This article from NYTimes.com 
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This week, I sent the link to this article and  another to the list, asking if we 
could get these internet high speed links established in Mpls neighborhoods. No bites, 
not even someone saying I'm an idiot. Where are you techies on this? RT? Sheldon 
Mains? Steve Clift? and any other like minded soul I may not know?   Phyllis Kahn 59B

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Good (or Unwitting) Neighbors Make for Good Internet Access

March 4, 2002 

By AMY HARMON


 

When David Sarno moved to a new apartment on the Upper West
Side of Manhattan recently, he learned he would have to
wait several weeks for the phone company to install a fast
Internet connection. But after opening his laptop, he
discovered with a surge of delight that he was already able
to check his e-mail and call up Web sites at lightning-fast
speeds. 

Someone nearby had Wi-Fi, the technology behind the
short-range, inexpensive and often unsecured wireless
networks that are rapidly sprinkling the nation with sweet
spots of airborne high-speed Internet access. 

"Thank God for my neighbor, whoever he may be," said Mr.
Sarno, 29, who has taken advantage of similar serendipitous
connections from a hotel room in Cambridge, Mass., and a
street corner in downtown Manhattan. 

For Internet enthusiasts, Wi-Fi is manna from heaven. The
technology - known in engineering parlance as 802.11 - has
been around a few years. But with a recent proliferation of
wireless data networks in homes, businesses and public
spaces, growing numbers of people who have properly
equipped laptops now find themselves able to tie into the
Internet on the run, courtesy - knowingly or unknowingly -
of someone else. 

>From business travelers to a new breed of bandwidth
hackers, people are surfing the Web and collecting e-mail
at airport lounges, coffee shops, park benches and bed. 

"Wi-Fi sort of came out of nowhere," said Tim Bajarin,
president of Creative Strategies, a technology industry
consultant. "But it's growing like wildfire." 

Wi-Fi, short for wireless fidelity, works a lot like a
cordless phone. The D.S.L. or cable Internet line, instead
of connecting directly to a computer, is plugged into a
small radio transmitter. Any computer with a receiver in a
radius of about 300 feet can potentially pick up the
signal. 

Many of the free rides these days are the result of
bandwidth bleeding from private networks that are intended
to let their owners connect to the Internet without being
tethered to a fixed spot in a home or office. 

Because the great majority of these wireless networks have
not been secured, it is easy for neighbors and passers-by
to use them undetected - although if enough freeloaders
download large enough files, legitimate users will notice
their own connections are been degraded. 

The popularity of 802.11 has also begun to inspire the
construction of networks that are intended to be shared,
either free or for a fee. 

"It's a fantastic thing," said Simon Skelly, who recently
hooked up a Wi- Fi network to the high-speed Internet line
in his apartment in the West Village in Manhattan so he -
and anyone else - can work from the two cafes down the
street. "It would be great if we could get the majority of
Manhattan covered." 

Mr. Skelly is one of several hundred wireless enthusiasts
across the country who have listed the locations of their
Wi-Fi networks on a Web site called freenetworks.org. 

One of the site's supporters, a nonprofit group called
nycwireless.org, recently persuaded the Bryant Park
Restoration Corporation to jettison a plan to provide
Internet cables in a small area of the park, in Midtown
Manhattan. Instead, the restoration group will finance the
installation of an 802.11 network designed to bathe the
entire park in bandwidth this summer. 

"We thought it would make people want to stay in the park,"
said Daniel A. Biederman, executive director of the
restoration group, a private organization that oversees the
park. 

It may well do that. At the University of Akron, Internet
use spiked to three times its previous level when the
school installed Wi-Fi transmitters throughout the campus
over the last year. 

In San Francisco, community- minded entrepreneurs have set
up a wireless "cloud" over parts of the Presidio, which
residents and visitors can use free. And Tallahassee, Fla.,
has perched 50 Wi-Fi transmitters on street lights and
traffic signals in a five-block area around the State
Capitol complex. For now, legislators and others in the
area have free access, but the city plans to charge for the
service eventually. 

The wireless buzz is being driven largely by the plummeting
price of 802.11 equipment. Wireless network cards that slip
into laptops now cost less than $90, and many new computers
come with the technology built in. Wi-Fi transmitters cost
less than $150, half the price Apple Computer (news/quote)
initially charged for its AirPort model - one of the first
to market - in late 1999. Antennas that can extend a
network's average range by several miles can be bought for
as little as $40. 

