Slashdot Mirror


Colorado May Allow Cities To Provide Wifi

miguelitof writes "According to the TheDenverChannel.com, Colorado cities may soon be able to provide wireless internet service to their citizens. The state Senate will vote today (April 5th) on Colorado Senate Bill 152, which would allow cities to provide wireless internet access. The only proviso would be that cities would have to get approval from voters to use tax dollars. The cost to provide internet access to a 16 square mile area is about $600k. A city could charge as little as $16 a month and cover expenses."

311 comments

  1. I live in colorado by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    And since I had to pay for their stupid stadium that I didn't want, now they can pay for my useful wireless internet access which they may or may not want.

    1. Re:I live in colorado by NaruVonWilkins · · Score: 1

      That's a really good point. I'm in Seattle, and we voted down construction of a stadium to replace the Kingdome - but they built TWO anyway, using tax dollars. This can go both ways.

    2. Re:I live in colorado by robertjw · · Score: 1

      Heck yeah (although I wasn't specifically against the stadium). If nothing else this should drive down the costs of cable and DSL.

    3. Re:I live in colorado by ShaniaTwain · · Score: 2, Funny

      ...since I had to pay for their stupid stadium that I didn't want

      yes, but a stadium is useful. what possible use could city-wide wireless networking provide? How are you going to get a hot-dog and a $20 dollar beer out of it?

    4. Re:I live in colorado by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      why do you want the government to do what you can already do yourself? [seattlewireless.net]

    5. Re:I live in colorado by pete-classic · · Score: 1

      That's exactly the sort of thinking that made this country great.

      More bread! More circuses!

      -Peter

      PS: I live in Denver. I didn't want the stadium either. (Especially with that atrocious name.) I would enjoy the WiFi, but I oppose it politically.

    6. Re:I live in colorado by OECD · · Score: 1

      If nothing else this should drive down the costs of cable and DSL.

      Or price them out of the market? OK, prob. not since most of them have other business in the area (phone, cable, etc.) but the costs could just as easily go up (broadband as luxury item.)

      --
      One man's -1 Flamebait is another man's +5 Funny.
    7. Re:I live in colorado by robertjw · · Score: 1

      More likely would probably kill some of the other local wireless providers. Can't see cable and DSL going up because of it. At least where I live, Comcast has spent a significant amount of money creating it's network and upgrade it's image. It's not going to lose market share to local wireless without a fight. I'm not suggesting it would drop to anywhere near the $16 range, but I'm paying almost $60/month now. I think the cable company has a lot of room to adjust their pricing.

    8. Re:I live in colorado by cubicleman · · Score: 1

      I live in Denver... I'm not sure when or if I would use public WiFi though..it's not like I walk around with my laptop all the time... I use a computer at work and at home.

    9. Re:I live in colorado by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey here is a question ....if you get free wireless broadband can you hook it to a vonage box and get boradband phone service?

    10. Re:I live in colorado by WindBourne · · Score: 1

      First off, which stadium? Only those in the denver region are taxed for the diaghram or Coors.

      As to the wireless internet access, the state is targeting small areas. Rifle is a good example. They now do wifi because nobody else would. Wifi is a good way to get moderate bandwidth to homes/businesses in a cost effective fashion due to the distances between homes that are outside of metropolitians

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    11. Re:I live in colorado by zxnos · · Score: 1
      i know your being funny but a stadium does do a lot for the local economy. anytime you get 50,000+ (i think 72,000 at the new stadium in denver) people out and about after the game many go out to eat or hit the bars. add in all the merchandise etc. sports are big bucks at more than the stadium.

      that being said as a denver resident i have no idea why we really needed a new football stadium. but i dont follow that stuff.

      --
      always mosh clockwise
    12. Re:I live in colorado by rkelly · · Score: 1

      Meanwhile, Ricochet is back in business and has lit
      up towns from Denver up to the south side of Broomfield. The $27.99 plan includes national dialup when out of the coverage area. Looks like a 256k connection.

    13. Re:I live in colorado by Golias · · Score: 4, Insightful

      i know your being funny but a stadium does do a lot for the local economy.

      Actually, third-party analysis has shown, time and again, that this is BS.

      The net effect of building a major league statium on a state's economy is zero (minus whatever money you throw into the rat-hole.)

      A sports team doesn't bring any money into a state at all. If the team is not there, people just spend their entertainment budget on something else.

      You would actually be better off by randomly selecting 200 locally-owned businesses from the phone book, and handing them all the cash you would have used to build a stadium.

      If a stadium is such a massive boon to a downtown area, let the businesses in that area pitch in and build one. The truth is, it's only a help if they can get somebody else to pay for it.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    14. Re:I live in colorado by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > First off, which stadium? Only those in the denver region are taxed for the diaghram or Coors.

      Invesco Field at Mile High
      http://63.147.65.175/opinion/rivers0125.htm

    15. Re:I live in colorado by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Re:I live in colorado (Score:2)
      by WindBourne (631190) on Tuesday April 05, @02:53PM (#12146095)

      First off, which stadium? Only those in the denver region are taxed for the diaghram or Coors.


      Wrong. Six counties are being taxed for the football stadium: Denver, Boulder, Jefferson, Adams, Arapahoe, and Douglas.

      According to the Colorado Department of Revenue:


      The boundaries of the RTD/CD/FD [FD = "Metropolitan Football Stadium District"] include the counties of Denver, Boulder, Jefferson, Adams (west of Box Elder Creek), Arapahoe (south of I-70, west of Picadilly Rd. to Jewell, then west of Gun Club Rd. to Quincy, then generally west of Monaghan Rd., including Arapahoe Park and Aurora Reservoir), and Douglas (northeast portion plus Highlands Ranch area).


      The support by so many local Republicans for the stadium tax is the main reason I no longer vote Republican. (A lot of Democrats supported it to, showing that stupidity, pandering, and corporate welfare cross party lines).

      Besides, if stadium supporters had read Tom Clancy's novel The Sum of All Fears (1991), they would know that Denver's new football stadium would be targeted by terrorists with a nuclear warhead.

      Even though I am being taxed for the stadium, and and I am licensed by the state of Colorado to carry a concealed firearm, I am not permitted to bring said firearm into the stadium. I guess I'm supposed to leave it in the car, where it can be stolen.


      The following items are not permitted into the stadium:

      * Hard-sided containers of any size or style including hard-sided coolers or thermoses.
      * Bags or containers larger than 12" x 12" x 12"
      * Alcohol
      * Glass bottles or cans
      * Previously opened plastic bottles. This includes water bottles or Nalgene bottles.
      * Firearms or weapons of any type
      * Artificial noise makers
      * Signs or flags on sticks, regardless of the length
      * Large golf umbrellas
      * Laser pointers of any type
      * Any other item deemed dangerous or unacceptable by security


      In the opening scene of the novel Enemies Foreign and Domestic, former Navy SEAL Matt Bracken describes how a "terrorist" manages to kill hundreds of people inside a football stadium with a cheap rifle from the outside. (I use the words "terrorist" in quotes, becuase anybody who believes that Bush/Ashcroft was involved in 9/11, or Clinton/Reno in the Oklahoma City bombing, will enjoy the book. Believe me, it's not much of a plot spoiler.) Whereas, any gunman inside the stadium would immediately be jumped upon by bystanders.

    16. Re:I live in colorado by rjelks · · Score: 1

      Don't forget Coors Field and the Pepsi Center.

    17. Re:I live in colorado by jasonditz · · Score: 1

      Frankly it's a miracle anyone in this country pays for anything anymore. Surely enough people enjoy Cadbury Creme Eggs to make them an entitlement.

    18. Re:I live in colorado by petecarlson · · Score: 1

      This would kill most of the easy money for a city wisp but the fixed wireless base will still be there.
      When I say easy money, I mean customers with a laptop who know what their doing and pay me $20 a month for service. My cost is just the extra load on the AP as opposed to my fixed wieless customers who need expensive roof mounted bridges, support, etc.
      This would however create an installers market where I could charge premium rates to install a wireless bridge to the city's system. Pass the full price of the equipment and install labor on to the customer and let the city deal with providing the APs and bandwidth. If they don't like the city's service, support, latency, bandwith etc, I could then offer them my service. This would of course be an easy install for me as I don't have to outlay any money for CPE.

    19. Re:I live in colorado by pete-classic · · Score: 1

      Keep talking like that and you're going to find yourself elected to public office.

      -Peter

    20. Re:I live in colorado by MyLongNickName · · Score: 1

      Wireless is infrastructure. Making this available to all is the 21st century equivilent ot the national highway system, but a couple orders of magnitude cheaper.

      This is one of the few areas where the government should be spending.

      --
      See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
    21. Re:I live in colorado by fluxrad · · Score: 1

      Actually, third-party analysis has shown, time and again, that this is BS.

      And you have a link to one of these studies, or are you just blowing smoke out your ass?

      --
      "It is seldom that liberty of any kind is lost all at once." -David Hume
    22. Re:I live in colorado by WindBourne · · Score: 1

      that is the diaphragm (as even invesco nicked named it). The tax district is only in the denver region; IOW, it does not effect the state as a whole. In addition, we voted it in; part of living in a democracy.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    23. Re:I live in colorado by Pollardito · · Score: 1

      one minute on google and here's one such report. i'd be interested in reading a study that supports the counter argument. i've never even heard of one, it's always just taken for granted.

    24. Re:I live in colorado by jasonditz · · Score: 1

      "The 21st century equivilent ot the national highway system", assuming there were already many private highway systems that take you to all the same places.

      Grocery stores are infrastructure too, yet few cities have municipally run, taxpayer financed ones.

    25. Re:I live in colorado by FishinDave · · Score: 1

      Coors Field and the Pepsi Center... where are those? I live in Aurora, home of the Wheel Park. :)

    26. Re:I live in colorado by Emperor+Cezar · · Score: 1

      I remember watching a documentary that spoke of how G. W. Bush made his first few millions by investing in taxpayer-funded stadiums in Texas.

    27. Re:I live in colorado by Emperor+Cezar · · Score: 1

      Like TV is infrastructure. I like the idea of funding someone viewing pr0n, or by all means, reading Slashdot.

    28. Re:I live in colorado by rjelks · · Score: 1

      They are both in downtown Denver. Coors Field is around 20th, in Lower Downtown, and the Pepsi Center is right off of I-25 on Auroria Parkway. Isn't the Wheel Park a skate park?

    29. Re:I live in colorado by MyLongNickName · · Score: 1

      You fund someone viewing pr0n when you fund the national highway system. After all, those magazines don't teleport themselves to the newsstands.

      --
      See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
  2. Congradulations Colorado by LiENUS · · Score: 1

    This is how it really should be, Here a company is trying to block their competitor from building a new store using money from the local government. Ultimately it was ruled that the citizens should be able to vote for wether their tax dollers got used for it. Of course everyone there wants this new store to open.

    1. Re:Congradulations Colorado by Golias · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Yeah, congratulations.

      You are now locked in to paying $16 a month for your city's commie Wi-Fi solution, whether you use it or not.

