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Spokane Gets Unwired

prostoalex writes "Spokane International Airport is getting wireless connectivity just before the city will expand WiFi coverage to 100 blocks in Spokane downtown. It will be the largest urban Wi-Fi zone in the United States, said Bob Conley, a founder of Vivato, the company that made the antennas for both installations. Vivato's press release mentions the service will be useful not only to casual downloaders. The downtown 'Hot Zone' will improve city services by facilitating intelligent policing, quicker fire and rescue response, and will support e-government initiatives and a more productive mobile workforce."

103 comments

  1. w00t by sxtxixtxcxh · · Score: 0, Interesting

    i live in spokane..:D

    i've been waiting for it to get it's recognition for being so... wired... and now unwired.

    --
    for a minute there, i lost myself...
    1. Re:w00t by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually it's Spokavegas.

    2. Re:w00t by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I live in Spokane too, its about time we got on the technology map - meaning the slashdot technology map - the only one that matters!!

    3. Re:w00t by calebb · · Score: 0

      I live in Pullman :-) Spok-vegas is only ~70 miles away.

    4. Re:w00t by Dynamo247 · · Score: 1

      You lucky...lucky...little man...whom i wish i was at this very moment on my dial up connection.

      --
      "No, seriously, I AM a wallet inspector"
    5. Re:w00t by XpirateX · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I'm in Pullman too (lovely place in the summer, egh?). I get the great privilege to visit the Spokane airport on Thursday.

    6. Re:w00t by ill_conditioned · · Score: 1

      I live in Pullman too, and the correct term is "Spo-Compton". Unfortunately I have to go to Spokane every weekend. Ah, how I hate it so.

    7. Re:w00t by NanoGator · · Score: 2, Funny

      "I live in Pullman :-) Spok-vegas is only ~70 miles away."

      Better get out that Pringle's can!

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    8. Re:w00t by sxtxixtxcxh · · Score: 1

      yeah... well...

      luckily the internet insulates me from the sad reality that is living in spokane.

      --
      for a minute there, i lost myself...
    9. Re:w00t by jhylkema · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry.

      BTW, how's that parking garage deal working out for you?

    10. Re:w00t by sxtxixtxcxh · · Score: 1

      just about as good as your site ...slashdotted, -slashdot? ;)

      just teasin.

      i'm not too particularly fond of it either, but it is good to see spokane actually getting a little attention after the 1974 world fair left town. :P

      i only recently moved here... and looking for a clean exit already.

      --
      for a minute there, i lost myself...
    11. Re:w00t by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hope you get out.

      Took me five years to get out.. by the time I left I considered myself lucky to have escaped.

      Beware.. Spokane will suck you dry and spit you out if given a chance.

    12. Re:w00t by jhylkema · · Score: 2, Funny

      I'm really sorry. You go cow-tipping alot? Howzabout them Cougs and their former coach?

    13. Re:w00t by Tongo · · Score: 1

      That just about describes any Eastern Washington town.

    14. Re:w00t by jhylkema · · Score: 1

      I got out at 22 after growing up there. Most of my friends called me an escapee, but a few called me a turncoat for moving to "the coast."

      Spokane has very little to offer you if you're not into meth or bad football. Pullman is worse - drunken parties, meth, cow tipping, or bad football. You know someplace is pathetic when you call going to Spokane a trip to a "real city." Are they still doing saturation coverage of the state "B" basketball tournament? And has anybody else noticed the abundance of restaurants, car lots, and funeral homes in Spokane?

      Granted, the cost of living is cheaper than Seattle, but if there are no jobs to be had, what's the use? And it's a lot worse now that Kaiser is completely shut down. This is a place where the idiot then-mayor Sheri Barnyard^WBarnard brought in Alaska Airlines' competitor to keep out the maintenance facility they wanted to build.

    15. Re:w00t by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Roll Tide! It's rollin baby!

  2. News sparks questions... by 2057 · · Score: 0, Troll

    Great, but that still leaves the question...Where the hell is Spokane? btw It's meant as a joke, I know spokane is a city in El Dorado. pfft.

