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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

Brooklyn Bridge Park Hotspot Sign

Brooklyn Bridge Park recently put up some signs around the park to announce the availability of the hotspot in the park. Here’s wheat they look like:

!http://wirelesscommunity.files.wordpress.com/2006/08/brooklyn_bridge_park_sign.png!

Filed under: Community Wireless, New York City, NYCwireless

Podcast Interview on Wi-Fi Networking News

Glenn Fleishman of “Wi-Fi Networking News”:2 interviewed me this past week on his podcast series.

In the podcast, Glenn and I speak about NYCwireless and the work it has done and continues to do in New York City. We also cover: NYCwireless’ efforts to put Wi-Fi in New York parks, the challenges with that, and what’s happening in Central Park, and an RFP issued by the economic development arm of the city that will examine the state of broadband across all the boroughs and what might be done to improve access to the Internet to all residents.

“Podcast [40 min., 20 MB, MP3]“:1

[1]http://www.wifinetnews.com/audio/wnn_012_dana_spiegel.mp3
[2]http://www.wifinetnews.com/

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

CUWiN/UIUC Partnership Awarded $500,000 NSF Grant To Develop Next Generation Open Source Mesh Wireless Technologies

Sascha Meinrath and his team just announced a big grant to help develop open source wireless mesh technologies. Congrats, Sascha!

bq. University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign partners with CUWiN to build high-performance, robust open source wireless mesh networking technologies.

bq. The National Science Foundation (NSF) has awarded $500,000 in grant funding to support a research and development partnership between the Champaign-Urbana Community Wireless Network (CUWiN) and the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign (UIUC). This initiative, “Toward building a Performance-Predictable Wireless Mesh Network”, focuses on the development of wireless routing protocols, network testing systems, and gateway discovery in open-source technology. The grant, part of the Network Technology and Systems Program of the NSF, provides support over a three-year period.

bq. “CUWiN is building the next generation of mesh wireless technologies. Most importantly, CUWiN is releasing our software under an open source license — allowing communities, municipalities, organizations, and individuals around the world to deploy low-cost alternatives to current proprietary systems.” stated Sascha Meinrath, CUWiN Executive Director.

bq. Community and municipal wireless networks have gained tremendous attention in recent years. The ultimate objective of this CUWiN/UIUC partnership is to incorporate research results and system prototypes into production code to be widely distributed by CUWiN. With the help of CUWiN, the research to be carried out by UIUC researchers will make a real impact and effect high-throughput, cost-effective broadband access both for the U.S. and worldwide.

bq. “I am extremely pleased with the fact that NSF recognizes the importance of carrying out research on a real multi-hop wireless network. CUWiN provides us with a city-wide research testbed to understand how, and to what extent, wireless links are affected by PHY/MAC attributes and other environmental factors. All the measurements we make on CUWiN will help characterize the behavior of wireless links and identify control ‘knobs’ in the MAC/PHY layers with which the network capacity can be optimized.” Principal Investigator, Jennifer Hou, stated.

bq. CUWiN’s mission is to help bridge the digital divide by developing low-cost, open source, wireless technologies and making them available to community and municipal networks around the world. CUWiN networks have been established in urban settings like Chicago, Illinois, and Washington, D.C., as well as rural places like the Mesa Grande Indian Reservation near San Diego, California, and Apirede, Ghana. CUWiN continues to expand its development testbed in Urbana, Illinois in partnership with the City of Urbana and the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.

bq. “The wireless technologies being developed by CUWiN as a part of this initiative hearken back to the innovation and vibrancy of early Internet development.” stated Ross Musselman, CUWiN Outreach Coordinator. “With a focus on maintaining Internet freedom, these new technologies support digital inclusion around the globe.”

Filed under: Community Wireless, Mesh, News

New York Daily News: Students spread wi-fi

Some of us from NYCwireless (Rob Kelley, Laura Forlano, and me) have been training a class of students at Monroe College about how to install free, public hotspots. And the Daily News “has written about it”:2.

