Wi-Fi and the Cities

NY Times Editorial
June 6, 2006

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/06/opinion/06tue3.html?ei=5090&en=b8d19e86ca41fe76&ex=1307246...

No fewer than 300 cities and towns around the nation have taken wireless 
Internet
access, or Wi-Fi, to the people. San Francisco's aim is to make the entire city 
a
hot spot, Chicago plans to blanket the city with access, and large parts of
Philadelphia are to go wireless soon. But New York, which should be leading the
way, is dragging. A plan to offer free Wi-Fi access in city parks has been 
moving
slowly, and a larger vision has yet to take shape.

Wide dissemination of Wi-Fi is not the future. It is now, needed by businesses,
educators and especially the underserved populations on the wrong side of the
digital divide. Rural communities have known for a while that going wireless is
cheaper, more reliable and allows even the most remote areas to log in. It 
spares
the expense of laying down extensive networks of cables, not to mention the work
and time involved.

Local governments are filling a leadership void at the federal and state levels,
and they are going directly to providers to negotiate Wi-Fi deals. San
Francisco's mayor has turned to Earthlink and Google. Earthlink, based in
Atlanta, is also helping Philadelphia. In some of these deals, lower-speed
connections are free, with higher speeds available at a price. The providers 
also
hope to make money off advertising.

Surfing the net in the parks is a modest goal for New York, where some smaller
parks have already been hooked up by agreement between independent groups
managing those parks and NYC Wireless, a nonprofit organization. The city needs
to get moving to get the larger parks online, but it also has to get serious
about wider access. The minimal goal — pressed with energy in the City Council 
by
Gale Brewer of Manhattan — should be free or low-cost access in its densely
populated, poor neighborhoods in all the boroughs. That is where cable and phone
line options are out of financial reach, and where education especially suffers
as a result.
---end editorial

Frank A. Coluccio
DTI Consulting Inc.
212-587-8150 Office
347-526-6788 Mobile



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