Moreover, because 802.11 networks send data over an
unlicensed slice of the radio spectrum, there are no
additional fees for the transmissions once the equipment
and wired Internet connection have been paid for. That has
led to some of the more ambitious plans to create extended
access areas. 

The unwelcome competition is one reason the
telecommunications industry, which has paid billions of
dollars for spectrum licenses to provide various wireless
services to consumers, has concerns about the popularity of
Wi-Fi. 

Several of the major cable and phone companies that provide
high- speed wired connections to the Internet say customers
are violating their service agreements - and perhaps
breaking the law - by letting others outside a given
household piggyback using 802.11. 

"Anyone who is using it that way would basically be
stealing," a spokesman for Time Warner Cable said of those
who patch into its Road Runner cable modem service. "It's
the same thing as cable theft." 

Those who use cable theft as an analogy point to federal
law, which prohibits anyone from receiving communications
offered over a cable system unless authorized by the cable
operator. 

But how the law will apply to the new technology has not
yet been tested. Some legal experts say using stray Wi-Fi
signals is like trespassing. Others say the burden of
securing the network may lie with its owner, as it does
with satellite broadcasters. It is not a crime to tune in
to unscrambled satellite programs, but it is illegal to
crack the encryption of scrambled broadcasts. 

For the practitioners of a new sport called "war driving"
or "net stumbling," the finer legal points may be better
left unexamined. With free software called NetStumbler and
a small electronic global positioning device, war drivers
seek to detect wireless networks and map their coordinates
by walking or driving past them. 

Engineers at National Semiconductor (news/quote) used such
a setup recently and found 800 Wi-Fi networks in a 14- mile
stretch of Silicon Valley in California. More than 70
percent of them were unsecured, a number that matches those
reported by less-professional surveyors in urban areas from
San Diego to Salt Lake City. 

The nationwide map at Netstumbler.com lists more than
10,000 unsecured Wi-Fi networks, all supplied by the
growing corps of security experts and "researchers" who use
the software. 

"Whoa!" wrote one New York stumbler on the site's message
boards. "Anyone see the network in the concourse in
Rockefeller Center right near the food public sit-down
area?" (Yes, it works.) 

One student at the New Jersey Institute of Technology who
declined to give his full name, said he regularly found
oases of access while waiting for trains in Newark. Not at
Pennsylvania Station in Manhattan, however: "The nearest
connection is nearly four blocks away," he said. 

But for all the Wi-Fi networks that are plundered without
permission, there is growing evidence that people are
willing to pay for wireless Internet access. 

Marie Forleo, an executive coach who lives in the West
Village, has memorized the hours and locations of all the
Starbucks (news/quote) coffee shops in the neighborhood
since she discovered last month that they provide Wi- Fi
access. She has used up her 30- minute free trial and pays
Starbucks $2.95 for 15 minutes when she needs to check her
e-mail. 

"It's less than a grande Frappuccino," Ms. Forleo said.


Wayport, a wireless provider that has connections in 450
hotels and several airports, including San Jose, Calif.,
and Dallas-Fort Worth, saw a 230 percent growth in use from
the third quarter to the fourth last year. In recent
months, several corporate customers have bought accounts
for $19.95 a month for each user to provide employees with
a way to be productive while logging longer airport hours. 

Sky Dayton, the founder of EarthLink (news/quote), one of
the nation's largest Internet service providers, decided
that there would be enough demand for Wi-Fi to start a new
company called Boingo Wireless, which last month began
selling a service that makes it easy for consumers to find
wireless hot spots and connect to them. 

According to IDC, a technology market research firm, the
market for Wi-Fi cards and equipment grew to $1.1 billion
last year from $600 million in 1999. About 7 million
wireless cards were sold last year, a number IDC expects to
grow to 25 million by 2005. 

Mr. Sarno, for one, plans to set up his own unsecured Wi-Fi
network as soon as he gets his Internet connection. 

"You share your Internet access, and I share mine," he
said. "That's the whole idea." 

http://www.nytimes.com/2002/03/04/technology/04WIRE.html?ex=1016723510&ei=1&en=7adc5b32971b005e



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