Comment by ChrisMarshallNY

Comment by ChrisMarshallNY a day ago

6 replies

The issue with satellite stuff, is that it’s pretty sensitive to active attack. It will be available for things like natural disasters, but not necessarily for war.

In either case, jamming is a possibility.

nunobrito a day ago

That is inaccurate. You will NOT be able to jam a satellite outside local areas, the amount of power to do is monstrous and likely to cause cancer for anyone around.

In a real scenario these things work. Please don't fall into "what if's" which are exotic and confused as things bigger than what they are.

  • ChrisMarshallNY a day ago

    Well, from the comments, here, this sounds like a passionate topic, for folks.

    I've always been interested in helping folks that help folks.

    I started looking at Meshtastic, some years ago, but found the ecosystem to be a bit overly-complex, as is often the case, with "Swiss Army Knife" approaches.

    • nunobrito 21 hours ago

      Yeah, indeed. If you are in the mood, dive a bit into APRS.

      Best thing is the android app combo with the walkie-talkie. Tends to give a usable setup that works for voice and data.

  • elevation a day ago

    > You will NOT be able to jam a satellite outside local areas

    It is true that you will not be able to jam the _downlink_ frequency outside local areas.

    But due to the FM capture effect, anyone else in the same hemisphere with a basic 100w transmitter (and appropriate antenna) on the _uplink_ frequency will be able to deny the satellite service to all the 5W Baofeng radios that preppers are stockpiling.

    • nunobrito 21 hours ago

      That level of argument is already at Reddit level where every little detail is a reason to be "right". This is tiresome.

      Look: if someone is jamming something with a 100 watt transmitter which causes impact on the adversary, that location is quickly bombed because it is now a giant beacon that advertises its position.

      I'll even throw a cheap appeal to authority and mention that I've done this stuff professionally in the military for a decade. I'll still trust more on the usability of my cheap walkie-talkie capable of +50km range and satellite texts than an exotic LoRa used on the ground by few internet warriors.

      • lambdaone 18 hours ago

        I think the Internet warriors are trying to build their own entirely self-sufficient network independent of the state or commercial worlds, which is, as you say, tricky to do only with resources legally available to the general public. Armed forces have had these things nailed down pretty much since the invention of radio.