowledgements, and/or command acknowledgements from wireless units. In a typical implementation of the present invention, the administration unit may comprise a computer with connected wireless transmitter and receiver (as separate connected units or integrated with the server). Other functionally equivalent embodiments of a portal unit transmitter/receiver/processor combination may be employed. A single transmitter/receiver/processor combination may serve as both an administration unit and a primary wireless unit, as both an administration unit and a portal unit, or as all three (primary, portal, and administration). Routing information may be generated by the administration unit based on wireless unit/network status and the origin/destination of a data packet for selecting a particular network path for a data packet. Alternatively, such routing information may be generated locally by each primary wireless unit as the data packet makes its way through the primary wireless network. In this case, the plurality of primary wireless units collectively may function as an administration unit.
[0049] Access to the primary wireless network, and hence to the Internet (i.e., an external communications system) is preferably provided through a plurality of secondary wireless units, each comprising: a wireless receiver for receiving a data packet transmitted from a primary wireless unit; a wireless transmitter for transmitting a data packet to a primary wireless unit; and a programmed processing unit for generated a data packet to be transmitted and for processing a received data packet. Some or all of the primary wireless units may comprise transmitters/receivers for transmitting/receiving data packets to/from secondary units. These transmitters/receivers will typically be the same transmitters/receivers employed for implementing the primary wireless network as described hereinabove, although it may be possible and/or desirable to employ separate transmitters/receivers for wireless links between a given primary wireless unit and i) another primary wireless unit and ii) a secondary wireless unit. A user desiring online access to the primary wireless network and hence the Internet may do so by utilizing a secondary wireless unit, typically using a user interface. A graphical user interface (GUI) may be particularly well-suited for facilitating user online access through the secondary wireless unit. In a typical implementation of the present invention, a secondary wireless unit may comprise a personal computer (desktop or portable) with wireless transmitter and receiver hardware connected thereto. The transmitter and receiver may be separate units or integrated as a single unit, and whether separate from or integrated with one another may be separate from and connected to the computer or may be integrated into the computer. Other functionally equivalent embodiments of a primary wireless unit transmitter/receiver/processor combination may be employed. It should be noted that the primary differences between the primary wireless units and the secondary wireless units are: 1) the primary wireless units require routing/re-transmission functionality in order to handle in-transit data packets and enable transmission of data packets through the primary wireless network; while 2) the secondary wireless units are typically origination and/or destination points for data packets, and as such require no routing/re-transmission functionality, but rather require data packet generation and processing/interpretation capabilities, along with user-interface functionality. However, a single transmitter/receiver/processor combination may function as both a primary wireless unit and a secondary wireless unit.
[0050] Each secondary wireless unit is located geographically within a maximum wireless transmission range of at least one primary wireless unit, thereby enabling wireless online access to the Internet from the secondary wireless unit via the primary wireless network.
[0051] In addition to previously described functions, the administration unit may enable expansion of the distributed wireless online access system to cover new geographic areas with little or no extant wireless online access. The administration unit may also enable deployment of additional resources for enhancing the capacity and reliability of the wireless online access system. As shown in
[0052] From a commercial standpoint, it is particularly attractive to implement a wireless online access system according to the present invention using wireless transmitters and receivers that may be operated as an unlicensed wireless device in legal compliance with any applicable government regulations in force at the location of the wireless unit. By utilizing transmitters and receivers (for both primary and secondary wireless units) in the United States that fall within regulations for unlicensed use as set forth by the FCC in Part 15 of Title 47 of the Code of Federal Regulations, for example, a provider of wireless online access may avoid many costly and time consuming regulatory hurdles and/or permit procedures. One particular class of such transmitters and receivers are specified in the group of IEEE 802.11 standards and may be used within various ranges of wireless carrier frequencies, including (but not limited to) the spectral regions around 900 MHz and 2.4 GHz. Both Part 15 of Title 47 of the Code of Federal Regulations and the IEEE 802.11 standards are hereby incorporated by reference as if fully set forth herein. Successor U.S. regulations, applicable present and/or future foreign regulation, and/or other current and/or future standards may be equivalently complied with in order to implement an unlicensed distributed wireless online access system without departing from inventive concepts disclosed and/or claimed herein.