      Connection speeds will undoubtably suck, but you will have few alternatives, because there will be no more mom-and-pop ISP's offering higher-speed DSL solutions. Hell, your local phone and companies might not bother with anything other than large corporate accounts now.

      You can also say goodbye forever to all the free Wi-Fi hotspots you had all over town. Why would a coffee shop provide free wireless as a draw for customers when the air around them is filled with a "pre-paid" signal?

      Best of all, if your city government is anything like every other city government I've ever looked at closely, part of your fee which you think is going to bandwidth will be going to fact-finding "conferences" for city council members in the Bahamas.

      Congratulations!

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    2. Re:Congradulations Colorado by NorbMan · · Score: 1

      The last time I checked, I wasn't paying my city for water services whether I was using it or not. Where do you get the idea that Wi-Fi will be different?

    3. Re:Congradulations Colorado by Golias · · Score: 1

      Hehe! So now you not only want a state-paid (and probably eventually state-controlled) ISP, but you want the functional equivalent of a fuckin' water meter to be required on every laptop in town so they can keep track of how much you use the service?

      Wow. Please never live in my town long enough to become a voter.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    4. Re:Congradulations Colorado by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Obviously you have no idea what makes country like US tick ..

      Are you that stupid or just young ?

    5. Re:Congradulations Colorado by NorbMan · · Score: 1

      Wow, you just like to be angry.

      I never said I was in favor of this. I just wondered why you assumed that a city-run Wi-Fi service would automatically charge every citizen for service. If I don't have water hooked up at my place, I don't get charged.

      Instead of answering my question you make a silly remark about metering, whoring for the "Funny" moderation.

    6. Re:Congradulations Colorado by Golias · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Wow, you just like to be angry.

      I keed, I keed! I joke-a with you!

      Instead of answering my question you make a silly remark about metering, whoring for the "Funny" moderation.

      Well, yeah. Your point is?

      You don't actually come to Slashdot for information do you?

      I always figured that most of us are here to blow of steam while our code is compiling (or whatever.)

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    7. Re:Congradulations Colorado by 2short · · Score: 1

      "You are now locked in to paying $16 a month for your city's commie Wi-Fi solution, whether you use it or not."

      Um, no. If a Colorado city wants to build a wifi network, we can vote on it. If the voters choose to spend tax money to build the network, one guy speculates service might cost $16 a month for those that use it.

      "Connection speeds will undoubtably suck, but you will have few alternatives, because there will be no more mom-and-pop ISP's offering higher-speed DSL solutions"

      I don't know about the entire state, but in all three Colorado cities I do know about, there are no mom-and-pops offering DSL. There is Quest offering DSL.

      "Hell, your local phone and companies might not bother with anything other than large corporate accounts now."

      My "local" phone and cable companies are Quest and Comcast. If my city offers cheap wireless access, somehow I doubt they will stop taking my money for a much faster connection. They've already got the wires going to my house, and it's not like they spend anything on customer support anyway.

      "You can also say goodbye forever to all the free Wi-Fi hotspots you had all over town"

      I might say goodbye to them if I had them, but I don't. Some coffee shops provide access for a fee. There is one free hotspot downtown, provided by the chamber of commerce, which I imagine would remain, since (under the articles speculation) the signal would not be pre-paid, and the hot spot in question is obviously directed toward tourists.

      I don't pay for access at coffee shops, since it's expensive and not that useful to me. I would pay for wireless, in addition to broadband via cable, if it gave me access anywhere in town. I don't particularly care who provides it; but currently no private company seems to be interested. So I'd vote for it; You presumably would vote against it if you lived here. But you don't, so who are you, or the state government, to tell the voters of my city how we can choose to spend our tax money?

      "Best of all, if your city government is anything like every other city government I've ever looked at closely, part of your fee which you think is going to bandwidth will be going to fact-finding 'conferences' for city council members in the Bahamas."

      Too bad city coucil members are apointed for life by the emperor, isn't it?

      Unfortunately, my city is not on the articles list of ones considering wifi networks, which kind of surprises me. I mean are we really going to let Colorado Springs not only out-techie, but even out-commie the Peoples Republic? That's crazy. Hell, our city govenrment runs a frickin restaurant. And now that I think of it, that hasn't caused any big crash in the viability of privately owned restaurants. And now that I really think about it, it, and the associated gardens, etc. have given the tourists somewhere to walk to from the main downtown street, and that whole series of blocks now has lot's more private business going on, even a couple restaurants.
      Frankly, I think one could argue in favor of setting up a city-wide wifi network even to those who don't plan to use it personaly. It would be worth it just to keep our image as a hip, tech-savy place, and thus continue to attract the large number of tech-oriented people and small businesses that keep our local economy going.

    8. Re:Congradulations Colorado by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      If you're going to post, is there any reason not to do so intelligently? Except for being a moron in the first place? I suppose if I were such an idiot, I'd try to play it off as just kidding too.

    9. Re:Congradulations Colorado by Golias · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Um, no. If a Colorado city wants to build a wifi network, we can vote on it.

      Proving once again that direct democracy can be defined as "two wolves and a lamb voting on what's for dinner."

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    10. Re:Congradulations Colorado by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Score: -1 "Missed the Pop-Culture Reference"

    11. Re:Congradulations Colorado by 2short · · Score: 2, Interesting

      So many people say, without any evidence. The only real direct democracies I know of are small towns in New England. I've lived in such a town. Once a year, every resident that showed up for town meeting got to vote on the town budget. That town had the most well-controlled spending of any governmental unit I've known. In less direct democracies, candidates will promise people all sorts of bread and circuses; they just don't talk about how they are going to pay for it, and the voters don't think about it. At town meeting, you're not going to get any remotely controversial spending through without everyone and their brother directly asking the voters how they think they are going to pay for it. For getting people to think about limiting government excesses, there's nothing like Roberts Rules of Order. In terms of sane budgets, I've seen no approach that comes anywhere close to having the individual voters vote on every bloody line-item. It's too bad it isn't practical on larger scales.

  3. Seems fair enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In other news, the FBI has just announced plans to hack into Colorado resident's computers using their recently discovered Wireless hack.

    1. Re:Seems fair enough by ElDuderino44137 · · Score: 1

      that smacks of South Park ;)

  4. 600k? by Cruithne · · Score: 1

    A month or up front? If up front, what is the monthly cost? With numbers like that, it almost seems like they could make money off of offering it...

  5. I think the article is mistaken by phaetonic · · Score: 3, Insightful

    With a population of 37,500 sharing a 802.11g connection, I'd hate to think what kind of latency would occur with BitTorrent and gaming...

    1. Re:I think the article is mistaken by Nos. · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I didn't see where it said 802.11 was the technology there were considering, though it is a possibility. I personally would rather see 802.16 (WiMax). It has a greater distance and more bandwidth. If a city were to build something like this and bring in business to help offset the costs, a wonderful, high speed network could be created with little or no ongoing costs to the public.

  6. On the surface... by ScooterBill · · Score: 2, Insightful

    it sounds like a great idea. However, local governments don't have the same incentives to provide good service at low cost. I would hope that this would still allow private companies to compete.

    Long term, it would be nice to have high speed wireless access everywhere and have this be a public services paid for through taxes. Similar to public restrooms, drinking fountains, parks, etc.

    1. Re:On the surface... by s20451 · · Score: 1

      Long term, it would be nice to have high speed wireless access everywhere and have this be a public services paid for through taxes. Similar to public restrooms, drinking fountains, parks, etc.

      Yes, except you don't need a relatively expensive device to access public restrooms, parks, and so on. Providing wifi only benefits those who can afford laptops or similar devices, which means the middle class and up.

      Free wifi sounds nice, but like any luxury it should be left to the private sector, who will probably do a better job over the long term -- at a guaranteed cost of zero to taxpayers.

      --
      Toronto-area transit rider? Rate your ride.
    2. Re:On the surface... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Yes, except you don't need a relatively expensive device to access public restrooms, parks, and so on.


      You need to pay a fortune to access the stadium that was built with public funds. And then you have to pay even more for the beer.


      it should be left to the private sector, who will probably do a better job over the long term -- at a guaranteed cost of zero to taxpayers.


      ROTFLMAO!!!!

      What private sector enterprise has EVER missed the chance to stick its nose in the public trough while keeping service down, fees high and profits to themselves?

      That is what the private sector is all about. Provide as little as possible while charging as much as you can get away with, and if you can double bill the government along the way, then you have scored!

    3. Re:On the surface... by cmburns69 · · Score: 1

      The problem is that there is not enough competition on the real marketplace for the existing companies to give good customer service.

      I believe governmental entrance into this market will have the effect of raising the bar for everybody.

      In effect, everybody wins!

      --
      Online Starcraft RPG? At
      Dietary fiber is like asynchronous IO-- Non-blocking!
    4. Re:On the surface... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You just made a great case against paying for statiums, but not much of a case for why tax-funded wi-fi is a good idea.

    5. Re:On the surface... by s20451 · · Score: 1

      You need to pay a fortune to access the stadium that was built with public funds. And then you have to pay even more for the beer.

      The fact that governments have spent money unwisely in the past does not justify them spending it unwisely in the future.

      --
      Toronto-area transit rider? Rate your ride.
    6. Re:On the surface... by bfields · · Score: 1
      However, local governments don't have the same incentives to provide good service at low cost.

      OK, *you* volunteer to answer the phones at your city councilperson's office the next time a router goes down.

      I would hope that this would still allow private companies to compete.
      I don't see why not. But I also don't see that the private companies who own the most extensive already-established last-mile networks (and, sometimes, the content distributed over those networks too!) have the right incentives either....

      --Bruce Fields

    7. Re:On the surface... by ScooterBill · · Score: 1

      " the private sector, who will probably do a better job over the long term -- at a guaranteed cost of zero to taxpayers"

      and how many tax breaks, rezoning exemptions, eminent domain actions and anti-competitive laws will it take to provide this "zero cost" service?

      Also, relatively expensive is well...relative. Television and phones were expensive at one time. Now you can buy a decent wi-fi equiped laptop for under a thousand bucks and a wi-fi equipped PDA for a few hundred. They are becoming a commodity.

    8. Re:On the surface... by Politburo · · Score: 1

      Yes, except you don't need a relatively expensive device to access public restrooms, parks, and so on. Providing wifi only benefits those who can afford laptops or similar devices, which means the middle class and up.

      However, you do need a relatively expensive device, plus relatively expensive insurance, to access most public roads, rest stops, and so on..

    9. Re:On the surface... by ElDuderino44137 · · Score: 2, Funny

      I hope that the WiFi service ... ... is better then the public restrooms that I find in parks ;)

    10. Re:On the surface... by s20451 · · Score: 1

      However, you do need a relatively expensive device, plus relatively expensive insurance, to access most public roads, rest stops, and so on..

      But absolutely everyone benefits from them, whether they own a car or not. Everything you buy, including essentials such as food, arrived by truck. And, although I don't own a car, the roads are a nice place to ride my (inexpensive) bike or take transit.

      On the other hand, it's hard to see how a person who can't afford a laptop will benefit from civic wifi -- they will still get their "data" from newspapers, TV, and radio.

