Hotels with Broadband?
dialupInHoboken asks: "I'd like to know if anyone has compiled a list (that they'd like to share) of hotels in metropolitan areas that offer broadband connections, hard-wired or wireless, and how much the service costs per day, etc. I've found a few hotels that offer it, but don't advertise it, or really know that much about what they're offering. A comprehensive list would be something of value to us bandwidth-crazed individuals." There was an Ask Slashdot about this, early last year. Now that "broadband" is a marketable buzzword for businesses, have more hotels caught on?
I reciently attended E3 down in the LA area, and stayed at the Wyndam Gardens hotel, in Commerce...
All Wyndham hotels offer broadband internet access through Waypoint's network, at $9.95 a day, or for free if you sign up to become a waypoint member (it's free at the hotels)...
They do implore a Linux box that does MAC-based access control, so switching NICs/MAC addresses or using more than one computer will result in a seperate charge per system. Hope this helps...
-PhaseBurn Welcome to Linux country. On quiet nights, you can hear windows reboot.
I know you are probably talking about the US, but here is a searchable list of hotels and other places in Sweden that are covered by 802.11b Internet (Telia Homerun).
I recently stayed at both Swissotel in Boston and Sutton Place in Toronto. Both offered a web-tv style internet service for about $10 per day.
Although I'm sure this is probably fine for some people, most slashdot-types would probably get irritated pretty fast with this kind of connection. So if you ask the hotel about what kind of internet access they have, and they say "yes we have high speed internet access in every room", they might mean this webtv crap. They might also mean there is a data port on the phone in the room. woo hoo.
If any hotel-types are reading this: Personally I'd much rather have 802.11 and/or an ethernet jack in the wall.
"But actually trying to use m4 as a general-purpose langage would be deeply perverse" --ESR
Check out arescom'shospitality network hotels. You can get 1.5 meg connections up and down for 10-20 bucks a day.
I don't know why people implement useless non-proximity searches for locating geographic features. Such a waste of time.
The cost for service is typically USD 9.95 per day. Some locations will offer discounts for larger blocks of time. Just be sure to go directly to their portal site when you first connect. If you fire up your ssh session first, you will usually be charged for the day and won't get a chance to claim the weekly/monthly rate. Heaven forbid you should have to stay in a hotel that long.
"The great thing about multitasking is that several things can go wrong at once." -me
I recently stayed in the Marriott in Oakland (CA) and San Francisco. Not only do they have broadband, but there is a little bag of "accessories" hanging in the closet. This includes a variety of cables and other useful items to get a laptop hooked up. Downside: Expensive. My memory is not always reliable, but it was something like $10 plus $1 a minute.
The Embassy suites in Tigard Oregon had it - but doesn't anymore. The provider went under. As far as I know, the adverts still claim the feature though. The staff WILL tell you it isn't there anymore if you ask about it while making the reserveration. (I get to stay there alot for the next few weeks :-(
Have you compiled your kernel today??
I recently stayed at the Metropolitan Crown Plaza in Ikebukuro, Tokyo. My room came with a FREE broadband connection. I'm not sure whether or not the Crown Plaza's in the US offer the same service.....
From the geektools website, check out the GeekTels section. They have over 2000 listings for the USA.
Would you rather:
a) Call 100 hotels to find the 10 with broadband and choose one of those
b) Have a list of broadband-capable hotels and only call those 10 to begin with?
(I know these numbers are off, but you get the idea)
retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
This chain (mostly Southeastern US, some Midwest) looks like a Courtyard-type chain, but includes "high-speed Internet access" in the room rate. Probably a bulk deal with someone like STSN (mentioned above) and they just lump the $10/day into their rates...
I don't travel much. I stay in a hotel perhaps as much as 4-6 nights a year. But every single time, I shop around to find a hotel that has broadband in the rooms. Sometimes I pay extra to get a room with broadband, sometimes they say that the whole place does. (I've been doing this since 1996, BTW.) And not once -- not a single time -- have I had Internet access from my room. Big hotel chains, local joints, cheap and expensive...they're all the same. They claim to have Internet access and either a) don't have it, b) it's broken or c) they don't know how it works. b) is the worst. I once had a hotel tell me that for help I had to call some toll-free support number that told me, friendly-like, that I should expect a wait of 180 minutes for support.
Anyhow, as far as I'm concerned, broadband in hotels is a myth. I'm ready to throw in the towel and get an Earthlink account and buy a modem.
-Waldo Jaquith
I've stayed in a number of Hyatt hotels across the country, most recently the Elliot Grand Hyatt in downtown Seattle. I can't remember a single one that hasn't had internet access via ethernet in the last 3 or 4 years or so. At least at the one in Seattle, it was free but required a daily sign-in to re-authenticate the host for access. A lot of the smaller hotels have Internet access as well, you just have to ask. I stayed at a small Marriot property near LA a couple months back, and even they had it.
Perl - $Just @when->$you ${thought} s/yn/tax/ &couldn\'t %get $worse;