    --
    For The Best Jazz/Hip-hop fusion > COlD DUCK
  3. Ehhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't know that I like wifi being used for real substantive critical things like emergency services. It's still just a little too unreliable, signal can get messed up by whatever... I'd hate to have my house being burned down and the fire department doesn't know because the weather messes up their wireless network.

    1. Re:Ehhh by zakezuke · · Score: 1

      I don't know that I like wifi being used for real substantive critical things like emergency services. It's still just a little too unreliable, signal can get messed up by whatever..

      I'm not sure I like the idea of being dependent on wired technology in a region that is earthquake prone.

      --
      There is no sanctuary. There is no sanctuary. SHUT UP! There is no shut up. There is no shut up.
    2. Re:Ehhh by fm6 · · Score: 2, Informative

      The alternative isn't wired technology. The alternative is the wireless technology that emergency people already use.

    3. Re:Ehhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Spokane International Airport was fine BEING wired.

      What a waste, nearly every waiting area had these desks with cat5 outlets near them that you could plug in to.

      I'd rather plug in with a 30 ft wired cat5 then have connectivity issues and dropping signals every 30 seconds.

      I like my "wire" thank you very much.

      Jump off the damn WIFI bandwagon, WIFI sucks and isn't as reliable as wires.

    4. Re:Ehhh by Rembrant · · Score: 1

      Doubter! You would have also opposed the invention of the telephone in it's day for the same reasons! While every new technology has it's challenges the advantages will over weight the obstacles. I think it's great that the city of Spokane is going wireless! I look forward to begin connected all over the planet for a reasonable cost which will not happen unless we make these steps forward. I think with GPS wireless will in crease our ability to respond to emergencies and locate people in trouble. Imagine not having to tell the 911 fire people where you house is located when on fire or when a burglar has entered your premise or being assaulted. Star One allows subscribers to push a button on their dashboard to get emergency service when their car breaks down. Recently I heard of an elderly person who fell and broke their hip. Living alone they were discovered a day and a half later barely alive. If they would of had an emergency transmitter button to push things would have been different. Now my only concern with all this is how do we maintain privacy when every cell phone is constantly transmitting our position on the planet. Ok, yes we can turn the darn thing off to close Big Brother's eyes!

  4. Awesome! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    Just think, soon you'll be able to walk around the city and wirelessly hack into thousands of unsecure systems.

    This takes the whole getting-onto-the-neighbor's-802.11-connection to a whole new level.

    1. Re:Awesome! by sxtxixtxcxh · · Score: 3, Interesting

      indeed! that's what i'm waiting for ;)

      in the news yesterday, they mentioned the engineers setting up the wifi antennae attracted the attention of the secret service.

      i guess sitting around on the street with a laptop is suspect.

      --
      for a minute there, i lost myself...
    2. Re:Awesome! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      That's because Bush was in town yesterday rolling around in his motorcade...

      The secret service doesn't just wander the streets of Spokane.

    3. Re:Awesome! by sxtxixtxcxh · · Score: 1

      ah yes, i neglected to mention that.

      i think i got distracted in the middle of posting.

      work has an annoying way of doing that.

      --
      for a minute there, i lost myself...
  5. Woohoo by filtur · · Score: 4, Funny

    Finally, now I have something to do while I'm waiting to get through a security checkpoint, respond to those viagra e-mails.

  6. Double-edged sword by nsample · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The real hope is that this service, as it relates to emergency response, does not become another layer of dependency. At Stanford we had the pleasure of testing IP phones in the CS department and living with the fact that when the power fails, the phones are gone, too.
    As an old man, a child of the 70s, I was used to power and telephone access being separate concerns. We liked it.

    By isolating services, you often get safety through redundancy. Wiring emergency response into a new infrastructure is a dangerous proposition.
    Keep fire and rescue response on their own bands. Keep alarm systems on dry pairs. Etc. Save a life today; be old school. ;)

    1. Re:Double-edged sword by stratjakt · · Score: 4, Informative

      It's not a network you dispatch through, it'd be a network in which a cop can file reports from his car and save a little paperwork back at the station.