[0053] As an example, a non-directional transmitter having a maximum transmission range in the 150-200 meter range may fall within FCC regulations for unlicensed transmitters, and could be used to implement a primary network having a primary wireless unit roughly every city block or so. Non-directional wireless transmission may be preferred for most primary and secondary wireless units of a wireless online access system as described herein. FCC regulations may permit greater transmission ranges for unlicensed directional transmitters, perhaps as long as several kilometers.
[0054] The wireless nature of the data packet transmission and reception, and the distributed nature of the hardware (computers, transmitters, and receivers) means that there are substantially no infrastructure development requirements to implement a distributed wireless online access system according to the present invention. The link between the portal unit and the Internet backbone may be established readily and economically by the common practice of co-locating the portal unit with an established commercial Internet service provider (ISP). A computer thus co-located and including a wireless transmitter and receiver may serve as a portal unit, and one or more primary wireless units must then be located within the maximum transmission range of the portal unit transmitter and receiver (direction or non-directional). All primary and secondary wireless units may comprise relatively small (a few hundred cubic centimeters) transmitter and receiver units connected to personal computers (many of the computers which would already be in place). No cable or wire needs to be laid, and no large antennas or high-power broadcast equipment needs to be acquired, set up, licensed, and/or located. A distributed wireless online access system according to the present invention may be deployed and operated in a completely unobtrusive manner in any geographic area having a sufficiently dense distribution of structures (i.e., residences and/or businesses) having a sufficiently dense distribution of potential users therein to host enough primary wireless units to establish and reliably maintain the primary wireless network. In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, each wireless unit may function as both a primary wireless unit as well as a secondary wireless unit. In this way the number of online access points (secondary units) is maximized, while the number of different network paths (and hence network redundancy and reliability) through the primary wireless network (primary wireless units) is also maximized.
[0055] The relatively low cost of the hardware involved (essentially only a transmitter and receiver, since most users seeking online access presumably already have or already plan to acquire a computer), the lack of construction or infrastructure requirements, and the prospect of higher-speed online access, should combine to produce self-assembling, self-organizing growth of the wireless online access system, and may provide the basis for unique business methods for providing online access to subscribers according to the present invention. A provider of wireless online access preferably begins by establishing a portal unit with a high-speed link to the Internet, and may proceed to solicit one or more primary subscribers to locate primary wireless units at their respective locations, and who may be required to pay a primary subscriber access fee. These primary wireless units could also function as secondary wireless units for providing wireless online access to the primary subscriber. The initial primary subscribers may be given incentives to participate, such as free equipment provided, reduction or elimination of any access fees normally to be charged, and so on. Alternatively, the prospect of relatively low-cost high-speed wireless online access may be sufficient incentive for participation as a primary subscriber. The wireless online access provider may proceed to solicit secondary subscribers, who would locate secondary wireless units at their respective locations to obtain high-speed wireless online access in return for payment of a secondary subscriber access fee.
[0056] The wireless online access provider has thus established two incoming revenue streams (access fees paid by primary and secondary subscribers). Access fees may be periodic flat fees, may be based on the volume of data packets received/transmitted by a particular wireless unit (wireless data traffic volume), or may be a combination thereof. A distributed wireless online access system according to the present invention may further comprise a billing unit for tracking data-packet-volume-based subscriber access fees. The billing unit may comprise: a wireless transmitter for transmitting a data packet volume query to primary and/or secondary wireless units; a wireless receiver for receiving data packet volume data; and a programmed processor for calculating subscriber access fee amounts based on the data packet volume data. The transmitter/receiver/processor combination comprising the billing unit may preferably be the same combination of components comprising an administration unit as described hereinabove, since the same data packet volume data is used to perform both routing/re-routing and fee calculating functions. However, separate units may be employed for administration and billing functions.
