|
Houston, we have a problem: While
the city reports its Wi-Fi-connected parking meters work
great doubling as Wi-Fi hotspots downtown, their
much-ballyhooed "bubbles" efforts to unwire housing projects seems to have
narrowed in scope. The headline on the story in the Houston Chronicle, in
which yours truly is quoted, is perfect: "Houston's
Plan for Wi-Fi Bubbles Has Burst." The city now plans to use
Wi-Fi only to connect up community centers rather than bring service to
residents. As far as I and the reporter I spoke to for this story could
figure out, the networks will be running as password-protected clouds that
only computers in central locations will be able to access. I have no idea
why anyone would think this is a good idea. Bringing Internet access to
libraries, schools, and community centers is a perfectly marvelous idea,
but in low-income neighborhoods, the notion of putting free or affordable
Internet access in the home, paired with programs to offer inexpensive or
free refurbished computers along with training, is to deal with the
commensurate problem that kids can work from their homes instead of being
out on the mean streets. In many neighborhoods that are both poor and high
crime, parents keep their children in to avoid trouble. Thus, community
centers aren't the logical way to ensure greater access and bridge the
digital divide. These efforts should be trying to bring access parity
across income levels to match the ecumenical availability of information to
rich and poor.
Freakonomics
notices funny network names: A Dutch cafe using a service from
a company called They displays messages via network names (SSIDs) that
remind freeloaders to buy something: BuyAnotherCupYouCheapskate. I confess
to finding this story amusing, but not above the threshold to share, until
the New York Times's Freakonomics blog picked it up. That's partly because
even though the cafe is in the Netherlands, all the messages are in
English. Are Brits and Americans the only freeloaders. They, the company,
not an inchoate group of people, told me that they use a technique to
change the text display name of the SSID, while the underlying network
identifier remains the same. This keeps customers from being booted off
even as messages are dynamically rotated. Copyright ©2008
Glenn Fleishman. All rights reserved. Please notify us if you find this content
anywhere but at wifinetnews.com or wimaxnetnews.com. Reproduction of full
articles from RSS feeds is prohibited without permission.

|