*Students spread wi-fi*
Tech wizards bridge digital divide in city

BY BILL EGBERT
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER
Increasing numbers of city residents will be able to surf the Web while they dunk their doughnuts, thanks to technology students at a Bronx college.
Students in Monroe College’s advanced wireless technology course are installing wireless Internet connections at several locations in the Bronx and upper Manhattan, including a Dunkin’ Donuts in the east Bronx.

Last semester, they installed wi-fi in Manhattan’s Stuyvesant Park, and at a Harlem coffee shop.

“It’s good experience for them in a cutting-edge job,” said their professor, John McMullen. “And it’s a service to the community as well.”

Not only will the Web access be free to anyone with a wi-fi-ready laptop, the installation and equipment are essentially free to the hot spot hosts.

While the students earn college credits, the hardware is donated by NYCwireless, a nonprofit promoting free wi-fi access in the city.

“The Monroe College students have done a lot of really important work,” said Dana Spiegel, executive director of NYCwireless.

“They’re really plugged into their community. They’re the ones who know where the best places will be for new hot spots. They also help involve the community, which is crucial.”

While City Hall is lagging far behind cities such as Chicago and Philadelphia in backing citywide wi-fi networks, small-scale initiatives like Monroe’s and SoBRO’s new hot spot at the HUB are starting to fill the gap – to the delight of local businesses left on the wrong side of the digital divide.

“We’re really excited about it,” said Billy Gonzales, owner of Billy’s Deli & Grocery at 83 West Fordham Road, due to be wired shortly. “Our customers are excited too. I think it’ll be good for business.”

Other spots the class will turn hot this year include the Dunkin’ Donuts on Boston Road and Burke Ave. in the Bronx, Java’s Brewin’ Coffee Shop in Harlem, Coogan’s Restaurant in Washington Heights and Little Hands Day Care in Brooklyn.

Monroe’s first collaboration with NYCwireless – wiring Stuyvesant Park in Manhattan – was a first in more ways than one. The hot spot was installed in conjunction with alternative energy nonprofit SolarOne, and is the first solar-powered wireless access in the New York area.

An interactive map of free wi-fi hot spots throughout the metro area can be found at “http://www.nycwireless.net”:1.

Bronx businesses interested in being wired as a public hot spot can contact McMullen at “johnmac@acm.org”:mailto:johnmac@acm.org.

[1]http://www.nycwireless.net
[2]http://www.nydailynews.com/boroughs/story/429005p-361758c.html

Filed under: Community Wireless, New York City, News

Interesting Uses for NYCwireless Technology

Every once in a while, we hear from people around the country that have made use of some of the technology that NYCwireless has created or has helped to develop, such as Pebble Linux or Wi-Fi Thank You.

Jim Akens, who’s a Senior Engineer at the “Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution”:3 in Massachusetts recently contacted NYCwireless to let us know about how his research institution is using Pebble Linux to set up an off-shore wireless network to enable real-time data reconnaissance.

bq. SWAP stands for “Ship-to-Ship/Ship-to-Shore Wireless Access Protocol”.

bq. SWAP is a collaborative project to provide wireless networking between ships within the UNOLS research fleet and between those ships and UNOLS port facilities. SWAP has been designed to also facilitate connections with instrumented buoys.

bq. The active administrators consist of a few volunteer engineers from varying institutions who have collaborated over several months to argue about the details and make it all work.

bq. The goal of our labor has been to provide voluntary hardware recommendations and software configurations to meet the requirements set forth by the UNOLS Technical Enhancement Committee RVTEC. These requirements were summed up in a series of “StoryScenarios”.

bq. To meet that goal we have provided a parts list complete with vendor information where the items can be purchased, elaborate instructions regarding construction of the devices and their installation, preconfigured operating system distributions that can be freely downloaded and detailed instructions regarding how to install the software and complete the configuration for your situation. And of course, we are happy to come and do this all for you.

bq. To necessitate interoperability, we also provide an administrative role, doling out network addresses, hostnames and other details to participants.

