Guys,

In recent news we have heard all about TWC and their efforts to thwart
grassroots wi-fi deployment. Here is a very encouraging article.

Read on,

http://news.com.com/2010-1071-954609.html

Wi-Fi and free lunches
By John Patrick
August 21, 2002, 4:00 AM PT

Stopping for a bite to eat in a small New England town, was I ever surprised
to find a Wi-Fi connection available at 1.2 megabits per second. Where was
this bandwidth coming from? No idea. Who was paying for this bandwidth? Same
answer.

One thing, though, was very clear: The advent of Wi-Fi is about to change
all of our lives in a major--and positive--way. I'll go further: Wi-Fi is
one of those grassroots phenomena that will soon become as ubiquitous as the
PC itself. The latest laptops have Wi-Fi antennas built into the lids, while
the wireless access points, which send and receive the Wi-Fi signals, now
cost less than $100.

Communications from the PC to the Internet or to another PC are as fast and
reliable as wired local area networks in businesses. Wi-Fi is one of those
grassroots phenomena that will soon become as ubiquitous as the PC itself.

 The range of Wi-Fi is about the same as the cordless phone--approximately
300 feet--or it was until some enterprising young people discovered they
could make a long-distance antenna from a potato-chip can. With less than
ten dollars worth of parts, the antenna can be constructed and put on a
roof, thus making it possible for people to use the high-speed Internet
connectivity at their place of employment--from their home or apartment
miles away.

People are using their Wi-Fi-enabled laptops in conference rooms, at home on
the deck and at the local Starbucks. But this is the tip of the iceberg.
Think about all the places where you have to "wait"--the car shop, medical
offices, hotel lobbies, restaurants, hospital check-in areas and, of course,
on a bus, train and in airport lounges.

Think about the concept of community services. When people go downtown, they
naturally expect the local infrastructure to include streetlights, fire
hydrants and parking spaces. Soon, I believe, they also will expect Wi-Fi
connectivity. Sitting on a city park bench and checking e-mail will not seem
so strange; in fact, it will be something people demand.

Not that everyone needs to be connected all the time, tethered to the
Internet. But if people want or need to be connected to the Internet, they
should be able to plug in. The Internet has transferred power from
institutions to people. Isn't it time to enable this power to become
pervasive?

The mysterious source of bandwidth at my sandwich shop may have come from a
nearby office upstairs or from across the street, operating without any
encryption that would thwart others from using their Internet connection.
But increasingly, you're finding apartment dwellers willing to share their
Internet connections with neighbors using Wi-Fi.

Meanwhile, many start-ups are building services to enable Wi-Fi to operate
much like our cell phones--hopping from cell to cell as we move about.
Community groups are linking satellite connections to Wi-Fi networks in
remote areas where DSL and cable are not available.

The issues, which are many, include security, privacy, business models and
the scalability of the infrastructure. If you had listed the issues and
concerns about the Internet in 1993 it would have been the same list! But
just like the Internet of ten years ago, the emergence of Wi-Fi is a
grassroots trend that is irreversible. Just like the Internet of ten years
ago, the emergence of Wi-Fi is a grassroots trend that is irreversible.

The fee structure and relationship to local phone companies will also get
worked out. Existing infrastructure companies that fail to understand that
the rise of community-based wireless networks will drive up total network
usage--and long-term revenue--will get pushed aside by new entrants into the
market.

Should we consider the diversion of Internet bandwidth at the sandwich shop
an instance of stealing? You can come at this question from several
perspectives.

If you take unlicensed software without permission of the owner, you have
possession and can use it at your will. If you "take" a Wi-Fi signal that
someone has made available, you can only use it when you are in range of the
wireless access point. What's more, you can only use it when the owner of
that access point has consciously (or unconsciously) made it available to
others.

Whether you should "take" the signal is another question. What does the
owner of the wireless access point intend? If they turn on encryption and
you hack your way into it then I would say that is stealing. The owner
clearly does not want somebody to use the signal. At this stage, the
"stealing" going on is mostly a result of wireless access point owners not
being aware of what's really going on.

Has the "free lunch" arrived? In the Internet's early days, many people
thought it was free. That misunderstanding eventually got cleared up. So it
is that community wireless networks will hopefully continue to spread. All
that's now needed are business models that can make this happen.




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