[0057] The wireless online access provider enterprise may be readily expanded by adding new primary subscribers (
[0058] A similar incentive may be result from paying the primary subscriber based on the volume of in-transit data packets received, routed, and re-transmitted by the corresponding primary wireless unit. Additional incentives (flat fee or traffic-based) might be paid to a primary subscriber to host a longer-range directional transmitter or wired connection (
[0059] Algorithms for determining the revenue to be distributed by the wireless online access provider are many and varied. A fixed fee per recruit, perhaps decreased by a specified fraction per generation removed from a recruiting primary subscriber, might be paid to a primary subscriber. A fixed fee per unit data received and re-transmitted, perhaps decreased by a specified fraction per network node removed from the data source, might be paid to each primary subscriber. Primary subscribers could be sorted into hierarchical levels based on length of time in the system, number of recruits, number of network nodes removed from a portal unit, fraction of uptime, transmission speed, or any other relevant criterion, and specific (perhaps level-dependent) fractions of the overall system revenue may be distributed among primary subscribers in each level. The possibilities are endless, and any suitable scheme for revenue distribution among the primary subscribers may be employed without departing from inventive concepts disclosed and/or claimed herein.
[0060] One or more primary and/or secondary wireless units may be mobile and/or placed on motor vehicles. Mobile secondary wireless units could enable roaming between areas covered by different primary wireless units of the primary wireless network, or even into an area served by one or more other primary wireless networks. Such roaming wireless online access may be controlled/monitored by the administration unit in much the same way that roaming wireless telephone access is monitored/controlled. Roaming access may provide a basis for charging additional online access fees. Mobile primary units result in a primary network coverage area and topology that vary dynamically with the positions of the mobile primary wireless units. In this instance the administration unit must monitor the temporally evolving primary network topology in order to appropriately route and/or re-route transmission of data packets over the primary wireless network. Such a primary wireless network may be referred to as a transient primary wireless network.
[0061] By placing a few primary units of a primary wireless network near a length of roadway, the primary wireless network may be expanded to include a transient primary network portion encompassing the length of roadway. If sufficiently many motor vehicles carrying primary wireless units are on the roadway (presumably, but alas not necessarily, moving), then any vehicles carrying secondary wireless units would have high-speed online access while on the roadway. Each such vehicle-mounted mobile wireless units may function as both a primary and a secondary wireless unit. Similar subscriber recruitment, solicitation, access fees, and financial incentives may be provided as described hereinabove for deploying, maintaining, and/or generating revenue from a transient wireless online access system. A particularly attractive scenario for such a transient mobile wireless online access system might be implemented among a group of commuters using a particular arterial roadway of a major metro area. With many vehicles moving relatively slowly in a relatively closely packed distribution, and with commuters stuck in those vehicles for significant periods of time, both the feasibility and desirability of providing such a transient primary wireless network for an online access system is clear. Another scenario that could be implemented may essentially convert the Interstate highway system into a nationwide backbone for a high-speed wireless online access system. A combination of fixed primary wireless units at certain strategic points along the highway system and recruitment of vehicle operators that heavily utilize the highway system (freight trucking companies, for example) to carry primary wireless units on their vehicles would enable implementation of a nationwide wireless online access network. Such a system could serve both stationary and mobile secondary subscribers. A vehicle-based wireless network might be particularly amenable to use of directional transmitters for expanding transmission range of the wireless units, since the roadway constrains most other primary wireless units to be located in front of or behind a wireless unit on a vehicle (i.e., on the roadway). Administration units for such implementation must enable monitoring of wireless unit position, which may be accomplished using positioning systems associated with each wireless unit (a GPS receiver, for example), using wireless link and/or network status data (i.e., the locations of the wireless units may not be as important as the network topology of the wireless links between the wireless units), or by other suitable methods. Administration/routing software should preferably be adapted for routing/re-routing data packet transmission through a primary wireless network of dynamically varying topology.
[0062] While preferred implementations of the present invention have been disclosed as pertaining primarily to deploying and/or providing high-speed wireless online access, it should be noted that the present invention may find applicability in other arenas. In addition to providing high-speed wireless online access, systems, apparatus, and/or methods according to the present invention may be employed for providing other distributed wireless services, including but not limited to: voice/fax/phone service; mobile/wireless phone service; one- or two-way paging service; voice and/or text messaging service; wireless delivery of music, audio, video, multi-media, or other content; two-way-radio-type telecommunications; security systems; local- and/or wide-area network services (LAN/WAN); emergency services; traffic monitoring/management services; roadside assistance services; road condition information services; positioning/navigation services; and so on.
[0063] The present invention has been set forth in the forms of its preferred and alternative embodiments. It is nevertheless intended that modifications to the disclosed distributed wireless online access system, apparatus, and methods may be made without departing from inventive concepts disclosed and/or claimed herein.