This is a great use of wireless technology, and a great example of why NYCwireless develops and provides open source technology and information to help enable new uses for this technology.

You can find out more information about the Woods Hole wireless network “here”:1 and “here”:2. They’ve even got some great maps of the mesh network they’ve created:

!http://wirelesscommunity.files.wordpress.com/2006/06/tiogalog1.jpg!

[1]http://www.sssg.whoi.edu/swap
[2]http://www.sssg.whoi.edu/whoi_swap
[3]http://www.whoi.edu

Filed under: Community Wireless, Mesh, NYCwireless

New York Times Editorial: Wi-Fi and the Cities

A “New York Times editorial”:1 on June 6 advocates both free public Wi-Fi in NYC parks as well as universal affordable broadband. The article specifically mentions NYCwireless’ work in these areas, and calls for the Mayor and the rest of the City’s leadership to step up and start addressing some real issues. Far from the usual “scare article” about Wi-Fi, this editorial trumpets the great work that NYCwireless and other interested parties have done, and the benefits we have brought to this great city.

bq. “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”

bq. “some smaller parks have already been hooked up by agreement between independent groups managing those parks and NYC Wireless (sic)”

bq. “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.”

The Gray Lady is spot on correct in addressing issues of affordable broadband, which has long been an important initiative and topic of discussion by NYCwireless.

Your hard work is paying off. People are pointing to our example as the way it should be done.

Good work! Let’s keep it up!

[1]http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/06/opinion/06tue3.html?ex=1150257600&en=c37853eee83da5ef&ei=5070&emc=eta1

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

Volunteers Needed: Brooklyn Bridge Park Network Installation on Monday, May 22 @ 5:30pm

We will be installing of the Brooklyn Bridge Park on this Monday, May 22 at 5:30pm. Please dana@nycwireless.net directly if you are interested in participating. We will be installing the hotspot plus 2 antennas, doing some spectrum analysis, and also checking the coverage of the hotspot in the park.

We need your help to make this project a success, so please try to help out with this installation.

Filed under: Community Wireless, New York City, NYCwireless

NYCwireless Testimony for NYC Council Hearing on Wireless Internet Access in New York City Parks

Today is the New York City Council’s hearing on Wireless Internet in NYC Parks. I “wrote about this hearing”:2 a few weeks ago:

bq. On Monday, May 15 at 1pm, I will be testifying about the state of Wi-Fi in NYC Parks. The hearing will be held in the Committee Room at City Hall by the Committee on Technology in Government. The hearing, chaired by Council Member Gale Brewer, will be a joint oversight hearing with the Committee on Parks, chaired by Council Member Helen Foster of the Bronx, on the topic of wireless Internet access in New York City parks.

bq. This hearing is coming at an interesting time, as NYCwireless is expanding its Park coverage. In the past 3 years, the NYC Parks department has succeeded in lighting up only part of one park, and their RFPs (one 3 years ago, another a few months ago) have been widely criticized for being structured so that non-profits like NYCwireless cannot easily bid, and for failing to successfully incentivize developers to create Parks hotspots.

bq. The hearing should be an interesting one, especially since the only successful Wi-Fi deployments in New York City came from NYCwireless. Even though we don’t operate all of the existing hotspots anymore (though this may change), NYCwireless or its members built almost all (except 1 or 2) of the hotspots that have graced New York City and served its citizens and visitors.

Here’s the testimony I’ll be delivering later today. A “_PDF version is available_”:1:

h3. Testimony to the New York City Council’s Technology in Government Committee

Good morning. My name is Dana Spiegel and I am pleased to be here today to testify to the New York City Council’s Technology in Government Committee on behalf of NYCwireless, a non-profit organization that advocates for and enables the growth of free, public wireless networks in New York City, for which I serve as Executive Director. NYCwireless is an all-volunteer organization with seven (7) board members, approximately sixty (60) active members, and hundreds of members around the area and country.

