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Houston Narrows Scope Of Wi-Fi Project
Cordons off access just to community centers, schools....
by Karl Bode Saturday 15-Nov-2008 tags: business · wireless
In August of 2007, Earthlink, failing to make muni-fi work as an incumbent end-around, gave Houston $5 million for missing build deadlines. Earthlink ultimately walked away from citywide Wi-Fi entirely, but Houston used their money to deploy downtown Wi-Fi themselves. That network went live one year later, providing Houston residents with free service last August. Since inception the city's website hinted the initiative might not last, and now the Houston Chronicle reports the project has been modified to the chagrin of some locals:

Those who had high hopes that Houston's flirtations with WiFi would give them free home connectivity, that bubble appears to have officially burst. Instead, the city is using $3.5 million from a settlement with Earthlink to provide computers and free high-speed connectivity to community centers, nonprofit groups and schools.

With the exception of an area downtown with parking meter mounted hotspots, it looks like Houston is closing the network off to the general public. A project spokesperson says the post-Earthlink plan never involved Wi-Fi for the masses, and tells the Chronicle this effort is "about access with a purpose" and was never intended to be a Wi-Fi free for all. Glenn Fleishman of Wi-Fi Networking News seems utterly perplexed by the move:

I have no idea why anyone would think this is a good idea. Bringing Internet access to libraries, schools, and community centers is a perfectly marvelous idea, but in low-income neighborhoods, the notion of putting free or affordable Internet access in the home, paired with programs to offer inexpensive or free refurbished computers along with training, is to deal with the commensurate problem that kids can work from their homes instead of being out on the mean streets.

Houston's logic doesn't seem all that strange, given that restricting the municipal network to schools and community centers reduces network strain and bandwidth costs, while letting somebody else worry about wireless broadband across the rest of the city (which should make ISPs happy). The network was initially deployed to network parking meters and funded by Earthlink's screw up, so the school and community center Wi-Fi is just an added perk.

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Romney2012
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Just like BPL, muni-WiFi will die a deserved death

WiFi was never designed to work at a muni level and is not usable in situations where thousands of APs are spread across many square miles. WiMax and LTE will adequately fill that void as they are rolled out. That cities are realizing this is all to the good because the money they would waste on Muni WiFi can be better spent elsewhere.
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pnh102
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Re: Just like BPL, muni-WiFi will die a deserved death

Don't forget that most cities already have robust data coverage by one or more 3G providers. None of those rollouts cost taxpayers a dime.
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knightmb
Everybody Lies

join:2003-12-01
Franklin, TN
said by Romney2012:

WiFi was never designed to work at a muni level and is not usable in situations where thousands of APs are spread across many square miles.
My experience would beg to differ as that's exactly what my company does and it's been working just fine for quite a while now.

It's not the technology that is the problem, it's how it's planned and implemented that makes the difference. Throwing a bunch of wi-fi routers up on poles in repeater mode is what nearly everyone does and that's the problem. An effective city wide wi-fi network requires much more planning and technical tweaking to make it successful.
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aaronwt
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Woodbridge, VA

Why would they give free INTERNET access?

Just offer low price Internet access. Why would they give it away for free?

wifi4milez
Big Russ, 1918 to 2008. Rest in Peace

join:2004-08-07
New York, NY

Re: Why would they give free INTERNET access?

said by aaronwt:

Just offer low price Internet access. Why would they give it away for free?
Because people that frequent this website say so, thats why! Nevermind the fact that giving internet away makes no financial sense, thats just silly talk.
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sturmvogel
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Re: Why would they give free INTERNET access?

said by wifi4milez:

said by aaronwt:

Just offer low price Internet access. Why would they give it away for free?
Because people that frequent this website say so, thats why! Nevermind the fact that giving internet away makes no financial sense, thats just silly talk.
From a fan of the KGB as in your sig I am not sure what to believe.
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wifi4milez
Big Russ, 1918 to 2008. Rest in Peace

join:2004-08-07
New York, NY

Re: Why would they give free INTERNET access?

said by sturmvogel:

said by wifi4milez:

said by aaronwt:

Just offer low price Internet access. Why would they give it away for free?
Because people that frequent this website say so, thats why! Nevermind the fact that giving internet away makes no financial sense, thats just silly talk.
From a fan of the KGB as in your sig I am not sure what to believe.
My sig has nothing to do with the facts at hand.
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KrK
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Re: Why would they give free INTERNET access?

said by wifi4milez:

My sig has nothing to do with the facts at hand.
Some people could argue that about the whole message at times
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pnh102
Reptiles Are Cuddly And Pretty
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Mount Airy, MD
said by sturmvogel:

Obama '08. Will help resolve the terrible broadband issues we have that put us so far behind other countries.
Is your sig any more believable?
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patcat88

join:2002-04-05
Jamaica, NY
kudos:1

wifi is not a pancia

I never understood how wifi is supposed to help the ghettos magically turn into WASPy productive suburbs. Slow $20/$25 broadband is offered by most incumbent cable/tel ISPs. Computers are also easily available from used sources nowadays. I found a 2.4 ghz P4 abandoned today on the streets (missing a PS). Otherwise works fine.

And BTW, you can always goto the library or an internet cafe (works great in dirt poor Nigeria), no botnets that way either.

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