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Updated: NYC Broadband Advisory Committee Meeting on March 30 in The Bronx

A few weeks ago, I “posted information about the NYC Broadband Advisory Committee Meeting”:1 taking place on March 30. Here’s more information about the location and directions to the hearing. Also, the Advisory Committee “has a blog”:4 and “email address”:mailto:nycbroadband@gmail.com.

bq. Sponsored by Office of Council Member Gale A. Brewer (CD 6 – Manhattan), the Office of the Bronx Borough President Adolfo Carrion, Bronx Community College and the South Bronx Overall Economic Development Corporation (SoBRO), the New York City Broadband Advisory Committee will hold its first public hearing on Friday, March 30, from 10 am to Noon, in the Gould Memorial Library Auditorium, Bronx Community College, University Avenue at W. 181st Street. Below are directions.

bq. *Directions via Subway*

bq. Take the 4 train to Burnside Avenue. Go west on West Burnside Avenue for 4 blocks until you reach University Avenue. You should see the campus of Bronx Community College (BCC) in front of you. Turn right on University Avenue, walking alongside the BCC Campus until you reach the Front Gate at W. 181st Street. Take a left up the stairs to enter the college. Be prepared to present identification to the Public Safety Officer at the front gate. Go straight until you reach Language Hall and take a right. Immediately after Language Hall is Gould Memorial Library on your left. The auditorium is downstairs on the lower level of the Library.

bq. Here is a map of the Bronx Community College campus: “http://www.bcc.cuny.edu/tour/tour.htm”:2

bq. *Handicap Accessible Entrance to Gould Memorial Library*

bq. The handicap accessible entrance is at the rear of Gould Memorial Library. To get to that entrance, instead of turning right at Language Hall, go straight down the path. Then take the next right. Go straight down the hill until you reach the back of Gould Memorial Library. To your right will be double doors, which will lead you to the handicap accessible entrance to the Gould Memorial Library auditorium.

bq. *Directions via Car*

bq. The following is a link to directions to Bronx Community College if you are driving: “http://www.bcc.cuny.edu/directions/directions.htm”:3

bq. Public parking is located immediately after you enter the car entrance to Bronx Community College.

[1]http://www.wirelesscommunity.info/2007/03/05/nyc-broadband-advisory-committee-meeting-on-march-30-in-the-bronx/
[2]http://www.bcc.cuny.edu/tour/tour.htm
[3]http://www.bcc.cuny.edu/directions/directions.htm
[4]http://www.nycbroadband.blogspot.com/

Filed under: Event, New York City, NYCwireless, Policy

New America's Comments to FCC Arguing for Unlicensed Access to Unused TV Channels

NYCwireless signed onto comments that the New America Foundation with Media Access Project and allies (NAF, et al.) filed with the FCC about opening up unused “white space” TV band channels for use in broadband and wireless networks. The FCC Docket 04-186 is an essential measure to make more public spectrum available for building community (and other) networks, especially in rural spaces, but also in urban ones as well.

You can read the comments that were filed:

“Economic/Legal Reply Comments”:1
“Technical Reply Comments”:2

[1]http://www.newamerica.net/publications/resources/2007/reply_comments_to_fcc_on_tv_white_spaces_nprm
[2]http://www.newamerica.net/publications/resources/2007/technical_reply_comments_to_fcc_on_tv_white_spaces_nprm

Filed under: NYCwireless, Policy

Presentation on Estonia Wireless

John Heywood, Assistant Director of CITI, the “Columbia Institute for Tele-Information”:1, spoke at our February NYCwireless meeting about his research in Estonia and their extensive Wi-Fi program.

He talked about how Estonia became so Wi-Fi savvy. Apparently, when the country was still part of Russia, residents were able to receive TV and radio signals from Finland, and saw how wireless technologies were helping that country grow. When they became independent, the country as a whole made a decision to pursue what it saw as a way to become an economic powerhouse, and started innovative initiatives to develop wireless technologies. Estonia is now synonymous with technology innovation.

Estonia also has one of the most extensive “community wireless Wi-Fi networks”:3 of any country. And apparently the guy who started wifi.ee took as his inspiration the work NYCwireless has done building wireless parks, like Bryant Park.

Check out “John’s presentation (pdf)”:2, which has lots of interesting information about what’s going on in Estonia.

[1]http://www.citi.columbia.edu
[2]http://www.starfid.com/nycwireless.pdf
[3]http://www.wifi.ee

Filed under: Community Wireless, International, NYCwireless

DailyWireless Publishes 10 Most Connected Cities Report

“DailyWireless”:1, a great site with lots of technical and non-technical in-depth articles about wireless technology has published a report about the “The 10 Most Connected Cities in the World”:2.

Unfortunately New York City isn’t one of them. In fact, about half of them are cities in Asia, and most of the rest are ones in Europe. When the rest of the world is beating us at technology, we’ve really got to start working harder to catch up!