Over the past five years, NYCwireless has been active in the deployment of free, public wireless networks in over a dozen New York City parks and open spaces through partnerships with local parks organizations and Business Improvement Districts (BIDs). We have worked with NYCHA licensed low-income housing developers to light up three (3) low-income housing developments in Manhattan, Brooklyn, and the Bronx. We have created community engagement programs that take advantage of parks-based and other wireless networks in Manhattan, such as our annual wireless arts festival, Spectropolis. I and other board members regularly speak at industry conferences and at New York area Universities and Colleges to educate and engage students in the creation and use of public wireless networks and the benefits they bring to New York CIty. The organization sits on the FCC Consumer Advisory Committee with a number of other national community organizations, and we are engaged both nationally and internationally with other Community Wireless groups.

I am here to speak briefly about two topics that I believe are directly related to the City Council’s hearing on wireless Internet access in New York City parks: How NYCwireless has worked to directly bring free public Wi-Fi to those New York City parks that offer this amenity, and How the New York City Parks Department can help to bring this amenity to all parks.

h3. Free Public Wi-Fi in New York City Parks

Free public internet access in parks begins with NYCwireless seeking local interest and support. We work with local organizations, such as BIDs — like the Alliance for Downtown New York — and “Friends of…” groups, that approach our organization seeking help. Once locations are identified, we assist with the design of the wireless equipment deployment plans and seeking funding to support their build-out. NYCwireless provides design, installation, and support for the networks that we build through infrastructure, volunteer help, and the extensive know-how that we have developed over the past five years.

The equipment that we use is open source and standards based, to ensure maximum compatibility with end-user equipment, including laptops, PDAs, and more recently wireless VOIP phones (this last technology is still in its infancy). As a result, we ensure that both industry standard and novel uses of our networks are unrestricted, allowing residents, students and artists to invent new technologies and uses for public wireless networks. Spectropolis, our annual Wireless Arts festival produced with the Downtown Alliance and the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, brought thousands of residents and visitors to downtown New York to experience new forms of art and better understand how free public hotspots can be used.

Our hotspots have generally been deployed outside of park grounds and public facilities, or in the case of Bryant Park, using facilities provided by the licensed private park operator. We generally mount our equipment atop or on local buildings with the support of our partner organizations, beaming the wireless signal into the park. This deployment strategy is sometimes ideal, since equipment can be installed quickly and there are sometimes no facilities within the park to support the mounting of equipment. Though we have attempted to involve the Parks Department in these deployments, our efforts often fall on deaf ears.

We can often deploy a hotspot for only a few thousand dollars, and in under two months, to service most or all of a park. Much of this time is spent designing the network, ordering equipment and DSL internet service, and gathering necessary agreements. Actual equipment installation can take 1-2 days.

Our two most recent projects highlight our expertise and affordability. A few weeks ago, working with Solar One, the City’s first solar powered “Green Energy, Arts, and Education Center,” we lit up Stuyvesant Cove Park at 23rd Street and the FDR. This hotspot, which we believe is the north-east’s first solar powered public hotspot, provides free Wi-Fi to visitors and local residents from Solar One’s learning center. The hotspot was deployed with the help of a class of students from Monroe College, who learned how to deploy a hotspot through our education initiative. The hotspot is powered by a small 4-inch square antenna attached to Solar One’s building, and is barely visible from the park grounds. Solar One sponsored this hotspot in order to bring more people to their park, and provide information about their organization through its portal page. They intend to integrate it immediately into the events they hold in that area.

Within the next few weeks, NYCwireless will be deploying Brooklyn’s first public hotspot in DUMBO. Working with the DUMBO BID and Two Trees Management, free internet will be available in Brooklyn Bridge Park. In addition to providing this amenity, the DUMBO BID expects to integrate the hotspot into all events that take place in the park. More than other parks-based hotspots, the Brooklyn Bridge park hotspot is an essential amenity for the numerous parents who are moving to that area, so they can bring their kids to the park and watch them while still being able to work remotely.

