[nycwireless] Help Needed: Installation of Madison Square Park Hotspot

2006-06-13 Thread Dana Spiegel
We're planning on installing a hotspot at Madison Square Park on  
Saturday, June 24. If you are interested in helping out with this  
installation, please email me directly.


We'll be trying to include some training on how to:
1) set up a Supernode using Soekris hardware
2) set up and point antennas
3) configure a DSL modem
4) CORRECTLY run ethernet cabling from the Access Point on the roof  
to the basement of the Shake Shack


Dana Spiegel
Executive Director
NYCwireless
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
www.NYCwireless.net
+1 917 402 0422

Read the Wireless Community blog: http://www.wirelesscommunity.info


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[nycwireless] Gotham Gazette: Wireless Access

2006-06-13 Thread Dana Spiegel
Gotham Gazette - http://www.gothamgazette.com/article/tech/ 
20060613/19/1882


Wireless Access
by Marcus Banks
13 Jun 2006

Earlier this month the New York Times criticized the slow growth of  
wireless Internet access in New York City, which was the centerpiece  
of Andrew Rasiej's bid for the office of public advocate last year.  
The Times noted that free or low-cost wireless access is particularly  
needed in poorer neighborhoods, where the cost of DSL or high-speed  
service is prohibitive.


New York City's current patchwork approach to wireless access is  
markedly different from that of other cities and many rural  
communities. The national trend is toward developing free or low-cost  
wireless networks that are accessible anywhere within a given region.  
New York City has focused on wireless access in parks.


Thus far the Department of Parks and Recreation has been trying to  
provide wireless access in selected parks through partnerships with  
various non-profit and commercial groups. In addition, several  
organizations have worked independently to "light up" selected parks.  
For example, the Bryant Park Restoration Corporation provides  
wireless access in Bryant Park, and the Alliance for Downtown New  
York provides the same service in eight public spaces, including  
three parks, in lower Manhattan. Both groups worked with NYC  
Wireless, a non-profit organization that advocates universal wireless  
access in New York City.


Parks Department Strategy

The parks department first solicited bids for vendors to provide  
wireless access in 2003. Despite skepticism from some City Council  
members and NYC Wireless, the department perceived wireless access as  
a means of generating new revenue. The bid sought out companies  
willing to pay a significant license fee to outfit some of the city's  
largest parks, in exchange for selling subscriptions and/or pay-as- 
you-go wireless access. Few vendors were interested, and over a year  
later the contract was finally awarded to Wi-Fi Salon, a small firm  
in Manhattan. Although Wi-Fi Salon has successfully launched wireless  
service in part of Battery Park, it is almost one year behind  
schedule for launching wireless service in nine other parks  
throughout the city. The parks department has given Wi-Fi Salon a  
deadline of the end of this summer for completing this contract, and  
may approach other vendors if this is not met.


Because the original bid did not generate as much interest or revenue  
as anticipated, the parks department issued a second bid for wireless  
vendors earlier this year. The new bid has lower licensing fees,  
allows vendors to bid on one park at a time rather than multiple  
parks only, and assumes that wireless access will be free to all  
individuals. In addition, there are shorter deadlines for completing  
projects once a contract is awarded. There are early signs of success  
for this approach; NYC Wireless is involved in providing wireless  
service in Dag Hammarskjold Plaza, and a Long Island company will  
work on the Brooklyn Heights Promenade and in Brooklyn's Columbus Park.


NYC Wireless Perspective

Even though NYC Wireless successfully competed for the recent parks  
department bid, Executive Director Dana Spiegel expresses concerns  
about it. He believes that wireless service should be treated as an  
amenity that is as important as a park bench. Spiegel also worries  
that, because of the costs associated with responding to the parks  
department bid, many qualified groups have ignored it.


Spiegel feels that the city should pay for park access if no other  
funds are available. With that said, in many instances parks  
conservancies or "Friends of" groups could pay for installation and  
maintenance of wireless service. However wireless access is funded,  
Spiegel argues that it is a modest financial proposition, which pays  
for itself in the creation of more vibrant parks.


Most NYC Wireless projects have not included the parks department.  
Union Square, Tompkins Square and Stuyvesant Cove Parks all offer  
wireless service established by NYC Wireless and interested local  
groups. A similar installation at Brooklyn Bridge Park is currently  
in development.


Narrowing the Digital Divide

One of the most important goals of universal wireless access is to  
narrow the digital divide. The South Bronx Overall Economic  
Development Corporation and Urban Communications Transport  
Corporation recently launched the first freely available wireless  
network in the South Bronx. Urban Communications Transport is a  
minority-owned business that was initially founded to provide wired  
Internet access in disadvantaged communities, and has now moved into  
the wireless realm. If the South Bronx network proves successful, it  
could serve as a model for similar networks in other neighborhoods  
throughout the city.



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[nycwireless] SF TechConnect WiFi Franchise: Video of 6/12 hearing - includes Esme Vos and Greg Richardson, privacy, disaster tolerant, interference, dig. inclusion, fiber

2006-06-13 Thread Kimo Crossman
includes testimony from Esme Vos of MuniWireless.com and Greg Richardson of
Civitium.com
 
To see activists concerns which discuss issues like:
 
+Interference on unlicensed spectrum
+no explaination on how the system will provide 90% indoor coverage for all
citizens - this is a big problem.
+concerns about providing a service funded in part on the privacy of 
+citizens 300k speed is a joke even in Africa Fiber study continues to 
+be 4 months out (it seems to be 4 months out at every meeting) no 
+funding for digital inclusion no needs analysis, no business case, no 
+Radio Frequency Study - (Civitium now says one will be completed in the 
+next few weeks) - yet a vendor Earthlink/Google has already been selected
is this similar to Amazon.com offering to outsource city libraries in
exhange for access to checkout records and profits to a corporation outside
the city?
+no serious consideration of a Municipally owned solution no 
+consideration of creating a Disaster Tolerant solution to allow the 
+public to communicate after a calamity
 
Click:
http://sanfrancisco.granicus.com/ViewPublisher.php?view_id=8
Select BOS City Operations and Neighborhood Services 6/12, skip to 1 hour,
14 mins to see activist's response to city plans


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