      Plenty of agencies use drive in hot spots to access the RMS systems, run queries, etc.

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    2. Re:Double-edged sword by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cops already ahve radio links back to post... the run plates that way, surface warrants, perform DL lookups, post logs, the whole show... and it's not over IP.

    3. Re:Double-edged sword by Rembrant · · Score: 1

      Just like any new service fine tuning it to meet the needs and concerns of problems like backup power will have to be addressed. Now that we are in the wireless cell phone generation (all my kids and their friends have one) it makes a lot of sense to have wireless emergency response capability. I'm sure we will continue to use land lines for emergencies as long as it makes sense to. The thing that surprises me is all the doubt and apathy to new technology in this discussion. I though this was a forward thinking group.

  7. Re:Short answer... by 2057 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    You obviously missed the point of my post. El Dorado isn't a real place, at least that i know of. I meant el dorado as in the mythical city of gold....

    --
    For The Best Jazz/Hip-hop fusion > COlD DUCK
  8. Awesome... by GFLPraxis · · Score: 1

    Hope it stretches out to my house :)

  9. Quality? by nial-in-a-box · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I still have yet to hear about how reliable this stuff actually is. Putting an AP at every intersection simply isn't good enough. I'm not saying that's what they are doing, but if it is than it's basically pointless. To deliver speeds of greater than 1Mbps for all users there would need to be essentially thousands of access points to handle this, seeing as the signal strength issues lie mainly on the client side. Policing (at any level) via WiFi sounds like a recipe for disaster.

    --
    I am feeling fat and sassy
    1. Re:Quality? by chia_monkey · · Score: 2, Informative

      The Vivato panels that are being used are pretty robust. They're not your $49 Linksys that you buy at Circuit City. These Vivatos are capable of blasting a few blocks with the desired wireless bandwidth. It's actually pretty impressive. So yeah, to answer your question, they won't be putting up a bazillion access points. Just a few well-placed panels that can handle tremendous usage.

      --

      "He uses statistics as a drunken man uses lampposts...for support rather than illumination." - Andrew Lang
    2. Re:Quality? by mcrbids · · Score: 2, Interesting

      To deliver speeds of greater than 1Mbps for all users there would need to be essentially thousands of access points to handle this, seeing as the signal strength issues lie mainly on the client side.

      Do you have any idea how FEW people would need anything aywhere NEAR a Mb of bandwidth?

      I'm a fairly heavy user - MRTG reports my monthly usage on my 1.5 Mbit DSL line as ~ 50 GB or so of traffic per month, on an internal, home network of 7 computer systems.

      (whip out calculator)

      50 GB of transfer /month
      8 bits per byte,
      400 Gb of transfer in a month.
      30 days in a month(13,333,333,333 bits/day)
      24 hours in a day, (555,555,555 bits/hour)
      60 minutes per hour (9,259,259 bits/minute)
      60 seconds per minute, (154,320 bits/second)

      So, what we're really talking about here, is average usage almost 10 times what I, a fairly heavy Internet user consume.

      In theory, a single 11 Mbps access point could provide the bandwith to supply all 7 computers in my house, 71 times over!

      --
      I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
    3. Re:Quality? by ezzzD55J · · Score: 1
      Only on average.

      I used to work at an ISP, and we found our ADSL users were using an average of 25kbit per second per session. At the time the connections were a megabit.

      So that says something about how much capacity is necessary in total to keep your users happy, but it doesn't mean everyone would be just as happy with 25kbit connections :)

  10. Like it or not, WiFi is here to stay by chia_monkey · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We've heard many people ranting on about how insecure WiFi is, how it will never catch on, and so forth. Then you hear people talk about how great it is. Like it or not, it's here to stay. I like to think of WiFi as the new "wild west", the dotcom of the new generation. Just like the earlier dotcoms, companies are scrambing to make their mark. Some will fail miserably, some will grow to be giants, and some will be successful and be eaten (or destroyed) by the giants. It's still early in the game and it's hard to tell who will win out. Cometa is gone and they had some big backers. Maybe they just didn't have the proper management or revenue model. It'll be interesting to see how this all turns out.

