Slashdot Mirror


Niue Gets Island-Wide WiFi

NinjaPablo writes "Business Wire is running a story about the polynesian island of Niue. Niue has just completed an island-wide wifi network, making it the first country with nationwide free wifi access. This comes after countrywide email was started in 1997, dialup access in 1999, and broadband this Spring, all free for anyone."

18 of 245 comments (clear)

  1. Small island nations shouldn't count for firsts. by Capt'n+Hector · · Score: 3, Interesting

    But come on now, that doesn't even count! 2000 people? The UC Berkeley system is ten times that, and they're even thinking of installing campus-wide wifi.

    --
    Quid festinatio swallonis est aetherfuga inonusti?
    Africus aut Europaeus?
  2. Re:Small island nations shouldn't count for firsts by insecuritiez · · Score: 1, Interesting

    UCSD has 5,500 on campus students and we've had wireless for two years now.

  3. Spam haven? by cly · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Spammers can make use of the unrestricted wifi to spam to their hearts delight.

    Would the place become a base for spam corporations?

  4. Anybody notice this? by jeffiel · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Did it strike anybody as strange that they gave nationwide email to a country two years *before* they gave dialup?

    What good is email if you can't access the internet?

  5. Taxes, or tourism? by KingArthur10 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    With the limited range of WiFi, they'd need a station in every house, and the financial burden of an undertaking like that would be immense. I'd imagine that, since they have broadband, they can cut some pretty cheap bulk deals around maybe $50 per station, but the costs would still be astronomical, and from the looks of the article, they are saying that there is a blanket of WiFi over the ENTIRE island. Essentially, everywhere you see a transformer on a telephone, you'd have to see a base station, but really, the interference from such electricity would cause problems, so they probably alternate. I am guessing that other than by taxes, the biggest way they are paying for all of this is from tourism, which apparently is large for such a small island. I'm betting that within two years, they'd be able to pay off the addition, and after that, it would merely be a matter of the funds to maintain the system, which will also get costly.

    --
    I came, I saw, She conquered.
  6. Re:Small island nations shouldn't count for firsts by oneishy · · Score: 2, Interesting

    They have their own TLD (.nu) Not even Berkeley has that!

  7. Re:Free? by tommten · · Score: 5, Interesting

    No.. but probably a lot of the money came from Sweden.. since the .nu-domain is quite popular here. (FYI. in swedish the word nu means now)

    --
    - I choked on the red pill and now I'm stuck in limbo
  8. good to hear by Plix · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I own several .nu domains myself, and they don't come cheap (to just change your dns server listings - or any other setting - costs $10 [which can be avoided by waiting until it comes time to renew the domain]). I'm just glad to hear that all that money is going to a good cause, unlike many other tlds such as .ws, .tv, etc. which are marketed as entirely american and without any significant benifit to the countries for which they were originally created.

  9. Re:Free? by dago · · Score: 2, Interesting

    nu -> now also in dutch, for that matter

    --
    #include "coucou.h"
  10. Re:/.ing a whole nation/island by jnik · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Is this a first? Has /. taken out an entire nation?
    Well, dunno about slash, but Once Upon a Time maybe a decade ago somebody at MIT managed to take Portugal off the net. See, MIT and Portugal happened to have about the same size pipe....
    Of course this is based on hearsay from a sysadmin friend; apply NaCl liberally.

  11. Re:Hm.... by zerocool^ · · Score: 2, Interesting

    My girlfriend wants to study Iguanas. She's got a degree in animal science, focus on neurochemistry or something, and wants to go to grad school to study reptiles.

    She wants to move to airazona or something. I keep telling her to check out and see what schools have satelite programs in the polynesian isles.

    Now, I'll have to push a little more steadily.

    --
    sig?
  12. Re:Free? by rsborg · · Score: 2, Interesting
    FYI. in swedish the word nu means now

    Funny, in French it means nude. I wonder if they get a lot of "argent" from the cheese country?

    --
    Make sure everyone's vote counts: Verified Voting
  13. pop density/number of access points needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    259 square km's... Hmm.... how many Access points would you need? With good antenna's, and perhaps relaxed electronic emmissions requirments (since this is being approved by the government), I figure one AP could cover 3 square km's (as a conservitave guesstimate). so that's less than 100 access points, shared among a population of around 2000... Whats an access point worth? Everyone could throw in $20 I suppose.

  14. Re:Wow ... by gantrep · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Domain registration used to be free. I believe there should be a toplevel domain reserved for giving anyone who requests it one free domain name based on their name or any reasonable variation of their name.

  15. In all seriousness... by Max+Threshold · · Score: 4, Interesting

    See how much better things work in small societies where everyone feels like a significant part of the whole? This is why we Americans need to lay the smack down on our Federal government and give the power (read "money") back to our state and local governments. If your city council got the lion's share of your tax dollars, you might have free Wi-Fi, too.

    Screw this blood-for-oil bullshit! I want my free Wi-Fi!

  16. Re:The reason why... by d99-sbr · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Isn't WLAN supposed to be quite sensitive to rain and humidity? Microwaves generally lose a lot of energy to water molecules - ergo microwave ovens.

  17. Spam and other no-nos? by judzillah · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Somebody mentioned above that spammers would be a problem. This would seem to be a problem, not just spammers, but any trouble making hooligans, how do they go about making sure their users play fair on the net and don't end up causing a ruckus by doing foolish harmful things? Should they be concerned at all?

  18. EE question by elliotweston · · Score: 2, Interesting
    As a non-EE, I can't tell whether this passage is pure bloviation or not:
    Niue has no natural Earth ground, and therefore actually appears to an energy source as a giant capacitor-resistor floating on the ocean floor some thousands of feet down. Add to that the dielectric constant of ocean water, with a fresh water lens floating in coral and it makes Niue a very interesting specimen of electrical properties. Instead of being called one of the largest coral atolls in the world, perhaps it should better be called the worldâ(TM)s largest electronic component, a virtual âoepie network tankâ or âoecapacitive resistance tank.â
    The quote is from the pdf referenced at the bottom of the news item, http://www.niue.nu/images/Nuiepaper38.pdf