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Marriott to Add Wi-Fi in 400 Hotels

matt writes "InfoWorld reports: Marriott aims to provide WLAN (wireless LAN) access at 400 hotels in Germany, the U.K. and the U.S., the company said. It will collaborate with wireless service provider STSN to offer the service in hotel lobbies, meeting rooms, restaurants and other public spaces, complementing its current in-room high-speed access."

10 of 111 comments (clear)

  1. How about they first add..... by Chris_Stankowitz · · Score: 5, Interesting

    conentional Highspeed service in more of their hitels.

  2. Well... by C1everNickName · · Score: 0, Interesting

    With all the traveling that I do, this is a very welcome perk! More places need to do this!

    --


    I am Jack's.sig
  3. What about in room wireless? by John_McKee · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Having stayed at a few Marriott's with the wired in room access, it is everything that it is advertised as. Fast, stable, and easy to setup, just open a browser and click a button. They even let you check your front desk messages and bill on the hotel intranet website. I also found the pricing fairly reasonable at $10 a night, less than a PPV movie.

    But, as I have a wireless network at home, wireless access has really grown on me. I have always assumed that concrete walls and metal doors make hotel wide wi-fi access for in room use more expensive, it would be very welcome. Has any hotel implemented such a system, or are there any other technical limitations that I have missed that make implimenting such a system too difficult?

  4. but why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Most hotels I go to already have wired lan in my room and that's good enough for me. I'm no uber-geek that has to have lan access in the hotel pool. If you're at the bar, and you have a PC (and not looking up pr0n) you're a loser. In conference rooms, you're supposed to be listnening to one guy speak, not watching a live stream of a football game. Onlythe speaker should have internet for demos etc... and one lan cable never hurt nobody.

    Wireless is useful for people who roam around and need internet access everywhere they go. If you're in a building like a hotel with rooms setup for specific purposes you are not going to roam around much. If you're like me you'll spend lots of time in one place, move to another place and spend lots of time there, on to the next place etc...

    Marriott, just because it is wireless doesn't mean it's better. Make sure this is what people are asking you for before you venture off in this direction.

  5. Marriott's networking was disappointing by Woogiemonger · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This is involving a physical RJ45 cable connection, not Wi Fi, but I believe this example is telling of what you can expect from Marriott. I stayed at the Greenbelt Marriott in Greenbelt, Maryland recently, and had my laptop.. a Dell Inspiron 8000, with Windows XP installed on it and a 100Mb NIC. Runs fine, and I use it on my home network usually. So anyway, I go to the desk initially, and ask them if they provide internet access. The woman at the desk said they did, and that it was $12 for 24 hours of access. I ask when the 24 hours started.. and she replied it started when I first used the connection. Well, I connect my computer to the unmarked LAN cable leading from the back of the TV.. When I open my web browser it gives me a page effectively saying "Network access is charged in blocks, from noon to noon. If you agree to pay $9.95 for access up till the next 12pm, click here!" .. Well, it was about 12:30pm or so, so I figured it wasn't too bad and I agreed. I didn't like the fact that I would be charged for time I was away at a conference and not using the laptop, but $10 is not that big a deal for a nice T1 connection while I'm bored. I started using it.. the network was rather slow. It felt like I was using a 56k modem. So I messed around for 8 minutes and went off to my conference. I got back about 9pm later that night and started using my laptop again. The network connection no longer worked! I was about to release and renew my DHCP address, and ping the gateway, but otherwise, I had no internet access! I saw a number in the hotel room.. "call this for any networking problems!" ..I end up talking to some guy who tried a lot of very basic troubleshooting tactics on my computer, and eventually gave up after about 2 hours, just telling me to go to another room. Mind you, I liked the 14th floor room I was on..nice view, and everything else was satisfactory. I didn't want to risk a crappy room on the 8th floor, but they assured me it was the same, just lower down, and I figured I'd be too distracted with the internet to notice the view, so I agreed. I asked the desk clerk to not be charged for my internet usage for this "24 hour period" as at most I'd be getting 15 minutes of usage in. After a few more painful minutes of waiting for the manager, he gladly said I could use the internet for free and then I hung up and waited for my new room key to be delivered.