    --

    "He uses statistics as a drunken man uses lampposts...for support rather than illumination." - Andrew Lang
    1. Re:Like it or not, WiFi is here to stay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      encrypting the link is often pointless.

      encrypting over the robust connection (tcp) with something that can actually validate and authenticate between two hosts is a lot more important, and for that WEP and WPA are quite useless. IPSec and TLS/SSL are more what are needed, and having WEP not enabled makes application layer security go faster, so I'd rather they not use any encryption on it, period, so long as people understand that security is in their own hands.

  11. terabyte triangle by sxtxixtxcxh · · Score: 4, Informative

    from http://terabytetrigangle.com : We (Spokane) also have connectivity - more high-speed fiber per capita than any city in the U.S. - all of downtown has high-speed services available via either fiber or copper. -------------- not sure, but i doubt they'll be adding wi-fi to that last of high-speed services.

    it'll probably be more like a giant starbucks. $10/hr ... :P

    --
    for a minute there, i lost myself...
    1. Re:terabyte triangle by sxtxixtxcxh · · Score: 1

      oops.. that address is http://terabytetriangle.com... *sighs*

      --
      for a minute there, i lost myself...
    2. Re:terabyte triangle by aosgood · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      get a link right if you are going to post it. freakin' idiot. at least take the time to do something right. you must work for the new PONG inventor.

    3. Re:terabyte triangle by phoneboy · · Score: 1

      That's nice if you live downtown. When I lived in the Spokane Valley (between 1997 and 2002), I couldn't get jack shit in terms of high speed Internet there. No cable, no DSL. ISDN was the best I could get, and it was fucken expensive.

      -- PhoneBoy

      --
      The views expressed herein are not necessarily those of anyone, including the poster.
    4. Re:terabyte triangle by jhylkema · · Score: 1

      Quoth the poster:

      That's nice if you live downtown. When I lived in the Spokane Valley (between 1997 and 2002) . . .

      You mean the new (retch) city of Spokane Valley? They finally passed it after God-only-knows how many tries. You couldn't get high-speed anything? How far out in the boonies were you?

    5. Re:terabyte triangle by phoneboy · · Score: 1

      I know they were talking about incorporating Spokane Valley when I was about to leave. I lived up in Northwood, which is off Argonne after it goes up the hill. I think Northwood falls just outside the "Spokane Valley" city limits. Not sure that classifies as "out in the boonies," but it was quite the distance from the CO in any case.

      --
      The views expressed herein are not necessarily those of anyone, including the poster.
    6. Re:terabyte triangle by jhylkema · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't call Northwood the boonies either. Matter of fact, I'd say you lived up there off Argonne where the rich people live (well, the ones who don't live in Mead, Liberty Lake, or the South Hill anyway).

  12. oh great by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Now the cops will just sit around eating doughnuts AND watching porn.....

  13. Re:Double-edged sword -- mad cell phone disease by rawdirt · · Score: 2, Interesting
    the wi-fi and the cell system both collapse when power disappears for a couple of days.

    at least at&t maintained the batteries for rotary dial!

  14. Unwired? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    They switched to decaf!

  15. Airport connectivity by Kludge · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I was in the Quad Cities "International" Airport yesterday, and HEY! free wireless internet. Score! But then in Detroit it was $7 to hook up. :P

    Then I thought, there should be some user maintained web page that summarizes what kind of networking airports have available. I couldn't find such a thing on google. Any hints?

  16. I'm in Spokane. by Darth+Muffin · · Score: 3, Interesting
    They mentioned this on the news earlier this week, said that downtown was already wired. So my wife and I went war driving downtown.


    Out of 4 random intersections downtown (well within the listed coverage area), 3 had no signal and the 4th was so weak it kept coming and going.



