Pigeon Protocol Finds a Practical Purpose 113
Selanit writes "Since David Waitzman wrote his tongue-in-cheek Standard for the Transmission of IP Datagrams on Avian Carriers, there have been occasional attempts to actually transmit information via pigeon. One group back in 2001 successfully sent a PING command. But now there's a practical use for pigeon-based communications: photographers working for the white-water rafting company Rocky Mountain Adventures send memory sticks full of digital photos via homing pigeon so the photos will be ready when the rafters finish up. The company has details on how the pigeons are trained and equipped. It may not be a full implementation of the Pigeon Protocol, but it works in narrow canyons far off the beaten path — and just as David Waitzman presciently predicted, they occasionally suffer packet loss due to hawks and ospreys."
Packet loss (Score:2, Interesting)
I think the best part of the story is the packet loss explanation!! If only the pigeons could upgrade their internal CDMA protocol!
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No can do. This is a pure UDP implementation, feel the speed!
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If you're concerned about speed, I would suggest running trials of the African Swallow vs. the European Swallow.
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I suspect you could correct for packet loss through a RAIP (Redundant Array of Independent Pigeons) configuration. RUDP?
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So, how long before the media giants ban this form of P2P (Person 2 Pigeon)/(Pigeon 2 Person), or even P2P2P (Person to Pigeon to Person)?
Cache La Poudre (Score:5, Informative)
I rafted the Poudre this summer. It was a great time. The company we went with did a great job, not sure why the need to race photos back. Our photographer rode back with us, while we turned in our gear, changed clothes, etc. he set up in the office, and started showing the pictures to folks on an iMac. While we watched he burned a dvd. We had a big group so he set a price and sold us a dvd that we could all copy. It was pretty sweet. Mountain Whitewater Descents [raftmwd.com] was the company we used and I'd recommend them to anyone headed that way.
Apparently a while back some French trappers got snowed in and hid their gun powder by the river - that's how it got its name.
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He doesn't even have to mention the same river. His comment discusses the merits of the technology. His comment is extremely relevant.
In my opinion, pigeon protocal is not practical or pragmatic.
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What about the Pigeon Protocol? I've heard that works much better than the protocal ...
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I don't understand your question or statement. Could you rephrase? Are you trying to make a point?
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That may be the case for this company. If so they are using a different part of the river than we did. The section we started on is federally protected and there was a pretty tight window on when we could put in. We were told this was to limit the number of rafts and people on the river at a given time.
It's really a beautiful place and was pretty exciting. We caught the tail end of the season. I guess earlier when there is more run-off it is much more intense. I would like to try to go back and do a r
Not really TCPIPoP (Score:5, Funny)
This is less "TCP/IP over Pidgeon" and more "Sneakernet Over Pidgeon." Although if all the memory cards were the same size you could get away with calling it ATM over Pidgeon, I guess.
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Right there, at the end of that first sentence, it explains that there have been attempts to transmit information via pigeon. Not by IP over Avian Carriers. Nowhere in the summary does it actually claim that this is an implementatio
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Well, it is an implicit suggestion.
After all, humans have been using pigeons to transmit information for a LONG time before David Waitzman wrote that RFC. There IS a reason they're called Carrier Pigeons [wikipedia.org].
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There IS a reason they're called Carrier Pigeons
Yes, they carried diseases like the black plague.
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Actually, that would be rats, which carried fleas, which carried the bacterium Yersinia pestis.
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Carrier pigeons are in fact very cool animals. A family member of mine experimented with them extensively while she was in high school and I, in elementary school at the time, was fascinated. Using them to car
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Re:Not really TCPIPoP (Score:5, Insightful)
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Not even that I'd argue, more like pigeon sneakernet
Re:Not really TCPIPoP (Score:5, Funny)
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You'd have to make sure the current pidgeons were forked for that though.
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UDP = Useless Dead Pigeon
Another misleading headline...*sigh* (Score:5, Informative)
"Since David Waitzman wrote his tongue-in-cheek Standard for the Transmission of IP Datagrams on Avian Carriers, there have been occasional attempts to actually transmit information via pigeon.
Yeah, attempts like the victory at Marathon in 490BC...
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Yes I read this and thought, hrm, sounds more like SMPT via Pigeon, which would be only a slight update of what they have been doing for... hundreds of years.
Re:Another misleading headline...*sigh* (Score:4, Informative)
More like UUCP mail over pigeon, if we're comparing it to a protocol. On the other hand, we could just call it files by carrier pigeon... uh... why are we having this conversation again? It didn't say the pigeon protocol you're all thinking of (RFC 1149) was used — just that a pigeon protocol was used. I'll just be quiet now.
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"Since David Waitzman wrote his tongue-in-cheek Standard for the Transmission of IP Datagrams on Avian Carriers, there have been occasional attempts to actually transmit information via pigeon.
