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Earthlink Responds to my post about their Municipal Wireless strategy

A while ago “I commented on Earthlink’s Municipal Wireless Strategy”:1. Jerry Grasso recently responded on this blog to some of my suggestions:

bq. Dana: You state –

bq. “In the interview on the Wireless Weblog, EarthLink also acknowledges that there’s an issue with low income and digital divide service: though they can provide internet, families need PC’s as well. EarthLink would do well to persue partnerships with local non-profits for this part of the solution, as many cities have free or cheap PC programs that provide computers to low income residents. They’d also do well to work with local organizations to provide training and other services.”

bq. Actually we are – as you know, we spoke relatively early into our development process (we had just won ANA and PHI) and we discussed that the digital inclusion process would ‘include’ low-cost bandwidth for the financially disadvantaged.

bq. I mean, what’s the point of affordable broadband if you can’t afford the equipment to access it?

bq. Bear with us, we’ll make the appropriate announcements/info public when the time comes…

bq. Hope all is well – Jerry Grasso
EarthLink

I’m glad to see that Earthlink is looking at the big picture when it comes to their networks. As a company, they are best served when most people in their service areas have access to technology that will make their wireless internet networks meaningful.

[1]http://www.wirelesscommunity.info/2006/02/01/a-closer-look-at-earthlinks-muni-wifi-strategy/

Filed under: Community Wireless, Muniwireless, Policy

Wi-Fi Planet: Big Apple Wi-Fi…When?

“Wi-Fi Planet has an article”:1 that investigates if and when New York City will have a unbiquitous Wi-Fi network. The article, however, is a clear misrepresentation of reality.

Inexplicably, they have failed to even mention the dozen or so public hotspots that NYCwireless has helped create in New York City’s parks and other public spaces, including Bryant Park, Union Square Park, City Hall Park, and the South Street Seaport.

By leaving out this information, the article gives the false impression that New York City doesn’t have a vibrant community of people who, though community wireless and non-profit means, have given free Wi-Fi to a sizable percentage of residents. Gerry Blackwell, the author, implies that New York could only gain some form of Wi-Fi network through municipal or solely private investment. *NYCwireless has proven over the past five years that community and non-profit means should be a component of any such network, and that as a non-profit, we’ve done more for the development of Wi-Fi in this city than private companies and government agencies combined.*

[1]http://www.wi-fiplanet.com/columns/article.php/3585761

Filed under: Community Wireless, Muniwireless, New York City, News, Urban Wireless

UTOPIA municipal fiber delivers faster, cheaper internet than any other network in the US

“Sascha Meinrath posts”:1 about “UTOPIA”:2, which is a municipal fiber network that provides the highest speed internet available for consumers in the US.

bq. UTOPIA is an 14-city consortium serving hundreds of thousands of people. As UTOPIA user, Brad Thurber sums up, “The speeds are insane… We’ve been on the system for a month now and there has been absolutely no down time.” According to Utopia’s website, “As a minimum, UTOPIA will deliver 100 Mbps of bandwidth to every connected home and 1 Gbps of bandwidth to every business.” Services are already available at “10Mbps for $39.95/month”:3, “15Mbps for $44/month”:4, or get “Internet, Phone, and Cable services for around $90-120/month”:5.

So if a municipal network can bring to suburban and rural areas the same high-speed internet at _cheap prices_ that European and Asian telecom companies make available, what does that say about our big telco and cable companies? What sort of mis-management and money wasting has gone on at these big private companies like AT&T, Verizon, and SBC to make them unable to service their markets efficiently? If I were an investor in any of these companies, I’d be seriously questioning them right now, and holding them accountable for not persuing a significant marketplace.

[1]http://www.saschameinrath.com/2006feb04utopia_municipal_fiber_network_demonstrates_that_low_cost_pricing_and_high_speed_networking_doable_in_the_us_too
[2]http://www.utopianet.org/
[3]http://www.mstarmetro.com/services/iband.html
[4]http://xmission.net/utopia/index.html
[5]http://www.mstarmetro.com/pricing/utopia.html

Filed under: Community Wireless, Muniwireless, Policy

Cities Peg Wi-Fi as Next Must-Have Amenity

I was recently “interviewed for an article”:1 in the Knowledge@W.P. Carey magazine published by the W.P. Carey School of Business at Arizona State University:

bq. Robert St. Louis, professor of information technology at the W. P. Carey School of Business, adds that Wi-Fi is just one step in the right direction. “It’s part of the equation,” he says. “Free or low-cost connectivity plus a low-cost computer plus freeware equals the end of the digital divide.”

bq. St. Louis recalls watching a teacher in a financially struggling city school “beg” and scramble for computer equipment to use in the classroom. “Having computers in kids’ hands, and having those kids connected, would allow this teacher to do so many things he can’t do now,” St. Louis says.