    I suppose you get what you pay for...

    --
    Real programmers use "copy con program.exe"
    1. Re:I'm in Spokane. by gooberguy · · Score: 1

      You didn't get a signal everywhere because not everything is set up yet. Wait until next week. BTW, chip and I (remember SpokLAN) are thinking about doing some wardriving too.

      --


      Karma: Meh (Mostly from meh.)
    2. Re:I'm in Spokane. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We just had the Regional General Manager for 180 Networks, (ISP Based in Spokane), come to our LAN Party, and he was talking about them getting ready to flip the switch. He said non-directional antennas (like those found on a laptop) will reach for about 2 miles, and you can hit up to almost 20 miles with a directional (read Pringles can) antenna. They seem very excited about all of it, I just hope it all works out as planned.

    3. Re:I'm in Spokane. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Say, not to sound like a jerk, but what do techies do for a living over there in Spokane anyway? It is clear that it is a booming city, but I can't seem to figure out what industries are driving that growth -- thoughts?

  17. The elusive step two has been discovered! by natrius · · Score: 5, Funny

    WiFi...quicker fire and rescue response

    1. Buy lots of 2.4 GHz phones and plug them in all over downtown Spokane.
    2. Rob a bank.
    3. Profit!

    1. Re:The elusive step two has been discovered! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You retard. Most phones are DSSS while most Internet hardware is FHSS. FHSS will win every time...

    2. Re:The elusive step two has been discovered! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or you could just copy what some robbers did before WiFi: plant diversionary bombs. See here to find out what I'm talking about if you aren't a Spokanite.

    3. Re:The elusive step two has been discovered! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah those damn firemen, always thwarting my evil bank robbing plans.

    4. Re:The elusive step two has been discovered! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I dunno, have you ever been to Spokane? I don't think you have to worry about the cops trying to stop you anyway

      When there was a strange, violent, drugged-up guy attacking our front door, the police took like three hours to respond to my mom's 911 call

      In fact, the only time I've heard of Spokane's police department getting on the ball was when a nude woman was walking around downtown and littering..

  18. pittsburgh airports got wifi tooo by mrgreenfur · · Score: 1

    last time i was there with my laptop i was happily supprised to find free wifi. nothing better than memorizing slashdot posts to pass the time...

  19. In related news... by Joey+Patterson · · Score: 5, Funny

    Spokane city officials today announced that the city's population has more than quadrupled due to the sudden influx of Internet geeks who are looking for WiFi. Spokane's mayor likes to refer to it as "the Slashdot effect."

    1. Re:In related news... by vericgar · · Score: 1

      Jim West (mayor of Spokane) is a fucking asshat. I worked directly underneath him before he was in politics (summer job at a boy scout camp that he was a directory of). Though he does support the wireless hotspot, which my apartment is in (though no service yet), so maybe I need to change my opinion.

    2. Re:In related news... by 819 · · Score: 1

      So that explains why I had to go to EWU's library to find a Linux instillation CD, that wasn't scratched beyond usability.

  20. This is how we do it.... by rmarll · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Airport officials aren't sure how many people will sign up to use the service, but the system is equipped to handle hundreds of simultaneous users.

    The service is free until July 16, after which it will cost $6.95 a day.

    The airport spent no money to install the service, and will net at least $60,000 a year after Airport Network Solutions takes its cut.


    Oh and by the way, the federal government coughed up a cool million to finance this venture.

    For those of you who are unfamilar with Spokane we do math a little differently around here. The parking garage downtown for instance. Paid for by the city, for the Cowley family who own the River Park Square mall (and the local papaer) can only break even when it is near 100% capacity year round.

    No, it has never even come close to breaking even.

    1. Re:This is how we do it.... by tyrione · · Score: 1

      Correction: Cowles Family and at least mention The SpokesmanReview/Spokane Chronicle.

      http://www.spokesmanreview.com

      Born and raised in Spokane myself, also currently residing in Spokane, for the short-term.