    Same exact problem happened in that other room too. I call up the front desk (they forgot the shampoo in the second room, plus a lamp's bulb needed replacement as well) and told them of my frustrations. The desk clerk told me I should refer my networking problems to the front desk and they could send up their "engineer". I was relieved, saying how tired I was, and they end up sending in this kid who seemed like he barely made it through high school and maybe played Everquest for a while. He was clueless. After letting him mess around with my laptop for half an hour and complain on the phone to someone, I kicked him out and went to sleep. I tried restarting the internet connection repeatedly during my 3 day/2 night stay. It started working again a few minutes before I was about to leave. Grrrr. Other problems during my hotel stay... they're not that great at hosting a conference. The conference rooms were cold till the last hour or two of seminars, and the food catered to us was always the same, each of the three days. They also leave a nice looking, refreshing bottle of Evian spring water in your room, with a little tag on it saying "drink me and pay $4.50" .. fortunately the tap water was drinkable. I did not appreciate being teased. Also, although they gave me tasty little chocolates in the first room, I did not get another two tasty little chocolates when they moved me to the second room. As I left my problems I had with the hotel chain in their "feedback box", the girl at the desk said "I hope those are good comments!" I smirked and hit the road.

  6. I wrote that! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Our company installed wired high-speed access to one of the Marriott's (Richmond, BC, Canada), and we used Linux and Perl to do it!

    Check in, plug in, and surf!

    Of course, no matter what web page you try to go to initially, you get redirected to our page saying "you're in room 101, click here to pay $10", but after that page, you can surf to your heart's content; iptables 'REDIRECT' rules!
    (Well, ok, there are some free pages with local information... oh, and the microsoft update website... but *that's it*)

    We've set up printing through a web page; just print to a file, and upload the file. Anything else would involve changing settings on your laptop, and we'd get blamed for anything that goes wrong, so we don't wanna go there, do we?

    And if you need a 'real' ip address (not NAT), the front desk can click on a button and give you one. That's just for folks with cranky VPN setups. Sigh...

    It'll be interesting integrating wireless access, since we can't use SNMP to determine what room you're in (and therefore who to bill), but hey, we'll *find* a way to make it work!

  7. Re:I stand corrected... by Matts · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Could be some other room's. I tend to take my wireless hub with me when I go to stay at hotels, so I can plug it in and surf from the comfort of the couch or the bed. You could just be picking up the guy's next door.

    We also do this at the O'Reilly open source conferences - we make sure geeks are located close to eachother, and then share one net connection bill between us. Sometimes we'll even setup wireless repeaters.

    --

    Matt. Want XML + Apache + Stylesheets? Get AxKit.
  8. High Speed in Hotels by Big+Sean+O · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I was just in a Holiday Inn and they had FREE high speed internet access for computers with an ethernet card. It was frankly amazing. No extra fees.

    The only other computer access I've seen in hotel rooms are those cruddy TV-based web browsers. Frankly, they are worse than useless. And they usually charge $10/day.

    WiFi would be nice, especially if I could check my e-mail while I was in a boring conference seminar, but I don't see the benefit for most hotels. Except for resorts and conference centers, I don't need WiFi in the hotel bar, or in most crummy lobbies.

    But whatever a hotel decides, they should make it free for hotel users. Making it an extra profit center will stop many from using it, making it a freebie means I will never stay anywhere else.

    --
    My father is a blogger.
  9. Ohio man files $1.5M suit against Marriott by sittingbull · · Score: 2, Interesting

    That's right an Ohio man found a camera behind the mirror in a Marriot bathroom after he killed a small "bug" on the lamp - no bug it was a camera-eye. So, now Marriott can have a wireless video system in their bathrooms instead of X-10 et al., ... connect it to the www and what a $$$ generating engine that could be. Links to this story: Voyer news story And the original one that was pulled from KNS -Hmmmmm...: original story If anyone lives Knoxville and is willing to rent a room for the night could be interesting - extra credit will be given!

  10. Ought to include it with room price by timeOday · · Score: 3, Interesting
    They should really roll it into the price of the room.

    I, for one, would not pay $10/night from my own pocket, and I wouldn't feel comfortable trying to reimburse that expense.

    Yet if they just bumped their prices by $2-$3 per night, it would be no problem with the boss and a pretty big incentive to stay there.

    And besides making more money from more guests, they would make more money from the service directly, unless more than 20-30% of their guests were doing the $10/night thing (which I doubt).