Don't you think we could do it cheaper?

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Subject: [BDPA-DigitalDivide] Philly Considers Wireless Internet 
for All
Date: Wednesday 01 September 2004 06:49 am
From: "J. Edwin Sapp" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Philly Considers Wireless Internet for All

By David B. Caruso
The Associated Press
Wednesday, September 1, 2004; 6:53 AM


PHILADELPHIA -- For about $10 million, city officials believe
 they can turn all 135 square miles of Philadelphia into the
 world's largest wireless Internet hot spot.

The ambitious plan, now in the works, would involve placing
 hundreds, or maybe thousands of small transmitters around the
 city - probably atop lampposts. Each would be capable of
 communicating with the wireless networking cards that now come
 standard with many computers.

Once complete, the network would deliver broadband Internet
 almost anywhere radio waves can travel - including poor
 neighborhoods where high-speed Internet access is now rare.

And the city would likely offer the service either for free, or
 at costs far lower than the $35 to $60 a month charged by
 commercial providers, said the city's chief information
 officer, Dianah Neff.

"If you're out on your front porch with a laptop, you could dial
 in, register at no charge, and be able to access a high speed
 connection," Neff said. "It's a technology whose time is here."

If the plan becomes a reality, Philadelphia could leap to the
forefront of a growing number of cities that have contemplated
offering wireless Internet service to residents, workers and
 guests.

Chaska, Minn., a suburb of Minneapolis, began offering citywide
wireless Internet access this year for $16 a month. The signal
 covers about 13 square miles.

Corpus Christi, Texas, has been experimenting with a system
 covering 20 square miles that would be used (for now) only by
 government employees.

Over the past year, Cleveland has added some 4,000 wireless
transmitters in its University Circle, Midtown and lakefront
districts. The service is free, and available to anyone who
 passes through the areas.

Some 1,016 people were logged in to the system at 2:20 Tuesday
afternoon, said Lev Gonick, chief information officer at Case
 Western Reserve University, which is spearheading the project
 and paying for a chunk of it.

"We like to say it should be like the air you breathe - free and
available everywhere," Gonick said. "We look at this like PBS or
 NPR. It should be a public resource."

In New York, city officials are negotiating to sell wireless
 carriers space on 18,000 lampposts for as much as $21.6 million
 annually. T- Mobile USA Inc., Nextel Partners Inc., IDT Corp.
 and three other wireless carriers want the equipment to
 increase their networks' capacity.

One part of the 15-year deal is cheap Wi-Fi phones for
 neighborhoods where less than 95 percent of residents have home
 phones. IDT, which has agreed to market the cheaper phone
 service in those neighborhoods, would pay lower rates for poles
 there than other companies would in wealthier areas.

Wireless technology has improved by leaps and bounds in recent
 years and become drastically less expensive.

The new "wireless mesh" technology under consideration in
Philadelphia has made it possible to expand those similar
 networks over entire neighborhoods, with the help of relatively
 cheap antennas.

Neff estimated it would cost about $10 million to pay for the
 initial infrastructure for the system, plus $1.5 million a year
 to maintain.

Philadelphia Mayor John F. Street, a technology buff who carries
 a wireless handheld computer everywhere he goes, appointed a
 14-member committee last week to work out the specifics of his
 city's plan, including any fees, or restrictions on its use.


� 2004 The Associated Press

-- 
Edward Cherlin, Simputer Evangelist
Encore Technologies (S) Pte. Ltd.
The Village Information Society
http://www.ryze.com/go/Cherlin
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