      Another reason for the massive expansion is WSU Branch Spokane is also about to pour in $300 Million to expand along 54 acres of land adjacent to downtown, that includes lots of new industry labratories, a nursing branch and room to support 5,000 more students.

      Also Mayor Jim West is really pushing for Industry Growth and this article discusses the City property up for sale to get it into the hands of private sector.

      The one proposal that is making waves is the long-discussed and pushed for Washington State University School of Medicine that they want located in Spokane.

    2. Re:This is how we do it.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it should read: "Taxpayers of Spokane pay for wireless infrastructure that will be privatized in a year. Come to Spokane one of the only citiies left where you can still screw the citizens out of lots of money and they don't care."spokane Gvt is so corrupt.

    3. Re:This is how we do it.... by gcaseye6677 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      If you think that's bad, check out Chicago's Soldier Field expansion. When all the cost overruns were calculated, taxpayers spent nearly a billion dollars for a stadium to benefit one private corporation, the forever-losing Chicago Bears. People here are completely immune to the effects of corruption, or so it seems. There was public outrage, but no officials lost their jobs over it.

  21. Great tourist idea by Stalke · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This would make a great tourist / sightseeing / shopping platform for many small towns or urban areas in general. You know those things they hand out at museums. What if something like that could be targetted so that someone would walk around a whole city and through gps they would be able to not only find out the history, but also (convinently) that the shops they were passing on the way to another historic spot were "the same place that so-body was caught doing to you know what". You don't always need a gui for this stuff. How much would a gps + cpu + speaker cost anyways?

    --
    -?-
    1. Re:Great tourist idea by segfault7375 · · Score: 1

      ...would be able to not only find out the history, but also (convinently) that the shops they were passing on the way to another historic spot...

      It would be cool until the fscking companies found out that people actually pay attention to it. From then on it would be loaded with ads until people finally quit using them.

  22. Follow up by Darth+Muffin · · Score: 1

    ... a follow up:
    The linked artile mentions that the "switch" won't be flipped for another week. The local paper article said it was active already, they wanted it up for the big "hoopfest" tournament this weekend.
    So, one of the articles is wrong (probably our paper, it sux0rz). Maybe that's why I couldn't connect.

    --
    Real programmers use "copy con program.exe"
    1. Re:Follow up by chill · · Score: 1

      Go180.net currently provides half-a-dozen free hotspots in Spokane, not affiliated with this story.

      http://www.go180.net/products/details.asp?DetID= 5

      Those are probably what you were detecting.

      -Charles (ex-Spokane resident)

      --
      Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
  23. Parking meter usage.... by yokem_55 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I wonder if the Spo-compton parking meter nazis will use this. I wouldn't be surprised as when I was living there attending Gonzaga, they had an incredible and uncanny ability to pounce on an expired meter literally withing 60 seconds of expiration. They probably could cut that time down to a quarter of that if each meter had a wifi device and a simple program to broadcast when a meter has expired.....

    --
    ...and IN SOVIET RUSSIA, beowulf clusters imagine 1, 2, 3 profit!!!! jokes made out of YOU!!!
    1. Re:Parking meter usage.... by sxtxixtxcxh · · Score: 1

      i don't see how parent is a troll... aside from the negativism toward the parking meter maids (with whom i've actually never had a problem, and i've been parked at expired meters for 10 minutes some times.)...

      parent actually brings up an interesting use for a wifi blanket. personally, it'd be nice if we could put a transmitter in our cars that would notify the meters when we were parked, and charge only for the time spent, and for squatters: an insane amount for being parked longer than a set (and high visible) time all billed, or auto-debitted ...

      imagine a beowulf cluster of those...

      --
      for a minute there, i lost myself...
    2. Re:Parking meter usage.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hear you there.

      The parking meter people are amazingly quick and efficient.

      Good thing the rest of government doesn't work as efficiently.

    3. Re:Parking meter usage.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some bitter meter maid must be a slashdot user who had mod points today.

