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Poor Reporting by the BBC About NYC's Wireless Lamp Post Licensing Deal

In his article titled “New York set for citywide wireless”:1, Matt Wells talks cautiously about the future of wireless technologies in New York City, however he seems to have a misunderstanding about what’s actually happening here, and mixing up two separate and different wireless initiatives and futures.

The Department of Information Technology and Telecommunications of the City of New York (DoITT) has indeed licensed 18,000 city lamp posts to 6 telecom companies for wireless use. However, the purpose of this deal is to enhance cell phone coverage in the city, and to bring added telecom capacity to these networks.

The licenses, while not restrictive in the airwaves that can be used, are not, as Mr. Wells seems to erroneously represent, intended to build a city-wide Wi-Fi data network similar to the ones that we, NYCwireless, have helped to build in many public parks and places in Manhattan.

Certainly, health risks should be considered. But most, if not all, of the antennas that will be deployed on the city’s lamp posts operate in cell phone frequencies, not Wi-Fi and Microwave frequencies. Such a plan *is not* like putting thousands of microwave ovens outside of your bedroom door, operating 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.

Neither will the lamp post antenna deployment extend Wi-Fi coverage throughout the city. To accomplish such a feat would require an entirely different strategy on the part of NYC DoITT, and would also best include those members of the local community, like NYCwireless, who are already helping to provide such free service.

[1]http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/3578982.stm

Filed under: New York City, News, Urban Wireless

Interview in NYC Center for an Urban Future December 2004 Report on NYC's Broadband Gap

I was interviewed by the “Center for an Urban Future”:1, a “New York City-based think tank that fuses journalistic reporting techniques with traditional policy analysis to produce in-depth reports and workable policy solutions on the critical issues facing cities.” In their December 2004 report on “New York’s Broadband Gap”:2, I am quoted about how the City Government can take steps to address this gap and the general Digital Divide that still exists in many parts of NYC through the use of Broadband Wireless technologies.

[1]http://www.nycfuture.org
[2]http://www.nycfuture.org/images_pdfs/pdfs/NY_Broadband_Gap.pdf

Filed under: Interview, News, Urban Wireless

Interview on WKCR Radio in Manhattan

I was interviewed today by Jesse Chanin, who is a reporter for “WKCR Radio in Manhattan (88.9)”:1, about wireless technology and the free wireless that we provide through NYCwireless. In the interview, I talk about how New York City can get better and more public Wi-Fi, especially in areas of the city that are less affluent, as well as ways that the City government can become more involved.

I’ll post a link as soon as I get a copy of the recording.

*Update:* The MP3 of the talk show session is now available “here”:2.

[1]http://www.columbia.edu/cu/wkcr
[2]http://www.sociabledesign.com/file_download/30

Filed under: Community Wireless, Interview, News

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