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Thank You Letter from Monroe College

Over the past year, NYCwireless has been working with Professor John McMullen and his classes at Monroe College. Rob Kelley, Laura Forlano, and I have each been going up to teach the students for a day about wireless technology and building community wireless networks. With our support, Professor McMullen has also had his students each take on a semester project to get a “community hotspot set up in a local business”:1 (and earlier this year also helping to set up our hotspot with SolarOne at Stuyvesant Cove park).

Word has reached the school of our efforts, and Mr. Jerome recently sent us this heart-felt thank you letter and a donation to NYCwireless.

This is the reason why we at NYCwireless do our work. Its not for the money (we’re just a non-profit) or even the media attention, but because of the difference we can make in people’s lives.

!http://wirelesscommunity.files.wordpress.com/2006/09/monroe_college_letter1.gif!

[1]http://auth.nycwireless.net/hotspots_map.php

Filed under: Community Wireless, New York City, NYCwireless

NYCwireless OneWebDay + Live Wireless Video Chat

!http://wirelesscommunity.files.wordpress.com/2006/09/top.jpg!:1

On September 22 at 12pm Eastern, as part of “OneWebDay”:1, “NYCwireless”:2 will be hosting a live video conference with community wireless groups around the world. We will be discussing the ways that free, public hotspots have contributed to our own and other local communities. We expect the video conference to last about 30 minutes.

The video conferences will be recorded and contributed to the “OneWebDay”:1 video archives. We will be live at Castle Clinton in Battery Park, New York City, where there will be many other activities going on as part of the event.

Please join us in Bryant Park and participate! Bring your mobile phones, PDAs, laptops and other wireless equipment. Feel free to host your own live video conference with friends around the world to participate in this event as part of “OneWebDay”:1.

*UPDATE: There is a change of location. We will be at Castle Clinton in Battery Park.*

[1]http://www.onewebday.org
[2]http://www.nycwireless.net

Filed under: Community Wireless, Event, New York City, NYCwireless

Where's My New York City Wi-Fi?

Ah, how short is the memory of our media outlets.

Not 2 months ago, there were “a number”:3 of “reports”:2 about how Wi-Fi Salon + Nokia were going to bring free Wi-Fi to New York City Parks. Of course, those reports didn’t mention that we already have a bunch of free Wi-Fi hotspots in some of New York’s most prominent parks, like Bryant Park, City Hall Park, Madison Square Park, Union Square Park, and Brooklyn Bridge Park, all of which were “NYCwireless”:1 projects.

But one thing these reports did mention was that our own City Council held a hearing, and “put a deadline”:4 on when Wi-Fi Salon should have its franchised parks online (after 2 years of virtually no hotspots under the Park Department’s oversight):

bq. At the City Council hearing, Robert L. Garafola, the department’s deputy commissioner for management and budget, said that the city had
extended the deadline to August.

bq. “We expect Central Park to be launched in July, and the rest of the parks in the late summer,” he said.

So, now that the summer is over, where are all of these Wi-Fi Parks? We’ve heard _nothing_ from Marshall about his company turning on these hotspots. The Parks Department and Commissioner Benepe have been silent. We’re now 30+ days beyond the *second* deadline that they set for Central Park, and close to that for the rest of their parks, and certainly we citizens have waited long enough.

Over this past summer, NYCwireless has brought online “a number of new hotspots”:5, including Brooklyn Bridge Park, Stuyvesant Cove Park, and Madison Square Park. We’ve launched (through the work of students at Monroe College) hotspots at a bunch of restaurants and gathering places in Brooklyn, the Bronx, and Harlem. We’ve upgraded some of our hotspots that provide free Wi-Fi for affordable housing residents at some “Dunn Development”:7 & “Community Access”:6 buildings.

Of course, that’s not to say that the Parks Department hasn’t been involved. They tried to force the folks at the Friends of Dag Hammarskjold Plaza pay for insurance using taxpayer dollars (the “Friends of” organization is funded by the City Council) before they pulled out of the Parks Department Wi-Fi RFP. Now Dag Hammarskjold Plaza is getting free Wi-Fi with the help of NYCwireless. The Parks Department also forced the fully operational Madison Square Park hotspot (built by NYCwireless) offline for over a month because they didn’t want that hotspot online before the Parks Department had their hotspots online (and we’re still waiting for that to happen…).

*So, Mr. Benepe, our Commissioner of Parks, where is all the free Wi-Fi in our Parks that you promised us? Are we going to have to wait until the winter, freezing outside with our laptops on our snow covered laps? I hope not.*

[1]http://www.nycwireless.net
[2]http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/060706/dath006.html?.v=57
[3]http://www.google.com/search?client=safari&rls=en&q=nokia+wi-fi+park&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8
[4]http://www.mail-archive.com/telecom-cities@googlegroups.com/msg00281.htmlhttp://www.technologyreview.com/read_article.aspx?id=16890
[5]http://auth.nycwireless.net/hotspots_map.php
[6]http://www.communityaccess.net/
[7]http://www.dunndev.com/

Filed under: Community Wireless, New York City, NYCwireless, Policy

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