Yeah, attempts like the victory at Marathon in 490BC...
Hmm. [Emphasis mine]. Are you claiming that RFC1149 was written back in about 500BC or before? That would have involved someone predicting not just the Internet about 2500 years before it happened, but also the RFC process and that there would be a 1148 preceding ones. Impressive, but unlikely.
(Has anyone managed an SSL handshake by avian carriers yet?)
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No. The legend has a runner (who had fought in the battle) running back to Athens to announce the victory. He was so exhausted by the combination of the battle and the long run home that he died just after gasping out the good news. Nowhere in any account of the battle is there any mention of pigeons being used.
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So, thats an example of Sneakernet then. :)
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Other things aside, I like your current .sig, having used something similar myself a few years ago.
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that is funny (Score:2)
We use to always compare TCP/IP packets to pidgeons.. ..
The joke was send more pidgeons and stop routing them over the pond where the duck hunters are.
Brings to mind the old expression, never underestimate the bandwidth of a truck load of DLT tapes going 55mph. ..... Tapes on Planes
Or the recover plan of "TOPS"
YMMV
ping (Score:2)
yikes, I'd hate to see the ms on that ping reply.
I would hate to show you (Score:4, Informative)
vegard@gyversalen:~$ ping -i 900 10.0.3.1
PING 10.0.3.1 (10.0.3.1): 56 data bytes
64 bytes from 10.0.3.1: icmp_seq=0 ttl=255 time=6165731.1 ms
64 bytes from 10.0.3.1: icmp_seq=4 ttl=255 time=3211900.8 ms
64 bytes from 10.0.3.1: icmp_seq=2 ttl=255 time=5124922.8 ms
64 bytes from 10.0.3.1: icmp_seq=1 ttl=255 time=6388671.9 ms
from http://www.blug.linux.no/rfc1149/pinglogg.txt [linux.no]
Photos Obtained Over Pidgens (Score:4, Funny)
a.k.a. "POOP".
Re:Photos Obtained Over Pidgens (Score:4, Funny)
As is PHP Object Oriented Programming.
Yeah, I know, Offtopic... :-p
packet loss due to hawks and ospreys (Score:5, Informative)
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Ospreys have been known to devour Marines.
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the falcon business (Score:3, Interesting)
Without any further description, the teacher said, "You can't sell those birds. They're protected." She replied that she wasn't going to sell falcons. She was going to rent them.
Her plan was to get contracted by big box stores. When they get normal birds stuck flyin
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Using birds of prey to fend off pigeons from buildings has been standard practice for some while. I'm not sure you can decouple these birds so easily from their default environment though; I don't think that using them for too many buildings will work. They are highly individual birds that will fly back when they decide to, so it would be hard to run a tight schedule.
If there are many birds it would be more useful for owners of big buildings just to make a nesting site somewhere on the top of the building (
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Yeah, they are very specialized on fish. I suppose it could eat a pigeon if it was sitting beside it, but catching it in the air -- that's not going to happen. Also, the summary says "hawks and ospreys", but TFA said "There are hawks, ospreys in this canyon ... they do get them ... what are you going to do?" she said.. Reminds me of attitude to raptors you find among very old people,
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Someone can't spell (Score:2, Informative)
One of the story tags is "wortthless".
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Kind of hard to hack a Pigeon..
Not really. All you need is a shotgun (or maybe a handful of birdseed for the whitehats) for packet interception. Keep a couple of spare pigeons on hand and it wouldn't be that hard to launch a MITM attack. :)
Everything old is new again... (Score:5, Informative)
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That's because, while neither we nor they read or investigate anything we write about, the traditional new media has to wait long enough to at least give the impression that they might've plausibly interviewed someone or read a book.
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Freddie Star ate my Hamster [wikipedia.org]
(front-page of Murdoch's "The SUN" newspaper, 13th March 1986). Whilst completely untrue (according to Freddie) you can drop this phrase into any pub conversation in Britain today and everyone over 35 will laugh.
Of course if you have to pay to read it, it must be true. Presumably the more you pay, the more true it is
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The article took 2 years to reach Slashdot because pigeon 1 carried the text in XML, pigeon 2 carried the XSL to render the XML to HTML, and pidgeon 3 carried the embedded adverts. Pidgeon 3 however was apparently mis-routed and wound up at EWeek.com, where the lack of content went unnoticed.
To Black Jack Pershing... (Score:2)
Pretty cool (Score:2, Insightful)
Still useful. (Score:2, Informative)
This may be useful in a post apocalyptic world. Chances are, Internet style connectivity will be wiped out. Decentralized regional networks may still exist. Transporting high-density data using antique methods such as the pigeons can allow for FidoNet (remember that?) other BBS-style data exchange. Anything that can get the information moving again is a good thing.