      --
      Toronto-area transit rider? Rate your ride.
    11. Re:On the surface... by s20451 · · Score: 1

      and how many tax breaks, rezoning exemptions, eminent domain actions and anti-competitive laws will it take to provide this "zero cost" service?

      Given that Starbucks and others are providing the service right now ... none?

      --
      Toronto-area transit rider? Rate your ride.
    12. Re:On the surface... by robertjw · · Score: 1

      Free wifi sounds nice, but like any luxury it should be left to the private sector, who will probably do a better job over the long term -- at a guaranteed cost of zero to taxpayers.

      Not sure where you are from, but I'm sure part of the motivation here is the makeup of the the Colorado geography. Most people in Colorado live in the "Front Range" area spanning from Colorado Springs in the south to Ft. Collins in the north. The rest of the state is relatively sparsely populated, some of the smaller towns are 50-100 miles from a major metropolitan area. I live in Greeley, east of the Ft. Collins area and a city of about 85,000 and DSL only recently came to town. Most smaller communities in Colorado have limited broadband access due to their distance from the more densely populated areas. The private sector will not get to many of these communities for years - if at all. There just isn't enough money there. Creating a wireless network through the local government may be the only way many of these rural/farming communites ever get broadband access.

  7. This is a SHOCK and a SHAME. by ShaniaTwain · · Score: 5, Funny

    Public tax dollars should NEVER go to provide useful services to the people. Sounds suspiciously like communism to me. What about the poor companies? Its a slippery slope people, next thing you know the government will be picking up garbage and paving streets! Stop it now before its too late!

    1. Re:This is a SHOCK and a SHAME. by stubear · · Score: 1

      Garbage collection and street repair is often subconracted. I have no problem with cities providing free wi-fi if hey subcontract the work out. However, I do have a problem with government running or becoming a business entity, especially when tax dollars are used.

    2. Re:This is a SHOCK and a SHAME. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know you're attempting the use of sarcasm ...

      But actually you got it right: the government should not be providing garbage services and owning the streets.

    3. Re:This is a SHOCK and a SHAME. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a matter of priorities. If you've got great bus service, great hospitals, great libraries, great schools, clean streets, regular garbage and recycling collection, no homeless begging on the street etc. etc. then why not have a treat.

      Otherwise, get your head screwed on right.

    4. Re:This is a SHOCK and a SHAME. by mzwaterski · · Score: 1
      You sir are an idiot...

      I suppose the gas station steals from you, but generously provides you will gasoline. Have you ever driven on a city street? Have you ever gone to a park? Oh, nevermind, you probably haven't left that basement in twenty-five years.

      Taxes are payments to cover services provided, learn to deal with it!

    5. Re:This is a SHOCK and a SHAME. by dpilot · · Score: 1

      They should instead privatize the streets, including the street you live on. Then the company that bought it can charge YOU for the privilege of leaving and entering your driveway. And if you don't like that, sell your house and buy different one on a street whose owners' policies you DO like. Unless of course after you move, the owner of the street you used to live on buys the street you now live on.

      But that's private enterprise, isn't it? It's "theft" for the government to levy a tax in exchange for services. It's "private enterprise" for a corporation to require large sums of money for those same exclusive services. (Thinking of natural monopolies here, like the ROAD (singular) to your house, or the fact that I don't really want competitive electric poles and wires strung up there.)

      Keep in mind I'm not being a government apologist, here. I'm just a lot more cynical about private enterprise and the Free Market. Both have their good points, and their bad points. Any caveman can grunt, "Government BAD, Private Enterprise GOOD!" but that doesn't make it so.

      --
      The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
    6. Re:This is a SHOCK and a SHAME. by Metapsyborg · · Score: 1

      In other news, Halliburton has won a $100 million subcontract to establish Wi-Fi internet service for Colorado cities.
      The funds for the project are coming from taxpayers and advertisers.

      --
      (\(\
      (^.^) INFECTED
      (")")
    7. Re:This is a SHOCK and a SHAME. by letxa2000 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      While taxes are a necessary evil, they must be minimized. That's because, unlike private industry where you can take your business elsewhere, you cannot opt out of taxes just because you don't use the "services" that are being "provided." If you don't need a service being offered by a business, you don't buy that service--but no such luxury is available when it comes to taxes.

      I believe the government should build and maintain roads, provide domestic security (police, essentially) so that we are not in danger out in public, and provide for the defense of the country. Local governments should also provide public education. THAT'S IT. If that's all we had to pay for tax-wise we'd probably be paying about 20% what we pay now in taxes... and be not confused, social security and medicare are both taxes.

      Minimal taxation is not unreasonable and is a necessary evil of life. But the "services" provided by the government have far exceeded what is necessary and the taxation necessary to support that spending is a huge burden on the citizens.

      In that sense, minimal taxation is reasonable. But excessive taxation beyond the minimal amount necessary to support the basic functions of government is, morally, theft.

    8. Re:This is a SHOCK and a SHAME. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      not necessarily, businesses offering tech jobs will be attracted to cities with the best tech infrastructure, such as the best WiFi networks. If the local governments don't work to keep up their networks, the businesses will move elsewhere, and the city will lose revenue. That's competition, pure and simple.

    9. Re:This is a SHOCK and a SHAME. by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

      I'm a little confused about the distinction you're trying to make. Subcontracting or the lack thereof shouldn't matter, because at the end of the day it's still taxpayer dollars being used to fund the service, which competes with private enterprise.

      There are times when I think the government has good reason to get involved in an endeavor like this. But it has nothing to do with whether the government uses its own employees or subcontractors.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    10. Re:This is a SHOCK and a SHAME. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't have to use the service, but i bet you'll be happy when it's there. Let me give you an example.

      The UK has the NHS, a taxpayer-funded medical service which is available to everybody in the country, regardless of class, creed or culture. People occasionally chat to their friends whilst walking down the road, asking why should they pay for a service they don't use. After all, they've never broken a bone or been critically ill. Next thing they know they wake up in a hospital bed after being hit by a truck. No credit check, no bill (save for if they want extra services), just medical attention because they needed it.

      That is why you pay for services you "don't use", because someday you may. Or somebody will be paying for a service you use but they don't.

      Call me a communist, but I would rather have a set of services which are available regardless. Don't use a service? The numbers are taken into account and the service scaled back, whereas something you do use may be paid for by someone who doesn't use that.

    11. Re:This is a SHOCK and a SHAME. by dpilot · · Score: 1

      I sort of agree with you, but I don't think it's the black and white line that you seem to. Take our industry, for instance. It has been called, "The Microsoft Tax," and while it IS possible to buy a PC (or Mac) without Microsoft software, at various times it has been well beyond the abilities of most of the marketplace. So in this respect, we tend to be held over a barrel and "taxed" by corporations as well as the government. Maybe it's not really a tax, but it's effectively as unavoidable as one. Perhaps the greatest Evil that Microsoft did was to sell others on the "tax revenue" path, because now just about every corporation seeks the holy grail where customers are practically forced to pay on an ongoing basis, unfettered by competition. (Can you say I.P.?)

      So permitting myself to perceive "corporate taxes" as well as "government taxes" in many respects I'd prefer the government ones. With the government I have a direct vote with which to protest, and I have the feeling that the government is more bumbling than greedy - I'd rather sleep with an elephant than a shark.

      Then of course we have the grey ground of regulated monopolies, like power and phone - and how are they different from roads?

      So I sort of agree with you, but don't think it's quite so clear-cut. It's nearly impossible to avoid some corporate products, or to buy from a different source, making them effectively a tax, too. Once put on that plane, IMHO it's no longer a black-and-white matter.

      --
      The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
    12. Re:This is a SHOCK and a SHAME. by Narchie+Troll · · Score: 1

      And withholding needed services from the destitute and ill is, morally, murder.

      I'd rather be a thief than a murderer.

    13. Re:This is a SHOCK and a SHAME. by buttfuckinpimpnugget · · Score: 0
      Whoa with the insults there bub!

      There is a big difference between a gas station and the services governmment provides. Of course the gas station doesn't steal from me. I have a CHOICE of whether or not to patronize it. Not so with 'gubment. The so-called services are proveded for me whether I like it or not and I am forced to pay for it.

      Like I said in my original post, the benefits are irrelevant, the fact is that Taxes are theft. Theft is immoral therefore Taxes are immoral. If I stick a gun in your face and demand 30% of the money in your wallet but give you something in return is that not theft?

      Jeez. THINK for a minute, eh?

    14. Re:This is a SHOCK and a SHAME. by mzwaterski · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If you come to my club and I say you must pay me 10% of your earnings if you want to stay at my club, I'm not stealing 10% of your earnings. Even if you argue, well that 10% goes towards the swimming pool and the hot tub, and frankly, I can't swim so I won't be using those, therefore I won't pay that. I have the right to kick you out or have you arrested for trespassing if you refuse to pay. Same deal, you live in the US, you get benefit from the services, you pay the taxes. Frankly, I'm not even sure why I'm continuing this argument. Your little logic game is functionally illogical because you are starting your argument with a definition that is incorrect. Taxes are not theft.

    15. Re:This is a SHOCK and a SHAME. by buttfuckinpimpnugget · · Score: 0
      Good points but. The free market is not utopia. And yes I do think everything should be privatized. But it is the best chance we have to get as close as possible. When talking about monopolies I find it interesting that people don't apply the term consistently. Most people agree that monopolies are bad. Absent competition, prices are higher and quality is lower. For some reason when it comes to government people seem to think that monopolies are good. But the same principles apply. Higher prices and lower quality. don't forget that we pay huge sums of money for our roads now! Number one, why should we be forced to pay for anything, number two, why should people pay for something that they don't use.

      I find it surprizing that you are more cynical about private enterprize than you are of government. Don't like WalMart? No biggie. Don't give them your money. You don't have that choice with government.

      Also what makes the services government provides so special? Answer is NOTHING.

      And like I told the last poster, It doesn't matter if it is more expensive, if service is better or worse. It only matters what is moral. Yeah, some asshole might want to charge me $10 bucks a day to use his road. So what? Nothing gives me the right to use his property without his consent.

      I look forward to a reply to this. When you preach to the choir it's usually the same song!

    16. Re:This is a SHOCK and a SHAME. by buttfuckinpimpnugget · · Score: 0

      Dude, Of course you would have a right to kick me out, same as I have a right to kick someon out of my house. Because it is PRIVATE PROPERTY. The same as the fruits of your labor (money) are your private property. No one has a right to these things unless you voluntarily give them up. Taxes ARE theft. No one voluntarily pays taxes, they are taken from us. I'll say it again, If I take your money it is still theft even if I force some service down your throat so quit telling me about the benefits, they are irrelevant. A small example: Say you own some land, you buy a car that you will only use on your property. You cannot buy that car without paying taxes. The supposed reason for these taxes is to pay for the roads. So, in this case you would be paying for a benefit you would never realize. But again, benefits aside, unless it is voluntary it is THEFT! If you do decide to reply (hey, arguing is fun!) please explain to me how it is not. If 5 people on a desert island vote to take the property (money, coconuts, whatever) of the 6th person, just because they voted to do it does not make it just.

