You can learn more at http://wifi.xfinity.com/. There are more than 8M hotspots 
around the country today and we're doing more and more outdoor / public area 
WiFi hotspots. In my area (Philadelphia) I hit them all along the route that my 
commuter train takes, so it's convenient.

The XFINITY SSID is new and uses WPA2 IIRC.

The guys copied (Ken and Corey) are good contacts for any direct questions 
about Comcast's WiFi network.

As an aside, it does not look like UVM is covered yet but we expanded our free 
college streaming service this Fall and on campuses that have Xfinity WiFi, it 
would presumably help students stream from more places (see 
http://corporate.comcast.com/comcast-voices/xfinity-on-campus-expands-comcast-now-brings-streaming-tv-to-24-colleges-and-universities).

- Jason
Comcast


On 9/9/15, 9:52 PM, "NANOG on behalf of Michael T. Voity" 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> on behalf of 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

Sorry folks,   attachment didn't work.  Here is the link -

https://www.uvm.edu/~mvoity/pole.JPG

-Mike

Michael  Voity
University of Vermont

On 9/9/15 9:24 PM, Michael T. Voity wrote:
Hello,

Today another colleague and I discovered the famous 'xfinitywifi' ,'CableWIFi', 
'CoxWiFi' and a new one 'XFINITY' on our University campus.   After doing some 
poking around on campus we found these gems (attached picture) on 2 utility 
poles that pass by our east campus.    Standing underneath it I got a -46 RSSI 
in both 5 and 2.4Ghz, maybe 75-100 yards away inside our hockey fieldhouse, 
through  lots of brick, cinder blocks and metal, I was still picking the 2.4Ghz 
at -64.

Looks like the unit is getting power from the coax.


My question is,   I've done a little poking around and have not found anything 
substantial to learn more information about this Comcast program.


Any insight would be nice!


Michael Voity
University of Vermont





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