Wireless neighborhoods was just discussed on Slashdot yesterday, for anyone who missed it: http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/18/1716222&mode=thread If you're short on time, set the threshold to about 3 or 4 to read only the most relevant comments. I'm for one am very interested in this project, and I don't think it's a folly at all. H o w e v e r , it needs to be approached very carefully, because with dotcoms like SprintION crashing around us (still), they're looking for both scapegoats and cash, and will not be kind to people using bandwidth without paying for it. At this moment, I'm reminded of the way Firestone, General Motors, and Standard Oil played mean and dirty when it came time to defend their investments. Ralph Nader gives this example whenever it's time to look seriously at large corporations and how they deal with competition: "...in the 1930s and 1940s, General Motors, Standard Oil and Firestone collaborated to buy up trolley systems in 28 large metropolitan areas, then ripped out the tracks while pushing legislators to fund a national highway system. For this, [Nader] said, the companies were indicted by a federal jury in Chicago just after World War II, charged by the Justice Department with a criminal violation of antitrust laws, and convicted and fined $5000 per company for what Nader called "one of the economic crimes of the century." With that in mind, gotta make sure the NANs don't get squashed early by not being prepared for the fact that the cable companies and the SWBells are in direct competition for this "friendly, neighborhood" idea here. Say $20 a month might be reasonable to cover costs, but that's $30 less per month than a cable modem, and if I were selling cable connexions, I'd do all I could to keep from selling a $50 connexion to someone who then divides it up to four other people for $20 each... God forbid the multilevel marketing folks get ahold of this idea. In other words, let's do it honestly, for example, to the point of creating a new form of contract with the cable co's than currently exist, if that needs to happen. Hope this makes sense, -Jared