    17. Re:This is a SHOCK and a SHAME. by mzwaterski · · Score: 1
      Sticking to one point: Taxes are not theft

      Black's Law Dictionary: Theft: 1. The felonious taking and removing of another's personal property with the intent of depriving the true owner of it

      First, I'd argue that the property is taken. No one comes to your house and takes the money, but then you'll argue that the government will garnish your wages and such to get the taxes if you don't pay, so we'll stay away from that one.

      Let's focus on felonious:

      Of course the definition of felonious is "of or relating to a felony" so turning to Felony: 1. A serious crime usu. punishable by imprisonment for more than one year or by death. Examples include burglary, arson, rape, and murder.

      So, while Black's law does not define the law, it is a very persuasive source when it comes to definition of terms. Because taxes are not against the "law" they cannot by definition be theft. Your whole argument begins with the definition Taxes ARE theft, yet you have provided no justification for that argument.

      Please provide some type of justification as to your definition of taxes as theft.

      PS: Sorry for calling you an idiot yesterday, I was in an especially defiant mood. No offense was intended.

    18. Re:This is a SHOCK and a SHAME. by dpilot · · Score: 1

      It seems that in economic discussions, there's a range from (pure) socialism to (pure) capitalism, and most people seem to like to identify themselves with the extremes. I tend to be a die-hard moderate.

      My simplistic argument against (pure) socialism is that it ignores greed as a motivation, and that everyone will do their best out of Love of the Masses. Essentially, IMHO it's unrealistic.

      My simplistic argument against (pure) capitalism is that it's uncivilized. Take good old "Law of the Jungle, red in tooth and claw," and replace it with "Law of the Market, green in tooth and claw." It simply redefines Power to be economic prowess instead of physical prowess. At the same time, it counts on a civilization that will protect the economically powerful from the physically powerful, BUT not vice versa.

      So then what is "civilization" and what do we expect of it? Personally, I want freedom of action, within well-defined parameters, as much freedom as possible. There are certain things I won't do to others, and I don't want them doing those things to me. Essentially, I'll mind my business, and you mind yours.

      I grow more cynical about private enterprise when it starts trying to act like a government, and starts forcing people to do things. Here's one example, using everyone's whipping boy, and boy in this case do they deserve to be whipped:
      http://clevescene.com/issues/2005-03-30/ news/featu re_print.html
      Here's another thing I came across recently, not quite the same type of abuse:
      http://www.texasobserver.org/showArticle.a sp?Artic leID=1898%20
      You can argue that, "They signed the contract, they have to live by it," on one the hand. On the other hand, the company can ALWAYS hire someone better at the Law than I am, or can afford to.

      I guess this side of it comes down to a view of corporations that has emerged in the past few decades, "Corporations are in business ONLY to make money, and are responsible ONLY to their stockholders." At face value, that has come to sound reasonable, but let's look at it a different way. You want someone to fix your car, so you decide to interview mechanics:
      Mechanic1: "I've always liked cars, since before I was a teenager. I rebuilt my first engine when I was 12 and have moved on from there. In recent years I've been learning about the new computerized engines. This career path is a natural for me, I believe I can do well at it, and earn a good living for my family."
      Mechanic2: "A few years into my studies as an economics major, I realized that *everything* is subject to offshoring except on-the-spot services. Plumbing was too dirty, construction too hot and too likely to get me injured, so car repair was the obvious choice. I went to tech school, and here I am."
      Who do you want working on your car?

      For that matter, what type of person do you want for a friend or neighbor?

      Outta time, gotta go. Answer this when you get a chance, so your old comment doesn't spool off, and I'll add more. (Clue: government is (usually) sufficiently inefficient to be less of a bother to me.)

      --
      The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
  8. Only $600K to do 16 sq mi ? by DiamondGeezer · · Score: 1

    If that's all the outlay required, what say a few of us Slashdotters got together, put a business plan which calls for $1mill, goto some some VCs and tell them about the next sure thing, then take the company public and retire by November.... Or did I miss something?

    --
    Tubby or not tubby. Fat is the question
    1. Re:Only $600K to do 16 sq mi ? by Max_Wells_SH · · Score: 1

      If that's all the outlay required, what say a few of us Slashdotters got together, put a business plan which calls for $1mill, goto some some VCs and tell them about the next sure thing, then take the company public and retire by November.... Or did I miss something?

      You missed "2. ????".

      --
      I read Slashdot for the articles.
  9. Some services were made for government by John+Seminal · · Score: 0

    I love the idea of the local city providing wi-fi access. If only they would offer phone and cable service. These are services people use as much as garbage collection or roads. Plus, government can use economies of scale to provide much lower costs than any buisness could. Buisnesses never cut costs. Never. With our luck, the best we could get is a mail-in rebate.

    --

    Rosco: "If brains were gunpowder, Enos couldn't blow his nose."

    1. Re:Some services were made for government by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And you think the government cuts costs? ...Ya I know off-topic, but I had to vent.

    2. Re:Some services were made for government by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Well, at least as far as healthcare, they do. Take a look at socialized healthcare systems in the world - check costs vs. lifespans/infant mortality/etc. In general, they're very cheap for the QoS that they provide.

      A good chunk of total healthcare costs are related to insurance and billing overhead. Simplifying the system yields huge benefits, in cases like that. Certainly, this doesn't apply to all government programs...

    3. Re:Some services were made for government by michrech · · Score: 1

      Yeah, companies never cut costs (HUGE lay-offs, cuts in benifits, etc, while the Exec's raise their own pay and keep customer prices exactly the same).

      Nope.., Never happens...

      Of course, less than one minute on google will show you news article after news article that proves the opposite, but hey, this is Slashdot, so lets ignore all the facts, eh?

      --
      bork bork bork!
    4. Re:Some services were made for government by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1
      "Buisnesses" (sic) never cut costs.

      What planet do you come from? Profits come from the difference between prices and costs.

      Governments may have an advantage of economy of scale, but over time that will be overwhelmed by union featherbedding, corruption, giving sinecures to family members, etc.. What's missing is a profit motive to run economically and competitively.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    5. Re:Some services were made for government by Chris+Burke · · Score: 5, Interesting

      You make a good point, but "lower costs than any business could" seems a red herring to me. It's the same red herring that all the opponents of this bill use -- the idea that the government is going to be competing with businesses and have an unfair advantage over them.

      While implementations may vary, I highly doubt that the government is going to be in the business of building wi-fi equipment, routers, etc. They are going to hire other companies to do this. They are going to hire other companies to do maintenance when necessary, and they are eventually going to have to pay an ISP to connect their wi-fi service to the Internet.

      What this means is that there is going to be plenty of opportunity for businesses to make money providing wi-fi service to a city.

      Of course they might not make as much money as they would charging monthly service fees to individuals in the city, because the city has collective bargaining power. Boo hoo. They know that the government is not going to be competing with them per se, but rather limiting their ability to gouge customers. They're just using the "competition" argument to invoke the name of Capitalism in the same cynical way that patriotism is invoked to get us to agree with things that have nothing to do with patriotism.

      Always be wary of a large corporate/government entity that says that you should not be able to pool your resources with others and thus enjoy the same benefits as they do. Always be wary of anyone whose definition of a level playing field is the status quo with them holding all the advantages.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    6. Re:Some services were made for government by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      "Buisnesses" (sic) never cut costs.

      What planet do you come from? Profits come from the difference between prices and costs.


      I think he meant businesses never cut costs to their customers. Which is true, unless they are forced to by competitive pressure. Like you said, it's income minus costs, so why would they want to reduce income? If it won't get them more sales, it's counter-productive.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    7. Re:Some services were made for government by slyguy135 · · Score: 1
      It's true that people can't be trusted to think of your interests instead of their own, which is why they invoke noble principles to in fact further their own goals. This includes corporations, governments, your ex-wives (apparently), etc.

      But it's still valid to be opposed to the government getting involved in providing a service which can be provided by the private sector because it's against the principles of capitalism. The logic is simple: If a company hasn't set up a city-wide WiFi network, it has to be presumed there's no profit in it. If there's no profit in it, why should the government provide it? I'm all in favour of people voluntarily banding together to do this on a non-profit basis, but this is other people's money being used here, and I'm sure they'd know how to spend it better themselves...

    8. Re:Some services were made for government by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And what are you going to do if you don't like their service ?
      Petition the goverment ?

      Man, you are such a fucking moron I pray you are nowhere near where I live.

    9. Re:Some services were made for government by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I'm all in favour of people voluntarily banding together to do this on a non-profit basis, but this is other people's money being used here, and I'm sure they'd know how to spend it better themselves..."

      This bill allows cities and other communities to publicly fund a WiFi network, IT DOES NOT FORCE them to! If a city has referandum to establish such a service and the voters affirm it, you can't get much more voluntary then that.

    10. Re:Some services were made for government by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      The logic is simple: If a company hasn't set up a city-wide WiFi network, it has to be presumed there's no profit in it.

      Presuming something can't be profitable because no one has done it before may be simple logic, but it is also falacious. If that logic held, one would wonder how anyone would start anything at all. Fortunately, it doesn't hold. That aside...

      If there's no profit in it, why should the government provide it?

      Umm... because the people, who the government allegedly serves, want it?

      Why should profit matter? The people decide that they want their city to provide wifi, and the city spends tax dollars to do so. Where does profit enter into it? I would certainly hope the city is not making a profit off the services it provides!

      Now, if we assume hypothetically that a given city would not be a profitable market for a commercial venture, that sounds like exactly the case where there should be no objection at all to the city providing it.

      I'm all in favour of people voluntarily banding together to do this on a non-profit basis, but this is other people's money being used here, and I'm sure they'd know how to spend it better themselves...

      So, would the constituents of a local municipality voting to have their town provide wifi at cost count as voluntarily banding together?

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
  10. Takes the fun out of... by bird603568 · · Score: 0

    wardriving. How hard would it be to get a signal? Also how hard would it be to break encryption if there is any?

  11. $16 / month? by TheFlyingGoat · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I live in Milwaukee, which is approximately 16 square miles. Within that 16 square mile area, there are around 600,000 residents (talking City of Milwaukee, not the metro area). If the cost to provide wireless runs $600K/month, that comes to $1/citizen/month. Even if you guess that it would cost 10 times as much (given the way our local government works ;), that's still only $10/month. Where is that $16/m figure coming from?

    --
    You have enemies? Good. That means you've stood up for something, sometime in your life. --Winston Churchill
    1. Re:$16 / month? by Telastyn · · Score: 2, Insightful

      A lower population density. Most likely due to the more uneven terrain in colorado, as compared to wisconsin.

    2. Re:$16 / month? by TheFlyingGoat · · Score: 2, Informative

      Twice the population density in Milwaukee vs Denver:

      http://www.internest.com/city/milwaukeewi.asp
      http://www.internest.com/city/denverco.asp

      So Denver would be $2/person. I actually think the population density of the states would be similar, given the fact that the upper half of Wisconsin is very midly populated (it's all forest) and the lower half just has a few bigger cities (Milwaukee, Madison) with the rest being farmland and glacial land.