  24. Technology Du Jour by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny
    Note the contrast: cells phones danger terrorism bad, jamming technology needed (never mind that emergency services also rely on cell phones)

    OTOH: Wireless freedom innovation good

    Right now geek wireless can do no wrong.

  25. Suddenly Brain Tumors Sprout Like Mushrooms by tjstork · · Score: 0, Troll

    I just can't believe that all this EMF is safe.

    --
    This is my sig.
  26. Wifi is here to stay, but will you have to pay? by j1m+5n0w · · Score: 1
    Just like the earlier dotcoms, companies are scrambing to make their mark. Some will fail miserably, some will grow to be giants, and some will be successful and be eaten (or destroyed) by the giants.

    This is what worries me. With wireless networking, it is possible to build free community networks that span large distances and don't rely on rented infrastructure (phone lines, cable, etc...), except for uplink to the rest of the internet. (For an example of what such a network would look like, check out roofnet)

    If a commercial provider can provide "good enough" service for cheap, it removes part of the incentive to create high quality community networks that are free.

    -jim

  27. violence + violence = VIOLENCE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey, you simple minded fool : read

    "Hegemony or Survival" by Noam Chomsky,

    and realize that there are good reasons people are angry with the U.S.

    A simple-minded response involving anger only makes you the pawn of Bush AND the terrorists.

    Smart people know the answers lie not in violence, but in changing U.S. foreign policy.

  28. Re:Sony Clie by NanoGator · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Pardon my ignorance, but why was I modded off-topic for pointing out that wi-fi devices are getting down into a really low price? Did I misread the article or something?

    --
    "Derp de derp."
  29. The last clause in that summary... by CSharpMinor · · Score: 1

    "...and will support e-government initiatives and a more productive mobile workforce."

    Let's see how many buzzwords we can pack into that last dependent clause:

    "...and will grow e-civil management initiatives and will improve the morale of the mindshare in a more immersive global knowledge worker production environment."

    Mod Interesting or Underrated, help my karma.

    --

    Whatever it is I'm complaining about, I'm sure the Republicans did it. This is /., after all.
  30. Wow by bLindmOnkey · · Score: 0

    True mobility over such a vast stretch of land is great. If I lived there I'd roam around town iming all my friends that i'm...well roaming around. But the fun would all end when my laptop's battery dies.

  31. Re:RobMalda@gmail.com FOR SALE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about my friend Stirling pounds your GN ass and you give up the password?

  32. Spokane sucks hind tit by jhylkema · · Score: 1

    Quoth the poster:

    "...and will support e-government initiatives and a more productive mobile workforce."

    Let's see how many buzzwords we can pack into that last dependent clause:

    "...and will grow e-civil management initiatives and will improve the morale of the mindshare in a more immersive global knowledge worker production environment."


    This is fairly typical of Spokane. As late as 2000, I knew people in Spokane who were talking about "getting on that new Internet thing" and suchlike.

    Spokane is a pathetic backwater that is still basking in the afterglow of Expo '76. Anyone who doubts this needs to realize that about 80% of Spokane's college grads leave town as soon as they get their diplomas. You think the job market sucks where you are? Spokane's economy is perennially depressed. Spokane unemployment rate actually spiked during the 90s boom years! Besides, Spokane has lots of crime and not nearly enough cops.

    This is yet another futile attempt to get on board with "the next big thing." Trouble is, WiFi has been around for a couple of years now. Its latest attempt to be one of the cool kids is nothing short of pathetic.

    1. Re:Spokane sucks hind tit by tyrione · · Score: 1

      World's Fair, Expo '74, not Expo '76.

      I agree the city is 15 years late at acknowledging the days of being a haven for retirees with money are over and need to be over in order for the second largest city in Washington State to grow or die.

    2. Re:Spokane sucks hind tit by tyrione · · Score: 1

      Spokane has too many cops, not enough. Cite statistics all you want the fact of the matter is the more restrictive law enforcement gets on the citizens of any community the more crime will spike, both due in part because laws change to introduce once legal activities and now illegal activities, and due in part to the fact people of a Free Nation don't like being controlled by a myriad of frivolous laws.