[1]http://www.dailywireless.com/
[2]http://www.dailywireless.com/features/most-connected-cities-030607/

Filed under: International, New York City, News, Urban Wireless

iPass Publishes Wi-Fi Usage Index

iPass, a network connection aggregator that concentrates on business users, has just “published a Wi-Fi Hotspot Index”:1 based on their user data. Given iPass’ size, they represent a significan proportion of all of the paid Wi-Fi usage throughout the world, so their data shows some very interesting trends.

The report shows data for more than 1 million users across more than 76,000 aggregated hotspots in 68 countries. Of particular note is the venue types: Cafes show the most popular usage with an average of 2 hours per connection. These numbers align well with NYCwireless usage patterns for our “SuperNodes”:2.

[1]http://www.ipass.com/pressroom/pressroom_wifi.html
[2]http://auth.nycwireless.net

Filed under: News, NYCwireless

Interview: Wireless co. — We’re a latte cheaper than Starbucks (The Villager)

Julie Shapiro interviewed me for an article she wrote in The Villager, a local NYC news-weekly titled “Wireless co.: We’re a latte cheaper than Starbucks”:1. The article talks about “FON” (about which I’ve written in the past) and their new plan to get people who live near Starbucks coffeeshops to install FON routers.

I talked to Julie about the fact that I’m very skeptical about FON’s plan, at least in New York City. First, for every coffeeshop in NYC, there’s maybe a couple of apartments that could offer competing coverage. And if the Starbucks is in a commercial building, the business on the 2nd floor isn’t going to install a FON router just to get the few dollars of revenue share that they might see.

bq. Most of the FON hotspots Spiegel has seen in New York City are in the apartments of people who live above the first or second floors. Since wireless Internet travels only 100 to 150 feet indoors, “Only a handful of apartments are able to take advantage of the hotspots,” Spiegel said. “Everyone else in New York City has no advantage.”

bq. While some Starbucks are located on the first floor of apartment buildings, others are in business buildings, surrounded by open lobbies with high ceilings, Spiegel said. In these cases, he doubts anyone will be able to take advantage of the FON promotion.

And of course, there’s the ISP acceptable usage policies, which make FON-type sharing illegal, unless you use an independent ISP or business-grade DSL connection:

bq. Besides, Spiegel said, sharing one’s Internet service can be illegal. Internet service providers like Comcast and Time Warner do not allow consumers to resell their Internet connection — in fact, consumers aren’t even allowed to give the connection away for free. Smaller companies like Speakeasy and bway.net, on the other hand, allow consumers to profit from reselling.

bq. Spiegel estimates that 99 percent of all Internet connections in the United States fall into the first category, making FON-style sharing illegal.

Plus, we believe that in public spaces and semi-public spaces, the internet should be free:

bq. On Gothamist.com, a New York City Web site, a poster named “jg” wrote, “Gross. Make Internet free.”

bq. While Spiegel and NYCwireless appreciate that FON educates the public about wireless Internet, he basically agrees.

bq. “NYCwireless has as philosophy that in public spaces, Internet should be free,” Spiegel said. “[FON has] a philosophy that you should be paying for the Internet in some way or another.”

[1]http://www.thevillager.com/villager_201/wirelesscowerealatte.html

Filed under: Interview, New York City, News, NYCwireless

Wi-Fi is the Air-Conditioning of the Internet Age

Randall Stross writes in his New York Time article “What Starbucks Can Learn From the Movie Palace”:1 about how hotspots today are just like air conditioning was in the early part of last century for movie theaters.

bq. In the 1920s, when air-conditioning began to be installed in movie theaters, owners had to spend a sizable sum — $50,000 (roughly equivalent to $570,000 today) — to transform the property into a “cold spot.” But it was worth it. Before the “refrigeratory process” came along, theaters could not draw customers during the summer because of the unbearable heat in confined space. With air-conditioning, patronage increased so sharply that even the largest investments were quickly repaid.

I’ve often used the comparison of Wi-Fi to 1920′s air conditioning in my talks, though my comparisons use the department stores of that time as the places of comparison. This viewpoint actually started with my friend at MIT, “Eric Plosky”:2. I think this comparison is an even better one than movie theaters because department stores are quasi/semi-public spaces. (In other words, you don’t have to purchase a ticket to get into a department store, unlike a movie theater.)

Back in the 20′s, department stores, which were the places to shop and be seen, started to install this new invention called “air conditioning”. It started with a couple larger stores, who could afford it. They saw that people were much more comfortable in a cool store, and would linger longer, which meant they were more likely to spend more money.

Smaller department stores saw this too, and some of them installed the expensive devices. These smaller stores saw an even bigger bump in sales, in part because of the novelty, and in part because they had something that many of the larger stores did not: comfort. Installing air conditioning, even though it was expensive, allowed smaller department stores to better compete with their larger rivals. Smart small store owners who could afford it installed the devices and reaped the benefits.

After a while, the larger stores woke up to the fact that they were being beaten by the smaller stores, and some of them also installed air conditioning. This in turn caused even more stores (both large and small) to install the devices because they began to realize that, with so many of their competitors offering such comfort to potential shoppers, they couldn’t afford to *not* install it.