In addition to these two parks, NYCwireless has been working closely with the Friends of Dag Hammarskjöld Plaza to bring Wi-Fi to that park. The “Friends of” organization felt that having Parks Department involvement was critical, and submitted a response to the recent RFP. We were informed in the last week that our network was awarded the contract to install the hotspot in the plaza. The proposal fee was sponsored by the “Friends of…” organization, and included a $1 franchise fee to be paid to the Parks Department.

h3. New York City Parks Department

As previously mentioned, NYCwireless has occasionally attempted to involve the Parks Department in our efforts. Unfortunately, we have been altogether unsuccessful in attracting their attention, even though almost all NYC parks that provide free Wi-Fi are NYCwireless projects. We have found that it is far more effective to deploy our networks within privately operated parks like Bryant Park and Stuyvesant Cove Park, or work entirely outside of the aegis of the Parks Department, beaming the wireless signal into the park from outside.

When the Parks Department released its first RFP over 2 years ago, NYCwireless considered bidding on the project. After reviewing the requirements, we determined that as a non-profit organization, we would be unable to meet the RFP’s onerous requirements and costs. We understand that there were only a few proposals submitted, and that in the time since the contract was awarded, only a small section of 1 park has been lit up. In the same time, NYCwireless has deployed a number of parks and public spaces, helped to educate residents and students across New York City about how to safely use public hotspots, and brought free Wi-Fi to 3 public housing buildings.

Though we were involved in a single park response to the current RFP, we determined that the terms of the current RFP nor the Parks Department’s attitude towards providing this amenity were not changed sufficiently to enable NYCwireless to independently provide a suitable proposal. We believe that a comprehensive change in perspective is needed at the Parks Department if New York City is to see a significant growth in City supported public hotspots.

We would ask the Parks Department directly: If the original RFP has clearly failed to directly produce the expected flowering of free public hotspots, why was the second RFP not significantly changed, and why were proven stake-holders like NYCwireless not consulted to ensure that the RFP be envisioned and structured properly to garner more and better responses, and that any proposal have a greater chance for successful deployment?

We believe that free internet is an amenity and should be provided to all New Yorkers just as grass, trees, and benches are. The costs of such a widespread deployment would be easily offset by the cost savings and efficiencies afforded by a high-speed wireless network available in all parks. This wireless network could be used by the Parks Department to run sensors, provide the means to automate its workforce, speed up the operations of the Parks Department while on location, and provide necessary infrastructure to support additional means of commerce by private franchisees. Such a network would also provide a means to inform the public about all news and events related to the parks, and would return parks to their rightful place as central gathering places for local neighborhoods. A parks-based free Wi-Fi network would require proper investment and support by the City, and should empower local stake-holders, as NYCwireless has done in our projects.

The failure of the Parks Department to address any of these issues is saddening. The people that suffer the most are the residents and visitors of this great city. We hope that the City Council’s involvement will help change the direction of the Parks Department’s initiatives, and NYCwireless will continue to work to bring free public internet to all New Yorkers.

[1]http://wirelesscommunity.files.wordpress.com/2006/05/nycwireless-new-york-city-council-testimony-5-15-06.pdfwp-content/uploads/2006/05/NYCwireless%20New%20York%20City%20Council%20Testimony%205-15-06.pdf
[2]http://wirelesscommunity.files.wordpress.com/2006/05/nycwireless-new-york-city-council-testimony-5-15-06.pdf2006/04/26/new-york-city-council-hearing-on-wireless-internet-access-in-new-york-city-parks/

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

Wi-Fi in Central Park

Aric Boyles, creator of “CentralPark.com”:1, recently asked visitors of his website whether they’d like to see a free hotspot in Central Park. The results are overwhelming, but hardly surprising:

p=. !http://wirelesscommunity.files.wordpress.com/2006/04/wi-fi_meetup_logo.pngwp-content/uploads/2006/04/Picture%202.png!:1

We’re trying to work with him to see what we can do to help those 87%!

[1]http://www.centralpark.com

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

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