bq. It is this kind of philanthropy that fuels NYCwireless, the non-profit organization that has been promoting and establishing public-access Wi-Fi hotspots throughout Manhattan since 2001. “Just as parks have benches and trees, community wireless is a community benefit,” says Dana Spiegel, executive Director of NYCwireless.

bq. Spiegel explains that his group started deploying community wireless in parks and open spaces as a good-neighbor effort, but the group has evolved to also offer access to low-income households that can ill afford the monthly broadband fee. “To raise the family up in terms of lifestyle and resources, they need Internet access,” he says.

bq. …

bq. In Tempe, Ariz., city managers are relying on a private company, MobilePro, to deploy and maintain a wireless network that will be available to the city departments for free and to citizens for reduced subscription fees. “About the time you get this thing built out, WiMax is going to come along,” says Bank One’s Clark. “What leverage does Tempe have to go to their provider and say, ‘Well, now you have to switch to WiMax.’”

bq. NYCwireless chief Spiegel doesn’t view obsolescence as a significant risk, just a circumstance to be factored into the deployment. Spiegel points to the strategy Philadelphia will follow with Earthlink at the helm of that city’s project. “They have a model for how often network equipment will have to be replaced and an estimation of the lifespan of the technology,” he explains. “Wi-Fi is going to be around for the next decade, and over the next five years, it will transform quite a bit. You build that into your plan.”

[1]http://knowledge.wpcarey.asu.edu/index.cfm?fa=viewArticle&id=1183

Filed under: Community Wireless, Interview, Muniwireless, NYCwireless

Study: 'Digital divide' affects school success

This is an older article that I failed to post at the time, but eSchool News reports on a study that the “‘Digital divide’ affects school success”:1

bq. Having a computer at home increases the likelihood that students will graduate from high school, a UC-Santa Cruz researcher claims in a report that casts the digital divide in a new light. But others question the report’s conclusions.

The report details a number of key findings:

* Teenagers who have access to home computers are 6 to 8 percentage points more likely to graduate from high school than teens who lack access to a home computer, after reportedly controlling for individual, parental, and family characteristics.

* Only 50.6 percent of blacks and 48.7 percent of Latinos have access to home computers, compared with 74.6 percent of whites.

* Only 40.5 percent of blacks and 38.1 percent of Latinos have internet access at home, compared with 67.3 percent of whites.

* Among children, slightly more than half of all black and Latino children have access to a home computer, and about 40 percent have internet access at home. By comparison, 85.5 percent of white children have home computer access, and 77.4 percent can use the internet at home.

Clearly, as more of our society and economy is tied to the internet, these disparities within different ethnic groups is going to have a greater and greater impact, and will only serve to grow the digital divide.

This is one of the reasons why citywide municipal networks and muni-wireless networks are even more important, since they provide affordable and universal internet access across an entire city, regardless of the demographics of the local areas.

[1]http://www.eschoolnews.com/news/showStoryts.cfm?ArticleID=5999

Filed under: Muniwireless, News, Urban Wireless

A Closer Look At EarthLink's Muni WiFi Strategy

The Wireless Weblog “offers a glimpse”:1 into EarthLink’s municipal wireless strategy.

A couple of months ago, I and some other NYCwireless folks also got on the phone to speak with a few people at EarthLink about their plans. Of particular interest is that they are persuing an open access network, where any ISP or other organization can buy carriage on their networks (like DSL used to work). This is a good strategy, and one that every municipality should require (though some are not). This ensures that there is a competitive marketplace in the wireless ISP space.

In the interview on the Wireless Weblog, EarthLink also acknowledges that there’s an issue with low income and digital divide service: though they can provide internet, families need PC’s as well. EarthLink would do well to persue partnerships with local non-profits for this part of the solution, as many cities have free or cheap PC programs that provide computers to low income residents. They’d also do well to work with local organizations to provide training and other services.

[1]http://wireless.weblogsinc.com/2006/01/28/a-closer-look-at-earthlinks-muni-wifi-strategy/

Filed under: Community Wireless, Muniwireless, News, Policy, Urban Wireless

Grand Rapids requires Network Neutrality in municipal wireless network

“Glenn Fleishman”:1 sent me a note that Grand Rapids, MI has required that Network Neutrality be a part of their municipal wireless network:

2.2.1 Open Service Provider Network
* Fair and Equal Access: The network shall be open to multiple Service Providers (SPs) and Content Providers (CPs) on a fair and equal basis to deliver services and content to end users (subscribers) on a retail basis.
* Wholesale Access: SPs and CPs may acquire wholesale bandwidth or peering access to the network to support innovative content or applications.
* No Blocking: The network shall not exclude access to any Internet content or block any network ports, except when required to deal with network security incidents.

