This should be a Minneapolis story. I have been urging city gurus to do
something like this for over a year. Could be done in parks, public
buildings, neighborhoods, public housing etc. This is the beginning of
the article (the moderator rejected the whole article as being too
long.) and the  link is at the end.

With Wireless, an English City Reaches Across Digital Divide

May 31, 2003
By MARK LANDLER 






MANCHESTER, England, May 29 - Three years ago, Shirley
Hughes lived a life of dreary routine, collecting welfare
checks, bringing up two children as a single mother,
passing her evenings in front of the television. 

Today, she teaches her neighbors how to use computers at a
local college while studying for a teaching certificate. At
home, she skips <object.title class="Movie" idsrc="nyt_ttl"
value="7425">"Buffy the Vampire Slayer"</object.title> in
favor of the Internet, which she surfs avidly, downloading
patterns for patchwork quilts, her favorite hobby. 

Ms. Hughes's computer is connected to the Internet "24/7,"
as she puts it, through a technology known as Wi-Fi. For
her, it has been a virtual passport out of the decaying
industrial landscape of East Manchester, a place only now
recovering from the end of history's last great commercial
revolution. 

Wi-Fi, or wireless fidelity, has generated a lot of
excitement here and in the United States as a way to offer
high-speed Internet access in airports, cafes, bars and
restaurants - anywhere one finds a surfeit of laptop-toting
customers and a scarcity of telephone jacks. 

In Manchester, the once-grimy Victorian city famous as the
birthplace of the Industrial Revolution, Wi-Fi is being
used, for the first time ever on this scale, as a way to
bridge the digital divide. 

"We wanted to give people access to the latest technology,"
said Sean McGonigle, a local official who led the effort to
build a network in Manchester. "In our wildest dreams, we
didn't envisage the impact it would have." 

Ms. Hughes, 40, marvels at the changes in her life. "If not
for this, I'd still be cleaning house," she said. 

Unlike the latest third-generation, or 3G, cellular
telephone technology, where European providers are ahead of
their American counterparts, Europe trails the United
States in the development of Wi-Fi. But there have been a
raft of projects begun here in recent weeks, suggesting
that Europe has caught the bug.  (to be continued).


http://www.nytimes.com/2003/05/31/technology/31WIFI.html?ex=1055526308&ei=1&en=b4a3634e7feab2c0

Phyllis Kahn  State Rep 59B
TEMPORARY REMINDER:
1. Don't feed the troll! Ignore obvious flame-bait.
2. If you don't like what's being discussed here, don't complain - change the subject 
(Mpls-specific, of course.)

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