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Village Telco is an initiative to build low-cost community telephone network hardware and software. It is based on a suite of open source applications that enable entrepreneurs to set up and operate a telephone service in a specific area or supporting the needs of a specific community.〔(Village Telco blog )〕 The first Village Telco network was established by Dabba at Orange Farm, a township near Johannesburg, South Africa. Users can make free local calls to other Dabba subscribers, as well as use pay-as-you-go vouchers to make calls to 'phones on other networks.〔(Economist July 19 2008 )〕 Technically, a Village Telco system consists of: * a mesh network made up of Wi-Fi mini-routers combined with an analogue telephone adaptor (aka * SIP phones * a pay-as-you-go billing and management system * a SIP/VOIP server * least cost routing equipment These components together comprise an easy-to-use, standards-based, wireless, local, do-it-yourself, telephone company toolkit. The goal of bringing these together is to make local telephony in developing countries to be so cheap as to be virtually free. This has become possible thanks to advances in open source telephony software and the dramatic decrease in the cost of wireless broadband technology. ==See also== * Personal Telco Project, which is a wireless community network project running in Portland, Oregon. * South African wireless community networks: Orange Farm and the Mesh Potato 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Village Telco」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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