This is how all networks should be operated, and are requirements for all municipal networks.

[1]http://www.wifinetnews.com/
[2]http://www.ci.grand-rapids.mi.us/index.pl?page_id=3928

Filed under: Muniwireless, News, Policy

New book about Philadelphia municipal wireless network

“Fighting the Good Fight”:1 appears to be the first in what I am sure are going to be a number of books about strategies for municipal networks. Craig Settles, a business strategist, writes about the still to be deployed Philadelphia municipal wireless network.

The book:

* recounts Philadelphia’s efforts against incredible obstacles to launch its initiative;
* includes interviews with city officials, steering committee members, constituent groups and vendors involved with the project;
* helps you develop the business case for your government’s use of municipal wireless technology; and
* presents key lessons to help you successfully deploy wireless technology.

I really have no idea about this book, as I haven’t read it yet. I haven’t heard about any work that he’s done in the municipal wireless space — I suspect he is writing mostly from the general strategy angle, and doesn’t have much specific municipal experience yet. He was, apparently, the Director of Electronic Commerce for Metricom, the company that deployed an early urban wireless system called Ricochet.

[1]http://hudsonhousepub.com/fgf/

Filed under: Muniwireless, News, Policy

Municipal Broadband: Resistance is Futile

“Wi-Fi Planet reports”:2 on a new research report by analyst Pam Duffey with “visiongain”:3, “Municipal Broadband Networks: Market impact and implications, 2006-2011″:1

bq. Legal opposition in some states notwithstanding, Duffey says in a statement, “We believe resistance toward Muni networks is futile.” She says the idea that a municipality should provide the network, or at least the means for widespread broadband, is quickly becoming not just an option but a duty.

bq. “By 2010/2011,” says Duffey, “we believe the majority of cities and townships in the US will have a municipal wireless network in place, and the focus then will be on uniting them into a seamless, if not centralized, national network.” Many, she says, will offer wireless broadband service as a utility along with gas, electricity and water.

[1]http://www.visiongainintelligence.com/reportDetail.aspx?reportId=1271&tab=1
[2]http://www.wi-fiplanet.com/news/article.php/3580231
[3]http://www.visiongainintelligence.com/

Filed under: Community Wireless, Muniwireless

Advocates of Wi-Fi in Cities Learn Art of Politics

A “great article”:1 in the New York Times (“same article on C|NET”:2):

bq. January 19, 2006

bq. Advocates of Wi-Fi in Cities Learn Art of Politics

bq. By GLENN FLEISHMAN
SEATTLE, Jan. 18 – The idea of building citywide wireless networks from the community level was suspiciously simple back in 2000, although the plans sounded like the work of underground revolutionaries. “All of us were very idealistic, and all quite strongly opinionated,” said Adam Shand, founder of Personal Telco, which had visions of such a network in Portland, Ore.

bq. There as elsewhere, it was seen as a three-step process.

bq. First, build home-brew Wi-Fi antennas and develop software to make outdoor wireless networks affordable and practical.

bq. Second, persuade thousands of people in each city to stick Wi-Fi antennas out their windows, on their roofs or in their places of business to serve collectively as the nodes of a network. (Some groups sought to share existing commercial broadband Internet access – often regardless of whether an Internet service provider allowed that kind of sharing – while others wanted to build a separate community network.)

bq. Third, link those thousands of nodes into neighborhood networks that would themselves connect into a cloud of free citywide Wi-Fi coverage. That’s free as in free beer as well as free as in freedom: most advocates envisioned no restrictions on content or participation, and no access charges. In contrast, almost all early Wi-Fi hot spots were pinpoints of service, had fees attached and restricted use.

bq. Step 2 was never completed, which is why victory speeches seem, at first glance, out of place. Nonetheless, “community wireless accomplished spectacularly well what it set out to do,” said Dana Spiegel, president of NYCwireless, a volunteer wireless advocacy group in Manhattan.

bq. While attendance at some community networking groups has plummeted and some smaller groups have disappeared, their technical and political impact has never been higher. Wireless advocates no longer dangle dangerously from rooftops mounting antennas built inside potato-chip cans, although some still provide technical help to business owners and nonprofit groups in creating free Wi-Fi hot spots.

bq. “The problems that were hard in 2001 were technical ones,” Mr. Spiegel said. “Now, they’re personal and relationship and political ones. The technology, we almost don’t even think about it anymore.”

bq. Greg Richardson, president of Civitium, a consulting firm, says that movement was the impetus for government-run citywide wireless Internet plans. Mr. Richardson has been a consultant on municipal wireless policy and technical issues for Philadelphia, San Francisco and other cities.