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Pigeon data transfer has one big disadvantage -- pigeons have to be transported first to where you want the data from. Or you need to have a pigeon from a location where you want to send something. :(
Sadly, there is no way of bundling two pigeons so one can transfer them back and forth
That is the reason why pigeons were used to carry emergency or very important and urgent messages only.
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Useful Down Below as well - for those who remember Grim Fandango.
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Not impossible, but not all that practical either:
1) FCC rules say that you can't use the ham frequencies for commercial purposes so you have the problem of finding the bandspace.
2) Most of the data protocols that hams use are dead slow, designed for simple text messaging or low-res images.
KJ6BSO
Not the first time (Score:2)
In both cases they mention that some of the pigeons get lost, and here also that sometimes they are just too slow. Why not go for redundancy? Wouldn't it make sense to send two pigeons each carrying a copy. I think it would dramatically decrease the failure rate.
Of course to do such redundancy you would hav
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you would have to carry some device that could copy the pictures.
You mean, like, say, a netbook?
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That is an option, if you cannot find a smaller device to do the task.
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I was thinking about redundancy and I realized that if one pigeon is unsuccessful it is more likely that another pigeon released under the same conditions would also be unsuccessful. Not that it would necessarily fail, but if weather was the problem any pigeon leaving in that time frame would have the same problem.
I think the copy the memory card is a easy backup plan. Just bring a laptop or something to copy the memory card and you'll still have pictures even if the pigeon goes AWOL.
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Of course to do such redundancy you would have to carry some device that could copy the pictures. Does there exist cameras, which can do it? I can imagine there are plenty of situations, where people would happily pay the extra cost for the data security, it would not only be for pigeons.
Professional DSLR cameras tend to have two memory card slots these days, and they can be configured to save a copy of every image to both cards, as the photos are taken. Or they can also be used to make a copy of the contents of one card onto the other.
This is so Pigeon 2.0 (Score:1)
Well prior even to publication of RFC 1149, similar protocols were employed in the CAD business, as documented by a source I'd hope more Slashdot readers would be familiar with. [google.com]
Bandwidth and Latency (Score:2)
If the USB memory sticks were large enough (capacity-wise) this could actually have quite and impressive bandwidth and could easily rival a dedicated fixed-line broadband connection. It's the latency that kills you on this one though!
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pigeon dos (Score:2)
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No, a pigeon denial of service attack would be made with a shotgun.
Nothing New Here (Score:2)
I remember seeing a documentary about this on TV years ago, only back then they were carrying rolls of 35mm film. The only thing new is that they've upgraded to digital photographs and memory sticks.
Back then it was more impressive because they were able to send the rolls of film back to the visitor center and process them on a 1 hour photo lab machine (which doesn't take anywhere near an hour to process) and have the prints up on display by the time the rafters came in from their trip.
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Yeah, was just gonna post the exact same thing. I saw it in about 1985/1986 on Ripley's Believe it Or Not. Anyway, not a new idea....then again maybe this is the same company that was doing it 20+ years ago.
Loosen up, folks. (Score:2)
This is nothing new. Pigeon (not Pidgin) carriers have existence since...forever. They're still used in some limited cases today. I don't see anything terribly different done by these folks; heck, the pigeons don't even come back, so it's not full TCP...
Hence why this was meant to be funny...
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Pigeon connection is just as one-way as air-dropped dispatches. It just goes the opposite way.
You can't train a pigeon to seek out a location other than its home. The troops in the field had to carry a supply of pigeons with them and send them back to the base - but the base couldn't send a pigeon into the field.
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Animal war heroes statue unveiled [bbc.co.uk] (by HRH the Princess Royal)
Tommy the Pigeon V.C. [bbc.co.uk]
Pidgeons that hadn't been captured and destroyed on the ground were considered a serious enough threat to be shot down or attacked by special-trained hawk squadrons.
Old news (Score:2)
Posted: 06/24/2007 02:06:52 AM MDT
This is old news, I've even seen references to this before that. Also it has nothing to do with RFC 2549 other than birds carrying bits.
Been there done that (Score:1)
Good luck, agent Calavera. Viva la RevoluciÃn!
Kiwis did it first (well not actual kiwis... duh) (Score:1)
Gosh is it 2003 already.
Waitomo Adventures in New Zealand used pigeons for transporting camera cards approximately 1.571 eons ago.
This isn't news.
(I wonder if they still use them? A quick peek didn't show it on their site - only some annoying pop-up flash)
NB: I'm quite prepared to be proven wrong about the 'first' part - I researched this almost as long as it took to type this in.
If they lose it to predators (Score:2)
You always send the duplicate and keep the original just in case, seeing as a memory stick for 2gb..is 5$, i would say you can send 1 keep one, even give another as part of the package!
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