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Top Forums Programming Arduino Project with NB-IoT (3GPP) and LoRa / LoRaWAN Post 303042539 by Neo on Saturday 28th of December 2019 09:14:40 AM
Old 12-28-2019
Quote:
Originally Posted by Neo
My thoughts are that the LoRa 923-925 (“AS2”) frequency band available in Thailand is my best bet to legally (approved frequencies bands) penetrate 30 floors of a condo, from basement to the top, but maybe there is a better way?
Bad news. Looks like the Thai government has decreed the "long range (LoRA) band" (in modern, developed countries) to be the RFID short range band in Thailand; it's all very confusing here; but it appears the authorities have made the unlicensed max power so low that this band used in other countries for long range (LoRa) IoT is being pushed down to low range RFID status in Thailand. They appear to be licensing the spectrum to their established commercial telecom companies for any power of use to build a LoRaWAN.

So, it seems my plan to build my open personal LoRa WAN in Thailand may have hit a local regulatory brick wall Smilie

Update: I have sent emails to the government standards and licensing groups to see if I can transmit at 500mW or less (seems that 500mW may be the ceiling for unlicensed applications, which should be OK for my applications).
 

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lora(7) 						 Miscellaneous Information Manual						   lora(7)

NAME
lora - Locality-Optimized Resource Alignment (LORA) framework DESCRIPTION
an acronym for Locality-Optimized Resource Alignment, is a framework for exploiting the locality domains in HP Non-Uniform Memory Architec- ture (NUMA) servers to improve performance or to reduce cost. On NUMA servers, a locality domain can consist of a related collection of processors, memory, and peripheral resources. All processors in a given locality domain will have equal or close to equal latency to any memory. LORA consists of a set of configuration rules, commands and tools to simplify the configuration process, and a new HP-UX kernel mode. The two HP-UX modes are called LORA mode and SMP (Symmetric Multiprocessor) mode. SMP mode is characterized by balanced utilization of all system processing resources, although the scheduler does account for system topology in processor scheduling decisions. In LORA mode, HP-UX attempts to align the processing resources executing an application within the minimal set of locality domains. This alignment results in improved application performance, or, alternatively, comparable performance with fewer processing resources. The use of LORA is recommended for and is generally beneficial to all workloads that exhibit locality of memory reference. The exception is technical applications that operate on extremely large data sets. The use of LORA requires the installation of a set of patches docu- mented in the HP-UX 11i Version 3 September 2009 Release Notes. The command can be used to establish server configurations that conform to the LORA rules. The command can be used to reestablish good resource alignment if it has been disrupted by a major workload transition or platform recon- figuration event. The kernel tunable parameter can be used to control the HP-UX mode. The kernel tunable parameter can be used to control the LORA memory allocation policies. The kernel tunable parameter can be used to control the LORA process launch policies. The tuning recommendations for LORA are as follows:(1) Leave the parameter at its default value of 0.(2) Leave the parameter at its default value of 0.(3) Leave the parameter at its default value of 1.(4) Apply the Server-Tunables product from the Tune-N-Tools bundle. AUTHOR
was developed by HP. SEE ALSO
loratune(1M), parconfig(1M), numa_mode(5), numa_policy(5), numa_sched_launch(5). a detailed white paper is available at lora(7)
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