      --
      You have enemies? Good. That means you've stood up for something, sometime in your life. --Winston Churchill
    3. Re:$16 / month? by iammaxus · · Score: 1

      And you are going to force every citizen to pay for it? That includes small children, people who get there service other ways, etc. In addition, I wouldn't be so sure what that 600k/month figure actually means.

    4. Re:$16 / month? by mapmaker · · Score: 1
      Where is that $16/m figure coming from?

      I dunno, but it's not from the $600K. The submitter failed to mention that the $600K figure is the setup cost and has nothing to do with the monthly cost of providing the service.

    5. Re:$16 / month? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, Denver is quite flat. If one were to draw a north/south line through denver, most everything east of that line is flat/plains. About 30min west of downtown you hit the foothills, then the mountains.

    6. Re:$16 / month? by boster · · Score: 2, Interesting
      And don't forget that if these cities mirror most American large and medium sized cities, then many, if not most, users will be people who don't live in the WiFi zone or even in the city. Most users will be people who work or are doing business downtown.

      I'm all for "free" WiFi for areas like this, but charging only those who live in that zone is not the way to go. It indirectly benefits the whole metro area. Widen the tax base and then you only charge pennies a month. Obviously, if there are only geogrphic centers of commerce besides downtown, it then behooves the city to provide "free" WiFi to those areas too as resources allow.

      --
      Madness takes its toll. Exact change please.
    7. Re:$16 / month? by tOaOMiB · · Score: 1

      From RTA, it sounds like they would use tax dollars to buy equipment, but they would charge for service; i.e. not every citizen has to buy the service.
      Perhaps they are estimating the customer base, and figuring out what they would have to charge to cover post-setup expenses.

    8. Re:$16 / month? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is Milwaukee really only 16 square miles? You guys must be packed in there like sardines!

      Sod wireless internet access - move!

    9. Re:$16 / month? by S.O.B. · · Score: 1

      I don't know where you learned math but according to the stats you linked to for Denver:

      3,700 people/sq mi X 16 sq mi = 59200 people

      $600,000 / 59200 people = $10.14 / person

      Not $1 or $2. Allowing for the fact that not everyone will sign up (such as children) and some people will share a connection and $16 is pretty reasonable.

      --
      Some of what I say is fact, some is conjecture, the rest I'm just blowing out my ass...you guess.
    10. Re:$16 / month? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >> A lower population density

      Hey, horses and cattle need internet access too, pal.

    11. Re:$16 / month? by Smegma4U · · Score: 1

      Just wanted to mention that there's at least one other Slashdot reader in Milwaukee :-)

      --
      If it's supposed to move and doesn't, use WD-40. If it moves and it shouldn't, use duct tape.
  12. Wi-fi Vs Mesh by earthstar · · Score: 3, Interesting
    So still wifi is being provided in latest rollouts of wireless interent?

    Whatever happened to the concept of Mesh Networks , that sprovide high speed higher security Internet that was seen as a bettet alternative to WiFI ?

    Infact I read in SPECTRUM that it has already been implemented in Vegas.

    1. Re:Wi-fi Vs Mesh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Mesh networking has a slightly different goal in mind then provideing low cost to setup, and reaching as many people as possible.

      What mesh networks try to acomplish is creating dynamic networks from moving parts. I don't know if you have ever went war driving and tried to IM with someon online while router hopping, but you will quickly find out that our current networks are designed for stationary devices.

      I think you will start to see mesh networking taking off in about 3-6 years when more cars are outfitted with their own versions of vechicle to vechicle communication systems. (I read that some higher end automobile manufactures are doing this already).
      The benefit of this would be the creation of "smart cars" that would be able to assit the driver with emergency decesions, or with simply route planning which takes into account traffic density, or planning based on accident reports, or assistance with avoiding those huge potholes in roads, or merging traffic to help assist emergency works............

    2. Re:Wi-fi Vs Mesh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's still around, however download speeds may be slower with a wireless connection.

      http://www.imesh.com/

      ha.

    3. Re:Wi-fi Vs Mesh by doombob · · Score: 1

      Mesh networks still have to use an underlying technology such as WiFi to create the mesh. The company I work for is creating a mesh of Wifi nodes using Strix units to manage the network. It's really easy to set up a new node, pull up the manager with the list of "rogue devices," and then incorporate the new node. When Wimax is available, the company says that they will provide equipment you can integrate with the existing nodes (kind of like stackable Linksys devices).

    4. Re:Wi-fi Vs Mesh by ElDuderino44137 · · Score: 1

      That works well until you get to someone in a 57' Chevy ;)

    5. Re:Wi-fi Vs Mesh by drinkypoo · · Score: 1
      When provided with a standard for a mesh that works across multiple platforms, and a low-power platform that allows me to be a mesh node for less than $100 (and the software for, say, linux is totally free/Free) then I will make my home server a mesh node and put a mesh node in my car. The thing that will make it take off is if it's really cheap. Having a mesh node in my car would let me have a single point for communications from the vehicle. I've been procrastinating on the subject of finally installing a PC in my car for ages and I'm finally sneaking up on it now, and the conclusion I've come to is that it would be best to use tiny little systems throughout the vehicle for individual stations and have a server in the trunk. Ethernet is convenient enough (and I have a lot of it) and you can get flat stuff for really strange installations, so putting multiple computers in the vehicle actually makes a lot of sense. We're talking very short distances here in the ethernet sense, and I can use anything from gigabit down to 10 megabit depending on what kind of cable is convenient, power requirements, et cetera. It's become very inexpensive to get tiny embedded platforms with ethernet on them and 5 port 100Mbps hubs the size of a pack of cards or so can be had for around twenty bucks.

      This all sounds pretty unnecessary but consider that the car already has a number of simple computers in it. Some of them are not so simple any more; PCMs usually have 32 bit microprocessors in them, often RISC architecture, and they feature communication buses of anything from 4800 bps up to multiple megabits for the latest CAN protocols. There are separate computers for the motor, transmission, ABS, climate control, body management, navigation, and sometimes even the automatic seatbelts. Having a storage and compute server and several X terminals, headless systems to capture telemetry and/or video, et cetera is only going to get cheaper and more reasonable. Remember how we used to see drawings of "futuristic" computers and they had all these cables strung out everywhere? Now we have a peer to peer version of firewire (at 100MB/sec) which can be star wired or daisy chained, and USB which is star wired, and all this stuff just plugs together and mostly works :)

      Anyway most people won't want all this crap. They want internet streaming radio and the ability to bring up maps. (Imagine google maps with GPS tracking... it's mmm-mmm good.) They can be well-served through the same equipment, which is the way to make it ubiquitous. In particular a Linux-based navigation system installed in a stereo with a motorized screen, which comes with ethernet, would be a good start. Just give people SOME kind of expansion, I think a couple of CF slots would be ideal. If I had a real job any more I'd be willing to spend at least a grand on something like that.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    6. Re:Wi-fi Vs Mesh by orac2 · · Score: 1

      It is of course totally possible to create a wifi-based mesh network, but the Mesh network in Vegas inverts that idea: mesh is used for the backbone (which city workers and high end subscribers can access directly), with bridges to local WiFi hot spots for normal consumers. The radio technology underlying the Vegas mesh is very different from WiFi. The company which brought the technology over from its military roots (MeshNetworks) was bought by Motorala a few months ago, so expect to see more of it, including the possibility of a Mesh-based cell phone network.

      The advantage of the Vegas Mesh technology is that it can handle, e.g. people driving around at 40 miles per hour and still maintain a seamless high speed VPN connection, even when moving from access point to access point, something 802.11 can't do. Nor do 802.11 based systems easily allow clients to become peers in the network, thereby automatically scaling coverage -- it's basically a backbone-and-star configuration, while MeshNetwork's tech is a true peer-to-peer mesh configuration (excluding anything on the other side of a WiFi bridge of course). However, MeshNetwork's cards for direct access are a lot pricier than WiFi cards, and the bells and whistles may not be needed for some municipalities anyway, especially if all you are interested in is providing WiFi service in the first place: Mesh really shines when you're also considering it as part of a package that includes first responder communications.

      Disclaimer -- I'm the author of the original IEEE Spectrum article!

      --
      "Just once, I'd like to meet an alien menace that wasn't immune to bullets." -- The Brigadier, Dr. Who
  13. My economics is a little fuzzy but... by scovetta · · Score: 2, Insightful

    A city could charge as little as $16 a month and cover expenses.

    Wouldn't that depend on the size of the city and how many people would actually want to pay $16/month?

    Or did they mean, $16/month total, for everyone?</not-really-a-serious-question>

    --
    Wer mit Ungeheuern kämpft, mag zusehn, dass er nicht dabei zum Ungeheuer wird. --Nietzsche
    1. Re:My economics is a little fuzzy but... by SmokeHalo · · Score: 1

      Perhaps that's why they included the phrase as little as, thus implying the minimum bill amount.

      --
      I'm not good in groups. It's difficult to work in a group when you're omnipotent. - Q
    2. Re:My economics is a little fuzzy but... by ElDuderino44137 · · Score: 1

      Maybe it means you get taxed 16$ a month if you use the service or not ;)

  14. Tax Dollars? I want Tax pounds spent on it by rescendent · · Score: 2, Insightful

    And I want it in UK!

    1. Re:Tax Dollars? I want Tax pounds spent on it by ElDuderino44137 · · Score: 1

      Maybe the BBC can branch out?
      Maybe they can put all the WiFi transmitters in tardis's littering the streets.

      (It was an attempt in humor ... something is lost in the translation.)

  15. Wallmart by John+Seminal · · Score: 1
    Ultimately it was ruled that the citizens should be able to vote for wether their tax dollers got used for it. Of course everyone there wants this new store to open.

    I've never voted on handing over public tax money to corporations. Nobody ever asked me if I want to give money to a store to open in my neighborhood. I wish they would, I'd like the oppertunity to vote.

    I was reading Wallmart has over $1 billion dollars in tax dollars from all of us. That is money we pay to government that is handed over to them. Some places offer free land to large buisnesses to lure them to build factories.

    --

    Rosco: "If brains were gunpowder, Enos couldn't blow his nose."

    1. Re:Wallmart by LiENUS · · Score: 1

      This is a Bass pro shop in the middle of Livingston parish Louisiana. Not to offend anyone considering my girlfriend lives there. But everyone there is a redneck and looking forward to this shop opening.

    2. Re:Wallmart by Rei · · Score: 1

      Yeah. TIFs (Tax Increment Financing) are a common, and frequently ugly business that a lot of city planners hail as a miracle tool. Basically, you lock the tax rate of the property at its current level for a fixed length of time (although some insane TIFs are unlimited). Whatever improvements are made to the property don't increase the taxable value, so there is supposed to be incentive for companies to come in and develop.

