On Sun, 8 Aug 2004, Rob Kelley wrote: > > only if its something that they can show has no commercial value > > (otherwise the city would get sued by the people who > paid for franchises). > > Anthony: > > That's a hard one. What product of benefit to a community does not have > some "commercial value"? Something the user couldn't afford on the open > market? Something that is not currently sold in any market? Art? I *suppose* if you don't try to charge for the service, that would qualify.
> Can you give some general examples? -- NYCwireless - http://www.nycwireless.net/ Un/Subscribe: http://lists.nycwireless.net/mailman/listinfo/nycwireless/ Archives: http://lists.nycwireless.net/pipermail/nycwireless/