An thus the technology of air conditioning became went through an inflection point: you couldn’t compete as a department store *unless* you had air conditioning. The devices became requirements for the business. Either you had it, or you closed up shop.

Wi-Fi is exactly like this. Starbucks is like a big department store that offered the amenity early on (though they charged for it). Lots of smaller coffee shops and other restaurants and bars started installing it — many with the help of local community wireless organizations like “NYCwireless”:3 and “Ile Sans Fil”:4 — and offered it for free. More and more, we’re seeing places install this cheap amenity because their competitors are doing it.

We’ve not yet passed the inflection point, but we’re heading there. I speak to businesses all the time that just want to install free Wi-Fi because they don’t feel they can compete without it.

Interestingly, we also see this with public parks. We get asked all the time to help get a free Wi-Fi network installed because a park wants to attract visitors, and they see other parks, like Bryant Park, that have been successful offering free Wi-Fi.

[1]http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/04/business/yourmoney/04digi.html?amp;ei=5090&en=65ffd17d76dd5fb5&partner=rssuserland&ex=1330664400&emc=rss&pagewanted=all
[2]http://www.subjectverb.com/www/
[3]http://www.nycwireless.net
[4]http://www.ilesansfil.org

Filed under: Community Wireless, News

NYC Broadband Advisory Committee Meeting on March 30 in The Bronx

On March 30, the “New York City Broadband Advisory Committee”:6 will meet in the Bronx for the “first of five public hearings to both educate the public on broadband and learn from the public about their experiences, or lack of, with broadband and Internet technology in New York City.” Over the past couple of years, NYC Council Member Gale A. Brewer, based on the testimony of a number of New Yorkers, “including NYCwireless”:2, helped “create the Broadband Advisory Committee”:3 to try to move New York City to the forefront of broadband accessibility and affordability.

NYCwireless will be there to help represent the interests of free public Wi-Fi, which hasn’t had as extensive distribution as midtown and downtown Manhattan. We’ve heard from a number of people and organizations in the Bronx that there’s a tremendous interest in free public Wi-Fi. “We’ve been working with Professor John McMullen”:5 and his students at Monroe College to build more free hotspots in local businesses.

*If you have any interest in helping New York City get affordable, universal, ubiquitous high-speed internet access, you should join us at this meeting.*

The public hearing will be on March 30, from 9am-11am in the rotunda of “Bronx Borough Hall at 851 Grand Concourse”:4. Council Member Brewer and Borough President Carrion invite all Bronx residents, nonprofit organizations and businesses to testify about the availability and affordability — or lack of — of broadband (that is, a high-speed connection to the Internet) in their neighborhoods.

Some questions that the Committee has are:

# Why is a fast affordable Internet connection important to you?
# What do you consider an “affordable” fee to pay for an high-speed connection to the Internet?
# If you have a broadband connection, what do you use it for (e.g., help your child do his/her homework)?
# If don’t have broadband or if you had a faster connection to the Internet, what would you use it for (e.g., market your business on-line or look for a job)?

The hearing in the Bronx will kick-off a series of five public hearings that will be convened in every borough of New York City. Based on these hearings and with the help of the New York City Economic Development Corporation, the Advisory Committee will report their findings and recommendations to the Mayor and City Council.

[1]http://nycbroadband.blogspot.com/
[2]http://www.wirelesscommunity.info/2005/05/05/testimony-to-the-new-york-city-council’s-technology-in-government-committee/
[3]http://nyccouncil.info/issues/intros_act.cfm?intro=Int%200625%2D2005
[4]http://maps.google.com/?q=851%2BGrand%2BConcourse,%2BThe%2BBronx,%2BNY%2B(Bronx%2BBorough%2BHall)
[5]http://www.wirelesscommunity.info/2006/09/14/thank-you-letter-from-monroe-college/
[6]http://nycbroadband.blogspot.com/

Filed under: Event, New York City, Policy, Urban Wireless

Podcast: Community Wireless Roundtable (Dec. 4, 2006)

h2. Agenda

* Attendance
* Announcements
* First New York-Berlin Live Community Wireless Video Conference
* Examples of successful local/municipal/city motions in favor of supporting community wireless infrastructures
* Updates from Community Wireless Groups Worldwide: Pakistan Wireless Networking Session

h2. Participants

* Alison Powell, Île Sans Fil
* Dan Adelman, Director of New Media, KDHX FM 88.1 / KDHX TV 21+2
* Dana Spiegel, NYCwireless
* David Young, CUWIN
* Gabe Sawhney, Toronto Wireless
* Jonathan Arbib, Rome Wireless Community
* Kafui A. Prebbie, oneVillage Foundation
* Laura Forlano, NYCwireless
* Malcolm Matson, OPLAN
* Mike Lenczner, Île Sans Fil
* Rich MacKinnon, Austin City Wireless
* Roland, wireless Network Administrator, WISP, North Cyprus
* Sascha Meinrath, CUWiN
* Sylvia Cadena
* Tracey Lauriault ogWiFi (Ottawa Gatineau Wifi)
* Vickram Crishna
* Warren Noronha

Filed under: Community Wireless, Community Wireless Roundtable, International, NYCwireless

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