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Apart from invitations to present papers at upcoming conferences we have not heard from Amity since June 2020.  Sep 4, 2020 when they forwarded an email originating July 11, 2020

Earlier they had saidThey then said:

  • "We are still working on the portability of the app from Android to Flutter, which will enable the app to be downloaded in iOS environment along with Android. Currently, our application is supported by Android only. Samaksh is looking forward to this issue. We are also discussing how the location feature will add functionalities to our application, and the PingER project will be more than just static servers and we can better monitor the internet with growing mobile communication. Shivang will mail you the list of all the proposed ideas we have on our mind, on what we can do with our mobile application. We will forward the list to Les Cottrell Sir and Bebo White Sir and get it discussed with them too."

    "One more thing I wanted to ask you is, can we have the ideas to be working on, or the subdomains, some particular topic we should pursue? Because there are a lot of facts we collected alone in the Coronavirus topic itself, and we need something more specific to work upon, like monitoring some particular countries, the government transparency on data, or measuring the impact the pandemic has on each country on a global scale. Please guide us into this. It would be a great help."

At that time In response we sent them an analysis of the impact of Covid-19 on PingER measurements. See the full report so far (main focus is on Africa and to a lesser extent South America) is at PingER and Covid-19 by Region. At the time we suggested "A possible project for Amity might be to extend the detailed analysis to South Asia. We would be happy to assist as needed."

They responded: 

  •  People's movement and the wave patterns can give us great insight into how the virus is spreading and its impact. With the advent of festivals in India in coming months, we are afraid we may be nearing a wave. We are trying to find its relation with various other factors, one being internet performance. The government has imposed various lockdowns and unlocking with different rules, we are also going to study its direct impact with COVID-19.

Concerning the Android PingER app, the July 11 2020 email said:

  • We have successfully implemented the Ping through our mobile application, and the data is saved in the default PingER format, with 2 fields in addition, the latitude and longitude of the place.

    An android application was implemented before, but this time we made a Flutter app, which makes it possible to distribute the app to both Android and iOS platforms via a single source code.

    Regarding the format of data stored, we can only store it in JSON format, because it is the most convenient and best way to store. However, we made a python script which can parse the JSON data to Plain Text format and give the output.

    In addition to functionality of the previous app, we are also storing the data locally on the user's phone, which is plain text format in a file, under the folder //Internal Storage/SLAC_Pinger/<date> <time>.txt

Concerning the Android App, Umar pointed out that we need to understand/specify the end goal of the project. The project can support mobility since it records GPS coordinates. One needs to decide how to utilize the data gathered. It can be useful for evaluating Telco service providers. Unlike today's PingER which has continuous data between monitoring stations and targets, we would expect the mobile data to be much more sparse both in terms of time and monitors (cell-phones). Further, it is community-driven rather than centrally. It would appear to be similar to Thousand Eyes or Speedtest app that enables cell phone users to make on-demand measurements of throughput from their phones to targets around the world. The measurements would be archived and can then be summarized and reports presented, e.g. comparing connectivity from area to area on maps and or by a carrier. Telcos are also making such connectivity measurements for their network. An advantage of the current proposal is that it would be across service providers, and also have less network impact than say Speedtest. 

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