3rd Annual Defcon Wifi Shootout Contest
New world record for unamplified wireless
networking!!
125 miles!
Team iFiber Redwire and their awesome rig at base camp.
"Loaded for bear." That quaint phrase means
that you have the biggest, baddest gun, loaded with the biggest, baddest
bullet, because you may have to shoot a big, bad bear. It indicates
that you have gone all out in an effort to be prepared for any situation.
"Loaded for bear" describes perfectly a team of determined
young college students calling themselves "iFiber Redwire,"
who, with parents, family and friends in tow, traveled from Cincinnati,
Ohio to a rugged desert area near Las Vegas, Nevada to compete in
the 3rd Annual Defcon Wifi Shootout Contest. The contest challenges
teams to wirelessly connect two computers at extreme distances using
the radio technology known as "WiFi," and, on July 30, 2005,
the efforts of iFiber Redwire paid off in an impressive way. After
part of the team drove a trailer loaded with equipment to Utah Hill,
near Beaver Dam in the state of Utah, iFiber Redwire used a fascinating
collection of homemade antennas, surplus 12 foot satellite dishes,
home-welded support structures, scaffolds, ropes and computers to
wirelessly connect to their comrades who were located southwest of
Las Vegas at the top of Mount Potosi. The final result was a full
11 Mbps data transfer rate over a distance of 125 miles, a new world
record for an unamplified wireless networking connection.
Thank You, Sponsors!
Media Sponsors:
For more info on past contests, be sure to check out our contest archives!