Morgan Vigil-Hayes, M. Hossain, Alexander K Elliott, E. Belding-Royer, E. Zegura
{"title":"LoRaX: Repurposing LoRa as a Low Data Rate Messaging System to Extend Internet Boundaries","authors":"Morgan Vigil-Hayes, M. Hossain, Alexander K Elliott, E. Belding-Royer, E. Zegura","doi":"10.1145/3530190.3534807","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Globally, 43% of households lack Internet access, primarily in regions where deployment and/or service costs are prohibitive, including in the least developed countries, rural locations, and regions with high concentrations of ethnic minorities and low-income populations. Unfortunately, this lack of Internet access increasingly equates to a lack of access to essential services, such as healthcare, education, and economic opportunities. In an environment of marginal economics, creative and varied approaches to obtaining access have flourished, including Internet kiosks long popular in the Global South, libraries as public access in the Global North, parking lot use of open WiFi access points, and spectrum-based solutions such as TV whitespace links and citizen band radio. In the near future, local 5G and the deployment of satellite constellations promise yet additional options in the price/performance space for access. In this context we are interested in the following research question: How can the presence of multiple networks, with different price, performance, and geographic reach profiles, be best used in concert to improve access to critical services? We propose that a robust answer to this question bears a holistic, cross-layer examination of new communication paradigms, network architecture innovation, and application design. We make this concrete by running to ground a specific case study of two networks, one high performance yet limited in geographic scope and the other low performance yet pervasive. Specifically our LoRaX (LoRa eXtends the Internet) system combines high bandwidth but non-pervasive Internet access with a low data rate, low power, yet ubiquitious network made possible by IoT developments. By focusing on two networks with extreme differences, we explore a design space that offers users new opportunities for participating in Internet-based services–even when high speed Internet connectivity is intermittent. We also reflect on the generality of the environment and our solution approach for future multi-network settings.","PeriodicalId":257424,"journal":{"name":"ACM SIGCAS/SIGCHI Conference on Computing and Sustainable Societies (COMPASS)","volume":"82 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-06-29","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"6","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"ACM SIGCAS/SIGCHI Conference on Computing and Sustainable Societies (COMPASS)","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1145/3530190.3534807","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 6
Abstract
Globally, 43% of households lack Internet access, primarily in regions where deployment and/or service costs are prohibitive, including in the least developed countries, rural locations, and regions with high concentrations of ethnic minorities and low-income populations. Unfortunately, this lack of Internet access increasingly equates to a lack of access to essential services, such as healthcare, education, and economic opportunities. In an environment of marginal economics, creative and varied approaches to obtaining access have flourished, including Internet kiosks long popular in the Global South, libraries as public access in the Global North, parking lot use of open WiFi access points, and spectrum-based solutions such as TV whitespace links and citizen band radio. In the near future, local 5G and the deployment of satellite constellations promise yet additional options in the price/performance space for access. In this context we are interested in the following research question: How can the presence of multiple networks, with different price, performance, and geographic reach profiles, be best used in concert to improve access to critical services? We propose that a robust answer to this question bears a holistic, cross-layer examination of new communication paradigms, network architecture innovation, and application design. We make this concrete by running to ground a specific case study of two networks, one high performance yet limited in geographic scope and the other low performance yet pervasive. Specifically our LoRaX (LoRa eXtends the Internet) system combines high bandwidth but non-pervasive Internet access with a low data rate, low power, yet ubiquitious network made possible by IoT developments. By focusing on two networks with extreme differences, we explore a design space that offers users new opportunities for participating in Internet-based services–even when high speed Internet connectivity is intermittent. We also reflect on the generality of the environment and our solution approach for future multi-network settings.
在全球范围内,43%的家庭无法接入互联网,主要是在部署和/或服务成本过高的地区,包括最不发达国家、农村地区以及少数民族和低收入人口高度集中的地区。不幸的是,缺乏互联网接入越来越等同于缺乏获得医疗保健、教育和经济机会等基本服务的机会。在边际经济的环境中,获取接入的创造性和多样化方法蓬勃发展,包括在南半球长期流行的互联网亭,在北半球作为公共访问的图书馆,停车场使用开放的WiFi接入点,以及基于频谱的解决方案,如电视空白链接和公民波段无线电。在不久的将来,本地5G和卫星星座的部署将为接入提供更多的性价比选择。在此背景下,我们对以下研究问题感兴趣:如何以不同价格、性能和地理覆盖概况的多个网络的存在来最好地协同使用,以改善对关键服务的访问?我们建议对这个问题进行全面的、跨层的检查,包括新的通信范式、网络架构创新和应用程序设计。我们对两个网络进行了具体的案例研究,一个是高性能但在地理范围内有限的网络,另一个是低性能但普遍存在的网络。具体来说,我们的LoRaX (LoRa eXtends the Internet)系统将高带宽但非普及的互联网接入与低数据速率、低功耗、无所不在的网络相结合,使物联网的发展成为可能。通过关注两种极端不同的网络,我们探索了一种设计空间,为用户提供参与基于互联网的服务的新机会-即使在高速互联网连接时断时续的情况下。我们还考虑了环境的一般性和我们未来多网络设置的解决方案方法。