      Blame Spokane City Council's trumping of any Spokane Mayor over the past 35 plus years as to how come Spokane missed the Internet boom and why traditional industry has slowly left, outside of the Medical Industry(old people are a hot commodity).

      Write a critique of Mayor Jim West 18 months from now and see where the City stands.

    3. Re:Spokane sucks hind tit by tyrione · · Score: 1

      Correction: Spokane has too many cops.

    4. Re:Spokane sucks hind tit by jhylkema · · Score: 1

      Quoth the poster:

      World's Fair, Expo '74, not Expo '76.

      Oops! I think that was a hybrid of Expo '74 in Spokane and Expo '86 in Vancouver, BC.

      Does this mean I have to turn my Spokane native card?

  33. Uhh.... by Codifex+Maximus · · Score: 1

    > The downtown 'Hot Zone' will improve city services
    > by facilitating intelligent policing, quicker fire
    > and rescue response, and will support e-government
    >initiatives and a more productive mobile workforce."

    Not to mention denial of services when it gets hacked. Hopefully, there will be redundancy in system services and tip top security.

    Also, I'm not sure I want my connectivity through a municipal carrier. What is the legal landscape like? How much regulation will there be?

    I'm all for getting connected but... I'm just playing Devil's Advocate here.

    --
    Codifex Maximus ~ In search of... a shorter sig.
  34. You know what I find absolutly amazing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I haven't heard people complaining about how anonymous open wireless services can be. I mean sure some people who understand the technology have been commenting on the security aspects but what I mean is that crypto in the hands of the public is a tool that protects criminals and yet open network connections aren't controlled that way even though they can be used to commit crimes anonymously. - 52ac76c77f50b99c35530ce006059c2b

  35. Wagon!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sweeet! Now I can sit in that really big Radio Flyer Wagon at Riverfront Park and surf the net, while I push little kids down the slide!

  36. OMGF WILDCAT IS ON TEH SPOKANE!!`1 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  37. Congratulations, idiots by ajp · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Airports shouldn't be selling internet access. While $6.95 isn't a heady chunk of change in my budget it's not something I'm gonna pay when I need to save my batteries for that 4-hour cross country. And finding an open, accessible power socket in an airport is like finding a Krispy Kreme in the Friday bagel basket.

    Why do I want net access in an airport? To check flight times when I'm picking someone up. To check e-mail for a few minutes, maybe. But seven bucks for a 45-minute layover? Give me a break.

    If, say, Topeka International had free, casual wireless access and Fargo International didn't I'd be more likely to book my flights through Topeka. What would Topeka get? My landing fees (which is their core business.) My undying dedication to FooBar Air, who uses--and is more likely to maintain--Topeka as their hub. And happy passengers.

    IBM gives away an OS because they want to sell hardware and consulting services. Stick to your core business. Giving away wifi is inexpensive and high-profile.

    1. Re:Congratulations, idiots by spectasaurus · · Score: 2, Funny

      Why do I want net access in an airport? To check flight times when I'm picking someone up.

      Why don't you just look up from your laptop to the big screens on the wall with all the flight info? Yeah, those are the ones.

  38. Gotta love Washington state by Aragorn+DeLunar · · Score: 1

    The other day I saw a fruit stand in rural central Washington advertising free WiFi. For those interested, it's highway 97A between Orondo and Chelan. ;)

    --
    Cynicism, like dogmatism, can be an excuse for intellectual laziness. - Susan Shirk
  39. But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are they synergizing their outputs with their outskirts?

  40. Connectivity through a municipal carrier. by Rembrant · · Score: 1

    You know that every federal agency will want access to it so unless encrypt your transmissions it will be like hanging your laundry on a outside cloth's line or posting your comments to Slashdot!

  41. sounds like a hack fest by GorillaTest · · Score: 1

    How in the world are you going to track down malicious hackers if they can connect from anywhere they want? Isn't physical access one of the only ways you can hold people accountable for thier behavior?