bq. Community wireless gave municipal planners “the validation that a lot of those ideas could work,” Mr. Richardson said. Early and continuing municipal efforts to provide small areas of free access in parks and downtown districts were and still are often created in conjunction with these community groups.

bq. The move from building physical networks to building political influence, many advocates say, stems in part from an August 2004 forum organized by the Champaign-Urbana Community Wireless Network in Illinois.

bq. At the event, many community wireless leaders met for the first time. Sessions were conducted with politicians and members of nonprofit groups interested in diversifying media ownership. Sascha D. Meinrath, the network’s project coordinator, said he saw a political awakening hit the technically focused participants.

bq. “We could develop all of these technologies, we could come up with the holy grail of wireless technologies, and then it would be illegal to deploy it,” he said. After they returned from the conference, several wireless advocates became involved in the political debates over municipal broadband. These debates intensified after Philadelphia announced in late 2004 that it would build a citywide Wi-Fi network.

bq. In quick succession, other cities announced their own plans, including Minneapolis; San Francisco; Anaheim, Calif.; and Tempe, Ariz.

bq. Much of the advocates’ involvement has centered on stressing network neutrality, in which a network operator has little say over what devices are used on a network and for what purpose.

bq. The issue became more prominent after recent statements by the chief executive of AT&T (the former SBC) suggesting that content providers like Google might be required to pay fees to reach AT&T’s Internet access customers. Scattered reports also indicate that some access providers may be blocking or interrupting Internet phone services.

bq. Michael Oh of NewburyOpen.net, a commercially sponsored free Wi-Fi zone on Newbury Street in Boston, said, “I don’t think anyone in the SBC world or the policy-making world would have anticipated that there would have been anyone at the table like us when it came to municipal wireless.”

bq. Many wireless advocates said they already had relationships with local politicians, and now were stepping up to the state level; some were contacted by officials trying to make sense of broadband policy. Richard MacKinnon, founder of the Austin Wireless City Project, testified at state hearings in Texas and joined in a successful fight against a bill to restrict municipal broadband service.

bq. Wireless advocates “have done more to bring forward the concerns of network neutrality as well as open access” than anyone else in the political process, Mr. Richardson said. “They have a very loud voice in an advocacy role.”

bq. A policy statement by NYCwireless lists several principles that define network neutrality: a city or network builder must resell service to other Internet service providers, avoid restrictions on content or types of service (like Internet phone service) and allow all legal devices to be connected to the network – meaning that Internet telephone adapters and wireless cameras would be as legitimate as laptop Wi-Fi cards.

bq. Because of concerns over neutrality, many community groups have focused on how to create independent networks that require neither government support nor an Internet connection to be useful.

bq. The Champaign-Urbana network is developing software that allows computers and Wi-Fi gateways to organize into a larger network as they find other nodes. The approach is called mesh networking; the software would be open sourced and distributed at no cost. (Mesh networks are to be the basis of all the municipal Wi-Fi networks currently planned, but are to use commercial equipment and proprietary software.)

bq. Seattle Wireless is taking a different approach to creating fixed networks using wireless equipment. Since 2000, its founder, Matt Westervelt, and other members have planned to create a central point that would act as a relay medium for local groups seeking to connect their offices, create temporary networks for events or offer Internet connections to others.

bq. His organization raised $2,500 for a climber to place network equipment on a cellular tower on Capitol Hill, one of the highest spots in Seattle. The cost of upkeep is to be donated by a private company.

bq. Community advocates want to use both these independent networks and municipal broadband to carry new kinds of locally focused services and data.

bq. Mr. Oh and The Boston Globe (a division of The New York Times Company) are experimenting in locations around Boston with what they call Pulse Points: freestanding Wi-Fi nodes with no Internet connections. These nodes carry only local discussion boards and information.

bq. At a Pulse Point in the South Station train terminal, every other board posting in the early days “was a flame about why there was no free Internet access,” Mr. Oh said. Now, the spot is routinely used to exchange information and personal stories.

bq. Mr. Spiegel said that the transition from hardware and networks to the higher level of programs and politics was inevitable as networks spread.

bq. “In the end, what all of us were trying to do was to change the way people thought about communications,” he said. “The Internet wasn’t something that you sat down at the computer to use, but that it was something that permeated our lives – it just didn’t have the distribution to permeate our lives.”

[1]http://www.nytimes.com/2006/01/19/technology/circuits/19wifi.html
[2]http://news.com.com/Advocates+of+citywide+Wi-Fi+learn+art+of+politics/2100-7351_3-6028573.html

Filed under: Community Wireless, Muniwireless, Network Neutrality, New York City, News, NYCwireless, Policy, Urban Wireless

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