      The obvious downside, as far as commercial TIFs go, is that there's a relatively fixed commercial demand in a given city (it can fluctuate, and you can get out of town shoppers, but it is relatively limited). So, your draw generally comes at the expense of non-TIF'ed parts of your city. The city managers proclaim "look at how well the TIF made this one area flourish; now lets apply it to this new area that's fallen into blight". A neighboring city to mine has almost half of its businesses in a TIF district, including an unending TIF on their mall. The net result is that it drew away a lot of our commercial activity (and has been forcing our city to start TIFing), but they're not getting the tax income from the companies. Most of the companies on TIF districts pay their employees poorly and rake in huge profits. The poorly paid employees are then a drain on city services.

      --
      What a crazy random happenstance!
    3. Re:Wallmart by RM6f9 · · Score: 1

      I shouldn't feed the troll, but:

      Our government (Federal *OR* state) handing over tax breaks, free land, or even tax dollars to a big business (like the tax incentives WA tried to throw at Boeing to keep them headquartered here) are COLOSSAL boondoggles. If a business cannot raise the funds it needs to *BUY* the land it needs to create those jobs *without* my tax dollars, then it. should. not. happen, whether those jobs are blue-collar or professional sports and concessions etc...,.
      Our entire economy is teetering precariously across the tip of the artifical inflation provided by the military-industrial war machine, and the bills for that war are gonna come due, but hey: Let's keep following your lunacy, allow our government to keep spending irresponsibly, and stick our heads in the sand when it comes to dealing with potential consequences later.
      sigh.

      --
      Take the 90-Day Challenge! http://rwmurker.bodybyvi.com/
    4. Re:Wallmart by modecx · · Score: 1

      Not only that, but Walmart (and Walgreens and a number of other retail chains) have a nasty habit of using eminent domain, basically bribing the counties and city councils (with promises of more tax dollars) to screw over the little guy, get rights to property for pennies on the dollar, and scare away local business.

      Actually, I'm quite amazed that Wal-Mart finally decided against their neighborhood store at Elitches (this is in the North Denver, Colorado area). I guess their potential consumers were too much of a thorn. It's the only time that I've ever heard of a Wal-Mart being ousted by the residents! GG Wallymart!

      --
      Constitutional rights may be respected, repealed, or modified; but they must never be ignored.
  16. So... cheap phone service too? by popo · · Score: 4, Insightful


    It should also be noted that free wifi has an immediate upshot of mass conversion to VOIP.

    Adding to that: Wifi handhelds are around the corner -- which means that cellphone (and landline) carriers have a lot to worry about.

    --
    ------ The best brain training is now totally free : )
    1. Re:So... cheap phone service too? by delta_avi_delta · · Score: 1

      They're more than around the corner, I have one on my desk: [url]http://www.nokia.com/nokia/0,,54106,00.html[/ url]

    2. Re:So... cheap phone service too? by delta_avi_delta · · Score: 1
    3. Re:So... cheap phone service too? by drewzhrodague · · Score: 1

      Let's hope. I wanna see Verizon cry themselves a little puddle, as people stop using their ancient services, and their monopoly power is extracted from their unwilling grip.

      Cell and landline carriers SHOULD FEAR VOIP and other new tech. They should either toss their chips onto the table, or get the hell out of the game. I want my goddam flying cars, and I won't wait any longer, if I have to build 'em myself!

      --
      Zhrodague.net - I do projects and stuff too.
    4. Re:So... cheap phone service too? by gregmac · · Score: 1

      Wifi handhelds are around the corner

      or here.

      --
      Speak before you think
    5. Re:So... cheap phone service too? by Chyeld · · Score: 1

      And the immediate return to celluar once public wireless is saturated and no one cal use it.

  17. The U.S. Postal Service is a good example... by ShatteredDream · · Score: 4, Interesting

    of what happens when the government locks out private competition and runs its own service. It costs $0.37 to send a single letter and by law, UPS and Fedex cannot send first class mail. So what that means is that you have to pay more for a service the government provides because it doesn't give you a choice. It's either the government's service or no service at all.

    Where I live in Virginia, you can get free or low cost WiFi in any of the coffee shops, and eventually other places will no doubt start providing it. I don't want my local government providing socialized WiFi in my area because local governments are notorious for being inept at spending control and quality of service. I'd rather pay adelphia for my access, have a wireless router on the connection and be able to go to a coffee shop and get free when I'm out and about. Barnes & Nobles' starbucks cafe charges $4.00 for 2 hours, but it's a good quality of service.

    Next thing you know, though, it won't be the government picking up trash, but government telling you that you cannot compete with it. That's the way it works. There is nothing that pissess off government bureaucrats than the idea that the citizenry can go elsewhere and completely ignore them.

    Oh and add in the fact that government-run Wifi will probably be completely open to law enforcement since it's a government service, not a private service. Watch the local cops argue that since it is a government utility, they don't need a warrant to log every action you take and periodically scan through them for criminal violations. That's one thing you really don't ever have to worry about the private sector allowing.

    1. Re:The U.S. Postal Service is a good example... by drinkypoo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It costs $0.37 to send a single letter and by law, UPS and Fedex cannot send first class mail. So what that means is that you have to pay more for a service the government provides because it doesn't give you a choice. It's either the government's service or no service at all.

      The U.S. also has the cheapest, fastest, and most reliable post service in the world by most accounts, and this will still be true/would still be true today if postage were fifty cents. If the USPS is an example of what happens when the government locks out private competition and runs its own service, then it is a favorable one in terms of benefit to the consumer.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    2. Re:The U.S. Postal Service is a good example... by Golias · · Score: 1

      The other thing that everybody's forgetting is that it would be very easy for $GROUP_YOU_HATE to eventually lobby and/or bully your government into censoring that Wi-Fi conneciton which you are not forever locked in to paying for.

      After all, we need to stop piracy and protect children from all those bad pictures. You're not for piracy and against children, are you Mister Councilman?

      I guaran-damn-tee you that the moment the government has an ISP monopoly, somebody is going to decide that it's their place to decide what goes across those wires, just as the FCC tightly regulates what goes over the "public" airwaves.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    3. Re:The U.S. Postal Service is a good example... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know if you noticed, but the post office kicks ass. Think about it...you drop a letter in a box right outside your door, and three days later it's on the other side of the country, right in somebody else's mailbox. Oh yeah, and it costs a whole 37 cents, less than the opportunity cost of driving to the nearest UPS drop-off.

      People tend to focus on the negative aspects of government services. They forget that, objectively, this kind of thing is ridiculously convenient and affordable, and likely far better than what could ever be provided by private mail services outside the densest urban areas.

    4. Re:The U.S. Postal Service is a good example... by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1, Offtopic
      How can you say that the United States Post Office is a government monopoly?

      I'm inclined to agree that there's little reason to leave the Post Office in the hands of government. On the other hand, I'm skeptical of the claim that privatizing would immediately lead to increased efficiency. More likely, it would simply replace a government monopoly with a private oligopoly.

      Only two plans make sense to me: either the USPS is sold in its entirety to a single private organization, or it's divvied up among the current would-be competitors (FedEx and UPS). In the former case, you have three players with sufficient infrastructure to deliver the service they provide; in the latter, you have two. It's just too expensive for new competitors to enter the market.

      "That's one thing you really don't ever have to worry about the private sector allowing."
      You were being sarcastic there, right?

      "There is nothing that pissess off government bureaucrats than the idea that the citizenry can go elsewhere and completely ignore them."
      How about the ramblings of right-wingers who seem to think all public services are theft, and that "the market" can do no wrong?
      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    5. Re:The U.S. Postal Service is a good example... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guaran-damn-tee you that the moment the government has an ISP monopoly, somebody is going to decide that it's their place to decide what goes across those wires, just as the FCC tightly regulates what goes over the "public" airwaves.

      I missed the part where cities were allowed to forbid current or future ISPs from operating. If there is content blocked by local city government, there will still be private ISPs and I'm sure some of them will continue to offer access without regards to content. So the choice will be, free-to-low cost WiFi (with the possiblity of content blocking), private WiFi, or private ISPs. The latter two have no insentive to block content, and infact financial reasons not to.

      To put it another way, does publicly supplied drinking water keep bottled water from being a profitable business? You sir are spouting FUD.

    6. Re:The U.S. Postal Service is a good example... by Golias · · Score: 1

      I missed the part where cities were allowed to forbid current or future ISPs from operating.

      It's the part that comes later. The USPS did not always outlaw other people from delivering First Class mail, either.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    7. Re:The U.S. Postal Service is a good example... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's the part that comes later.

      Only if the local voters let it. We are talking about cities here, not a national or even state-wide.

    8. Re:The U.S. Postal Service is a good example... by bfields · · Score: 2, Insightful
      It costs $0.37 to send a single letter

      Horrors!

      and by law, UPS and Fedex cannot send first class mail. So what that means is that you have to pay more for a service the government provides because it doesn't give you a choice. It's either the government's service or no service at all.

      So what? All I want is a cheap, reliable service. Looks like I've got that....

      --Bruce Fields

    9. Re:The U.S. Postal Service is a good example... by Golias · · Score: 1

      Only if the local voters let it. We are talking about cities here, not a national or even state-wide.

      Yeah, because everybody gets out to vote on mid-year resolutions, not just retired busibodies with nothing better to do than tell their neighbors how to live. No city government has ever made an asinine decision which went against the will of most of the residents.

      Sheesh!

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    10. Re:The U.S. Postal Service is a good example... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're complaining it costs 37 cents to send a letter across the country? If FedEx were allowed to compete, they'd advertise 30 cent service, and when you went to drop off your letter there would be a tracking fee, insurance fee, and special temporary gasoline charge, all added on by default. Then the clerk would spend 5 minutes trying to upsell you to "Mailer's Club Platinum" and the "Extended Liability and Protection Coverage Plan", not to mention "Terror-Safe Executive Envelope System".

      The minimum wage grunt sent to deliver the letter is a recent immigrant who doesn't know the difference between Wy and Dr so the letter gets stuck at the Receiving Center where the sender can either fly 800 miles to pick it up or pay a surcharge to have delivery reattempted, only during business hours and only if the recipient is physically at home.

      If you are unhappy, tough that's the market use someone else's service which of course sucks rocks just as hard. Or you can write a formal complaint in triplicate (three diff colors ink) to the Federal Underfunded Department of Mail and Mining (actual name) and expect a form response (not formal, form, as in form letter) within 6-8 months, notifying you an investigation has been opened.

      This response letter will be delivered by aforementioned private competitor and be lost again.

      You fucking libertarians should have learned from Enron, Worldcom, the cell phone industry, cable television, investment banking/ipos/underwriting/financial analysts and a MILLION other examples that private industry can be more corrupt, inefficient and customer-hostile than the government.

  18. Yes, yes you did. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The correctly formatted version of your post:

    " If that's all the outlay required, what say a few of us Slashdotters got together, put a business plan which calls for:

    1) $1mill
    2) some VC
    3) sure thing
    4) ?
    5) Profit!"

