Currently the WnDb data display consists of a pin point for each AP location. How do we display an empirical graph of the power output in order to see what area a particular node covers?

The raw data required comes from a gps receiver correlated with power output readings from a wifi card. This can be recorded by NetStumbler, Dstumbler or Kismet. Another approach would be to hack [http://nocat.net/download/wpm wpm] (the wireless power meter) or use linux wireless-tools and gpstrans directly.

Latitude Longitude SnR

<Insert some sample data here>

The data set consists of measurements of signal to noise ratio (or some other measure of AP power output) for each gps reading.

The next step is to use this point map data to produce a rough surface approximation of AP coverage. One way to do this is outlined at University of Kansas ITTC Wireless Network [http://www.ittc.ku.edu/wlan/procedure.shtml "Visualization"] Project. In order to compute the Inverse Distance Weighted interpolation I plan to use a modified Shepard's Method routine from [http://www.netlib.org/toms/790 Netlib]. The beginning of the file contains a lot of test code so search for PRECISION FUNCTION CS2VAL for relevant comments.

Outstanding questions:

on weather so we may want to track when the data was collected. This leads into collecting several maps for a location that record performance in different seasons. Or perhaps some sort of averaging of all data available depending on how much it varies.

Long term ideas:

--AaronJohnson


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