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Baltimore Inner Harbor To Go Wireless

An anonymous reader writes "The City of Baltimore has made free wireless internet available in the Inner Harbor in hopes of bringing in more tourists and business conventions. According to this article on Sunspot Internet service will be available free of charge to portable computers from the Baltimore Science Center to the World Trade Center along the touristy waterfront. Need to check your e-mail when sailing the Chesapeake Bay? Just dock at the Rusty Scupper and whip out your laptop."

18 of 230 comments (clear)

  1. Woohoo! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Warsailing here I come... I'll bring a new meaning to piracy on the open seas.

    1. Re:Woohoo! by lommer · · Score: 3, Funny

      Now there's an idea: Get a tricked out antenna with which you can reach the harbour wireless (you might need to set up a shore-based repeater in order to recieve signals going the other way). Then, you sit out in international waters with a multi-terabyte mp3 collection just sharing away. Let's see the RIAA try to sue you now...

    2. Re:Woohoo! by Kosi · · Score: 5, Funny

      They'd send you this baby over.

  2. St. Louis has had this for a bit... by KodaK · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I can't say it's helped draw in business yet, but it's here.

    --
    --J(K) DOS is like Unix in exactly the same way that a pinto is like an aircraft carrier.
  3. Re:Sweet! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    The homeless in Baltimore already ARE geeks. They're laid off tech workers.

  4. Dock? by nate1138 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Just dock at the Rusty Scupper and whip out your laptop

    Why bother? Just make sure you pick up a can of pringles before you set sail.

    --
    Where's my lobbyist? Right here.
  5. Is this completely non-secure? by sixteenraisins · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I mean, can you really take a Wi-Fi equipped laptop and download mp3's to your heart's content without being tracked down to your IP? Or launch a DDoS attack anonymously?

    Again, I guess you hafta take the good with the bad. I can imagine it won't be long before these wireless providers start paying attention to security on these networks.

    William

    --
    When you're not looking, this sig is in Latin.
  6. I've got it in my town... by NineNine · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I've got free wireless broadband in my town, too. I had to get an antenna to get it to my building, but it works great, and it helps my business a lot by saving $100+/month on a (slower) DSL connection.

  7. Sweet for Otakon! by 2Flower · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Every year Otakon holds one of the biggest east coast anime conventions at the Baltimore Convention Center, right on the Inner Harbor. If the WiFi reaches that far, I might be able to wank my inner geek by not only attending a japanese animation convention while wearing a schoolgirl costume with mechanical power-up accessories, but actually posting live cosplay photos back to my website at the same time.

    Life is good. Or sad. Or good!

  8. Travel Advisory by techsoldaten · · Score: 4, Informative

    Just in case you're thinking of going out to try this, Baltimore's Inner Harbor is notoriously expensive and you will be paying for access, just not to an ISP.

    At most garages, it costs more than $10 to park, the restaurants in that area serve tasty but expensive food, moderately overpriced shopping stores surround consumers, and random Orioles fans, despondent over the team's performance, may accost you at any time in that area.

    You would be better served going to Fells Point and playing video poker at any one of the dozens of bars.

  9. Big Brother Factor? by lugar · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It'll be interesting to see how closely the wireless access is monitored. A government-provided portal to the Internet. Scary thought. It's got to be monitored to some degree, right? Otherwise it's simply a great open portal for spammers.

  10. Traffic Wireless by LegendOfLink · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I live in Chicago, and let me tell you, what they (all big cities, not just Chicago) need is wireless connectivity through rush hour. It would be damn skippy to be able to read a few stories on Slashdot while sitting 45 minutes on the Ike without moving three inches.

    Of course, I'm neglecting to think about all the accidents that might be caused...oh well, I guess we can sacrifice safety to read /.

  11. What inner harbour? by stratjakt · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Isabel blew much of into the bay.

    Seriously, though, B-mo needs to do more than just provide free wireless. Cleaning up the panhandlers, crackheads, pot peddlers and other assorted dirtbags would go along way to revitalizing the district's nightlife.

    It's a cool place to go, it's a shame the city's so dirty and crime ridden. Working in the public safety field, and living in the area, I've spoken with lots of b-mo cops, and morale there is so low. They're just so overwhelmed with typical inner city crime that they've become completely apathetic.

    Last year when that crack dealer burned down some ladies home (because she supposedly called the cops on him), and killed her and her 5 children, it should have sent a wake-up call, but the b-mo police just hit the snooze button.

    Oh well, wireless is pretty cool, but it's not an area that you'd want to sit in the open with your two thousand dollar laptop.

    --
    I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
  12. The wrong attitude by GillBates0 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    But Paul Dowling, owner of Believe Wireless, a Towson-based company that charges customers $29.95 per month for wireless Internet access in Canton, Fells Point and elsewhere in the city, said he's worried that too much free service could drive companies such as his out of business or away from the Baltimore area.

    "It's hard enough to compete against other companies. If the city starts providing for free what we make people pay for, it could really hurt us," Dowling said.

    This is exactly the kind of attitude that hurts technology and customers. It results in monopolistic companies trying everything possible to stick to the existing model, and try and kill of competition (albeit superior in technology and better for the customer).

    Microsoft's been trying to hurt Linux as much as possible, because it's a free alternative to their OS, which could potentially kill them.And ofcourse, our beloved RIAA's been trying to kill away a newer, technologically better solution, rather than trying to innovate and provide alternatives that people would pay for.

    The right attitude should be to enhance their product so that customers would be willing to pay them for it, over the other cheaper (or free) alternative. Sheesh.

    --
    An Indian-American Hindu committed to non-violent thought/speech/action alarmed by the global explosion of radical Islam
  13. Re:Baltimore? Tourism? Muahaha.. by Skater · · Score: 3, Informative

    I've lived in DC for four years. I've been to Baltimore many times during that stretch (a couple times a year), but I haven't made it to the beach once.

    Baltimore has a great aquarium, the (currently closed) B&O railroad museum, Fort McHenry, the science museum, and on the waterfront a lot of shopping and restaurants. I've also gone to Baltimore to see shows like Penn & Teller. There are plenty of things to do in Baltimore.

    So, I would go to Baltimore before the beach. Even without free wireless, which is irrelevant since I don't have a wireless network card and my laptop is too old to run one.

    (And I love beaches, too.)

    --RJ

  14. $29.95/month hot spot service by deander2 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    haha! this is a quote from a company that sells a $29.95/month hot spot service, and is upset with the city's new offering:

    "It's hard enough to compete against other companies. If the
    city starts providing for free what we make people pay for, it
    could really hurt us," Dowling said.

    DUH! ;-p

    i do think that metered wifi access will fail as a business model. virtually every business where the cost of tracking and billing access is MORE than the cost of providing said access becomes just another gratuity. (like a public water fountain)

  15. The Right Attitude by Chibi+Merrow · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Your point MIGHT be valid if we weren't talking about the Government competing with a private business. That's not supposed to happen. A business can only use funds that have been voluntarily given to them by customers/investors to stay in business while the Government can force you to hand over tax revenues to fund whatever they want.

    If the company who donated the equipment to the city was running a free hotspot as an advertisement for themselves that'd be one thing, but by getting the city government involved in the project they've probably set themselves up for a lawsuit. The Government is supposed to help along private business, not compete with it. A Government is always unfair competition... Because in the end they can always make you being in business illegal.

    --
    Maxim: People cannot follow directions.
    Increases in truth directly with the length of time spent explaining them
  16. And they even have the gall of calling it by TheMidget · · Score: 3, Funny

    Penguin! Oh the insolence!