  19. Dangerous precedent? by Eyeball97 · · Score: 1

    Perhaps I haven't thought this through... But doesn't this seem odd to anyone? Let me get this straight - the local authorities want to use tax dollars to cover an entire city with their "ISP". Meanwhile, the local ISPs and (presumably already) WISPs do what, exactly? Why would I want to pay an ISP for service, when my tax dollars are already subsidising the local authorities to provide the same service? Imho, if they want to provide Internet access, they should get out of politics and go find their own funding, and set up and honest to God ISP business - compete like everybody else has to. What's next? State-wide Internet? Country-wide?

    1. Re:Dangerous precedent? by drewzhrodague · · Score: 1

      Meanwhile, the local ISPs and (presumably already) WISPs do what, exactly?

      They resell unshielded, untwisted copper pairs from Verizon, or whomever it is out west. This makes money for the last-mile telcos (twice -- once for the customer, and once for the ISP).

      Cut out the middleman, and providing Internet service (like, through wireless equipment) becomes insanely cheap by comparison.

      --
      Zhrodague.net - I do projects and stuff too.
    2. Re:Dangerous precedent? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mod up.

      Just because half of Slashdot readers work for ISPs doing tech support doesn't mean ISPs are the best thing for consumers.

    3. Re:Dangerous precedent? by kebes · · Score: 2, Insightful

      AFAIK, this has only been proposed in places where no company is offering a viable wireless solution.

      And it would appear that the public voted on the issue and approved the concept. Thus, their tax dollars are being spent on what they want. The local government is spending public money on the public. I think that's one of the basic tenants of democracy.

      I might be cause for worry if the government were massively deploying ISPs, thereby shutting down legitimate companies, but so far that doesn't look like it's going to happen. The government doesn't really want to get involved, and people who live in places with good and affordable commercial ISPs won't vote for gov-supported ISPs. Besides, as many posters have mentioned, the internet has become a public commodity/infrastructure, like electricity or roads, and could be partially implemented by public funds.

    4. Re:Dangerous precedent? by chivo243 · · Score: 1

      I'd rather have an ISP like www.xs4all.nl protecting my rights, than letting the gov't an inch nearer my privacy....

      --
      Sig Hansen?
  20. Allow Cities? by Valiss · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ...which would allow cities to provide wireless internet access.

    This makes it sound like it is currently illegal to do this. Is it illegal in Colorado to have a city set up a wireless network?

    --

    -Valiss
    1. Re:Allow Cities? by Chyeld · · Score: 3, Informative

      It's illegal in most places for municipalities to provide comercial services unless those services are considered of essential public value and not suitable for comercial involvement. That's why most utility companies are run by companies who purchase a contract from the company rather than the company itself.

    2. Re:Allow Cities? by DerekLyons · · Score: 1
      .which would allow cities to provide wireless internet access.

      This makes it sound like it is currently illegal to do this. Is it illegal in Colorado to have a city set up a wireless network?

      In most (all?) states, it's illegal for the state/city/county goverments to set themselves up in competition with the private sector.
  21. So is Amtrak by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Amtrak is also a good example, for the same reasons you cited. Amtrak trains are notoriously late, and very outdated.

    1. Re:So is Amtrak by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      Amtrak is also a good example, for the same reasons you cited. Amtrak trains are notoriously late, and very outdated.

      Amtrak is the result of the Federal Government stepping in to keep service from dying. Amtrak was created because the passenger rail service couldn't compete on a for-profit basis between expanding air travel and post-interstate road travel. The idea was to preserve a service for the citizens of this country and keep at least the spectre of competetion in the medium and long distance mass transit, to keep the airlines semi-honest.

      Amtrak has its problems and many are self-imposed, but some of its biggest are external. Amtrak actually makes a profit, while providing decent service, in an area know as the "Northeast Corridor". This is because of two important considerations not found in other parts of the country.

      First, Amtrak OWNS most of the track it uses here. Most of the railroad tracks are owned by various heavy freight companies, who charge usage fees for other trains to run on. While the fees add to Amtraks operating costs, the real problem is that of priority. For obvious reasons, the company that owns track has priority over anyone renting access. So sometimes Amtrak trains are delayed because they must wait for a long a slow freight train that is using part of the route.

      This is also a major obstacle for upgrading Amtrak's rolling stock as well. Newer trains (like those in Europe or Japan) are simply too fast for the most of the current rails. Since it doesn't most of the track it uses Amtrak can't force the neccesary upgrades, and the only alternative is building new track. New track would not only be expensive to lay, it would also require additional "right-of-ways". In many places that would ultimately require use of eminent domian. So that option looks to be untenably costly, both in finicial and political senses.

      Second, there is a high volume of travelers and even before 9-11 traveling by train took a comparable amount of time for less money. In fact, many Amtrak stops were also local subway stations, so it would often be easier and quicker to get to your final destination. In other words, Amtrak is competative here.

      On a final note, Amtrak was not ment to be a profit making venture. It was intended to preserve an option for traveling throughout the country for people that couldn't afford to fly or drive everywhere. In summary without Amtrak, there would be no passenger rail service in most of the USA. You can argue whether or not that is worthwhile, but there is no alternative.

    2. Re:So is Amtrak by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Second, there is a high volume of travelers and even before 9-11 traveling by train took a comparable amount of time for less money.

      Not only that, but Amtrak is one of the best ways to travel with illicit drugs!

  22. Can somebody explain why cities do this? by pauljlucas · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Why are many cities so interested in providing free/cheap WiFi access? Telephones and cable TV have been around much longer and you don't see cities rushing to provide free land-line phones or cable TV.

    I personally don't want any of my tax dollars used to fund any free/cheap technological service to anybody. Cities should just stick to funding the police, fire, water, and grounds maintenance, i.e., the traditional stuff cities are supposed to fund.

    --
    If you reply, do so only to what I explicitly wrote. If I didn't write it, don't assume or infer it.
    1. Re:Can somebody explain why cities do this? by garcia · · Score: 1

      Why are many cities so interested in providing free/cheap WiFi access? Telephones and cable TV have been around much longer and you don't see cities rushing to provide free land-line phones or cable TV.

      Because it takes a lot more time, money, and manpower to dig holes, run cable, and string wires for line based services (CATV and telephone) than it does for wireless based services such as Internet.

    2. Re:Can somebody explain why cities do this? by CDarklock · · Score: 1

      > Why are many cities so interested in
      > providing free/cheap WiFi access?

      I think it's more that voters and lobbyists of various stripes have some idea that the government needs to be MORE in their business than it already is.

      I for one don't want all my internet traffic traveling across a single chokepoint owned by the government, no matter how local the government is. And I *trust* my government a lot more than most /. posters seem to.

      > If you reply, do so only to what
      > I explicitly wrote.

      Somewhat off topic... does this work? I have that problem a lot. Is it really that easy to fix?

      --
      Microsoft cheerleader, blue flag waving, you got a problem with that?
    3. Re:Can somebody explain why cities do this? by pauljlucas · · Score: 1

      But the phone/cable companies have already done the work. By your argument, the city should simply pay the phone/cable companies directly and give away phone/cable for "free."

      --
      If you reply, do so only to what I explicitly wrote. If I didn't write it, don't assume or infer it.
    4. Re:Can somebody explain why cities do this? by brontus3927 · · Score: 3, Insightful
      How do you define what a city should and should not provide for its citizens? Things that have been around the longest? Things that aren't technologically based? Police, fire, water, etc use a good deal of technology to perform their services. Is it really wrong for a city to want to provide services for its citizenry? Isn't that the purpose of government in the first place?

      Is it inherently fair or unfair for a city to subsidize the cost of trash collection? My family has payed a seperate service to pick up our trash for a decade while our taxes go towards subsidizing a service we don't use. What about telephone polls? My great grandparents had to pay to have telephone polls installed on their road leading up to their house. 10 miles worth. At ~20 polls per mile and a cost of $1 per pole, that came to an expensive $200. Private vs public schools are the same issue. Private trash companies and private schools exist even though there are free alternatives. The same will be with WiFi.

      And why are so many cities interested in providing WiFi access and not telephone or cable? Because of demand. People are clamoring for internet access but there has never been a big movement for free cable/phone service.

    5. Re:Can somebody explain why cities do this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Watch this video titled "The Philadelphia Experiment" and maybe then you'll understand.

      http://www.pbs.org/now/thisweek/index_022505.html# video

    6. Re:Can somebody explain why cities do this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm paying for a war that i didn't agree... I haven't see any benefit from it. Not only that, i was lied about the reasons to go to war. Meanwhile, state-controlled companies(Halliburton) get all the profits from the war. Sounds like communism? Yes. I want my money back.

    7. Re:Can somebody explain why cities do this? by pauljlucas · · Score: 1
      How do you define what a city should and should not provide for its citizens?
      Recreational/information services such as cable TV or internet access are not essential. Therefore, a city should not provide them. (Emergency 911 service is guaranteed through state law even if you don't otherwise have phone service.)
      Is it inherently fair or unfair for a city to subsidize the cost of trash collection? My family has payed a seperate service to pick up our trash for a decade while our taxes go towards subsidizing a service we don't use.
      It's not clear to my why anybody would want/need a private trash company. Regardless, that's a choice you made. The city needs to have trashed picked up.
      What about telephone polls? My great grandparents had to pay to have telephone polls installed on their road leading up to their house.
      Telephone service is regarded by everybody as an essential service, even if only used for 911. At the time of your grandparents, there was no other way to get phone service other than by land-line. If this were done today, it could be done much more cheaply by using cell phones with only a few base stations.
      People are clamoring for internet access but there has never been a big movement for free cable/phone service.
      First, I don't believe people are clamoring for it. Such people would be the ones who otherwise don't have any internet access. (Those who have internet access have no reason to clamor for it.) Even if such people exist, they would have had to write/lobby their legislators in significant numbers. I also don't think that's the case since most people are too apathetic to write letters to their elected officials.

      My guess is that city legislators want their city to be seen as progressive to attract residents or something, but it's not because the people want or need free WiFi. And if that's the real reason, I certainly don't want to fund it.

      --
      If you reply, do so only to what I explicitly wrote. If I didn't write it, don't assume or infer it.
    8. Re:Can somebody explain why cities do this? by zxnos · · Score: 1
      i think wifi access is seen as more beneficial than television and phones because of the greater educational avenues internet access can take. i know because of time restraints involved in moving my body around i couldnt do a lot of things i do without access. like work and school.

      to me it is akin to cellphones in cars are bad but eating a huge mcburger that is dripping into your lap is ok. things that are percieved as a domain of the elite are attacked but something that can 'help the little guy' is ok.

      --
      always mosh clockwise
    9. Re:Can somebody explain why cities do this? by ElDuderino44137 · · Score: 1

      It does seem to be a bit counter capitalistic?

      Perhaps, they're secretly trying to make us commies? *LOL* But seriously ... I like haveing a job. I feel that these programs are makeing it more difficult for others to get jobs.

      Maybe it's a bit of a stretch ...

      But where does the money come from?
      We all need to consume a certain amount of natural resources ... If some folks aren't paying for theirs ... where does the money come from ... The government? Where does their money come from?

      The economy is a big circle of life ... dammage one link and you could bring the whole thing down.

      -- The Dude

    10. Re:Can somebody explain why cities do this? by DerekLyons · · Score: 1
      I personally don't want any of my tax dollars used to fund any free/cheap technological service to anybody. Cities should just stick to funding the police, fire, water, and grounds maintenance, i.e., the traditional stuff cities are supposed to fund.
      Actually, almost none of those things are 'traditional'. Police, fire, and water in particular were only funded by municipalities (at least here in the US) in the 19th century.
    11. Re:Can somebody explain why cities do this? by Obfuscant · · Score: 1
      It's not clear to my why anybody would want/need a private trash company.

      Cause it's more convenient to have somebody come by once a week to pick up bags of trash from my driveway than for me to have to tote them to some landfill or dump them illegally in someone else's dumpster. I suppose you could say I don't technically need the private company, but they sure make life a lot easier (and cleaner).

    12. Re:Can somebody explain why cities do this? by Politburo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      One interesting thing to note is that the Founding Fathers felt that it was necessary for the Federal legislature "To establish Post Offices and post Roads", which at the time was the cutting-edge of communication. It appears that they did not trust the free market as much as some do today.

    13. Re:Can somebody explain why cities do this? by drewzhrodague · · Score: 1

      Seems like the question really is, do you pay for trash pick-up because your local government does not do this?

      Some people commenting say that they don't want their local government to roll-out Wi-Fi networks, even if they are insanely cheap. It occurs to me, that this war in iRaq is not something I wanted, in spite of my efforts to persuade our esteemed government to this fact. Instead, I have to pay anyway.

      Also, I paid part of the 27 billion the state of Pennsylvania gave to Verizon to roll-out fiber services -- and yet I choose not to use Verizon's services (DSL is too slow, no need for landline, etc). Now it is illegal for the local government to provide a Wi-Fi network?

      --
      Zhrodague.net - I do projects and stuff too.
    14. Re:Can somebody explain why cities do this? by drewzhrodague · · Score: 1

      I totally agree, and I want my money back too!

      I also want my damn flying cars -- I was promised a flying car!

      --
      Zhrodague.net - I do projects and stuff too.
    15. Re:Can somebody explain why cities do this? by pauljlucas · · Score: 1
      At the time, there was no infrastructure for anything. There would be no profit for a private company to construct post roads only to deliver mail cheapy.

      Companies like UPS and FedEx exist only because there are already roads (and airports).

      --
      If you reply, do so only to what I explicitly wrote. If I didn't write it, don't assume or infer it.
    16. Re:Can somebody explain why cities do this? by MurrayTodd · · Score: 2, Informative

      This Slashdot posting is actually misleading. The intent of the legislation is to CREATE obstacles that don't currently exist to PREVENT communities from creating any sort of broadband services by creating a number of extra citizen-approval hoops to jump through. This showed up in Slashdot about a month ago as a news item of many states simultaneously proposing legislation to create these road blocks.

      By wording this now in newspaper articles as "cities will now be able to offer Wifi if they first do X, Y, and Z" makes the bill sound as though it's going to help roll-out cool public services, when in fact the cities don't presently need to do the X, Y or Z.

      And really, this has not as much to do with allowing some place like Boulder to get cool public WiFi but rather to prevent small rural areas from creating their own standard broadband offering (probably like broadband over power lines or WiMax) if the existing telcos and cable companies leave them behind.

      I was actually trying to help a small mountain community in Colorado figure out how to get broadband because there were NO options. The telco said it would be too expensive (and the existing copper in the area sucked too much for DSL). This legislation is intended to make sure that little communities never get broadband service until the existing monopolistic communications corporations decide to do it themselves.

      --
      Murray Todd Williams
    17. Re:Can somebody explain why cities do this? by fiannaFailMan · · Score: 1
      I personally don't want any of my tax dollars used to fund any free/cheap technological service to anybody. Cities should just stick to funding the police, fire, water, and grounds maintenance, i.e., the traditional stuff cities are supposed to fund.
      Spot the circular argument.
      --
      Drill baby drill - on Mars
    18. Re:Can somebody explain why cities do this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because something like this is whats known in economics as a nonexcludable good. When you provide it to a group of (paying) customers, you can't refuse it to those who don't pay based on the nature of the good. A land line is only laid to the person who paid for it, but with wireless internet anyone can use it in the area. Sort of like street lights or clean air. Even if you don't pay for them you get the benefits. In capitalism, government is needed for these types of goods.

    19. Re:Can somebody explain why cities do this? by Obfuscant · · Score: 1
      Seems like the question really is, do you pay for trash pick-up because your local government does not do this?

      Do you think you aren't paying for it if the city does it? You either pay the city, if they do it, or you pay a private company if they don't. Or you don't pay anyone and you spend your time lugging trash to the landfill where you will probably pay anyway. In any case, the question specifically was about why anyone would want a private company to pick up trash, and the answer is "because it's better than carrying it to the dump yourself."

      Some people commenting say that they don't want their local government to roll-out Wi-Fi networks, even if they are insanely cheap. It occurs to me, that this war in iRaq is not something I wanted, in spite of my efforts to persuade our esteemed government to this fact. Instead, I have to pay anyway.

      Unfortunately, "wi-fi networks" are not listed as a function of the government in our Constitution, while "common defense" and "foreign policy" are.

      Now it is illegal for the local government to provide a Wi-Fi network?

      Dunno about the laws where you live. You'd have to ask someone local. I do know that competing with private companies for private services isn't a job for the government. There is nothing inherrently "right of way" intensive about wireless networks. And hey, if our local University couldn't continue providing Internet access to folks (in the days when ISPs weren't on every block) because it was "competition" (even though the state still DOES provide ISP services to some people), why should the state/city/etc be in the wireless business?

    20. Re:Can somebody explain why cities do this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We were all promised flying cars. Nobody else got one so why should you?

      Just suck it up the cars were a false promise all flash no substance and thats all they'll ever be so get over it already.

      Jees you people and you're flying car whines next thing you know you'll want the jet packs to and the moving sidewalks. :D

  23. Wardriving the Colonies by werewolf1031 · · Score: 3, Funny
    Car keys: Check.
    Cigarette lighter adapter: Check.

    Now, dammit, SOMEbody in this town has got to have that last episode of Battlestar Galactica...

    1. Re:Wardriving the Colonies by sharkey · · Score: 1

      It's 106 miles to Colorado, we have a full tank of gas, a half a battery left on the PowerBook, we're dorks and we've never left our parents' basements.

      Hit it.

      --

      --
      "Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
  24. You could use 3 channels in a grid pattern by melted · · Score: 3, Informative

    You could use 3 channels in a grid pattern and place access points so that APs using the same channel cause no interference to each other. Then, you could use some hardcore APs which provide QOS to wireless clients, so if you're running bittorrent, you get 128K download rate, whereas someone just browsing the web would get the rest of the bandwidth. It's all technical problems that can be solved.

    1. Re:You could use 3 channels in a grid pattern by Atryn · · Score: 1
      It's all technical problems that can be solved.
      For how much more $$$? I'm not sure where the originator came up with the 600k number, but at the pace of technology change two questions come up right away:
      1. What is the cost of making the ongoing technical changes to the network to keep up (including monitoring to see what folks are using and paid staff to understand what these new emerging technologies are, etc. etc.)
      2. Do you think a government sponsored or government run program will be able to be as responsive as technology changes as a private venture?
      --
      Come play Moral Decay!
    2. Re:You could use 3 channels in a grid pattern by drinkypoo · · Score: 1
      1. If you use a queueing technology responsibly then the system will be very tolerant. For example you can give 100% of the available bandwidth to a single user, and as more users get packets, it will scale to divide the traffic evenly between every IP address. This is possible with little more than the linux kernel, for example, and some userspace configuration tools.

      Given the simplicity of an individual node, I don't see why a government-run program couldn't react quickly, provided they used commodity hardware and software. Luckily, there's a lot of Free/free stuff readily available.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    3. Re:You could use 3 channels in a grid pattern by Atryn · · Score: 1
      I don't see why a government-run program couldn't react quickly
      It's never a question of if a government agency COULD react quickly... They just don't, generally speaking.
      --
      Come play Moral Decay!
  25. A local story, from the mountains by ianscot · · Score: 1
    My family has a cabin that's up a private road on the southern slope of Twin Sisters mountain, just outside Rocky Mountain National Park in Roosevelt National Forest. Technically the address is in Allenspark, a while south of Estes Park on the Peak to Peak, though we're a long hike over the highway and up the mountain from town.

    Our hillside association has had this WiFi thing come up a few times. Someone down in Allenspark proper has been encouraging the town to try to get some sort of WiFi arrangement going. A variety of plans have come up.

    It's not flying very well with us, anyway. People from Denver who come to their cabins all the time do maybe want satellite TV and other amenities, but there's a pretty sizeable contingent of people on the hill who drive from far off -- Minnesota for us, Texas for some -- and who don't thrill at the idea of dragging the leash behind the car.

    The issue as far as I can tell has never been whether the town had the right to provide the service, or contract for it with private companies. Nobody told us it was illegal; they're just using the town's size as a way of getting the negotiating leverage, or trying to. I believe at least one of the proposals intended to use public money to contract with someone, but that got voted down... Which is, you know, how democracy functions. So no problem.

    --
    "Fundamentalism" isn't about divine morality. It's about human authority.
  26. Verizon by drewzhrodague · · Score: 0

    If you think about it, Verizon does not seem to be interested in providing a good service at a low cost. I'll be the local governments, even when botched, will produce a better and cheaper product. Hell, just using Wi-Fi for the local governments' telecommunications (voice + data), they should save tens of thousands of dollars -- minimum.

    --
    Zhrodague.net - I do projects and stuff too.
    1. Re:Verizon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll be the local governments, even when botched, will produce a better and cheaper product.

      Joseph Stalin, Mao Tse Tung, and Fidel Castro all made that same bet about food. It didn't turn out so well.

      Verizon sucks, but there are lots of options in most towns that don't. Use one of them and quit trying to force other people to buy your wireless Internet connection for you.

    2. Re:Verizon by drewzhrodague · · Score: 1

      Which carriers in Pittsburgh are doing wireless? Even the dinky little ISP here that DOES do wireless, only lites up a couple of hotspots -- it's not city-wide.

      Actually, there aren't lots of options, had you done your research. This is part of the problem with monopoly -- there is only one.

      --
      Zhrodague.net - I do projects and stuff too.
  27. www.chaska.net by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The city I live in is already establishing WiFi. The ISP involved made a deal with the local utilities and the city to use the municipal vehicals and stree/power poles already setup. In return, the city gets WiFi access for the police cars and some other benefits.
    They are only charging $15.99 a month, and it can be included right in the utilities bill.
    Speeds still leave a bit to be desired, as they didn't use one of the better technologies, but they are working on it. I've had speeds up to 900kbps on occasion, but average seems more like 3-400kbps.
    Oh, I can also loggin with just my wireless connection on the laptop and not need their router too, so I can go to the local coffee shops that don't have WiFi available. :)

    1. Re:www.chaska.net by ElDuderino44137 · · Score: 1

      heh ...

      Included right in the utilities bill?
      Nice.
      It seemed like an eternity before my cellular company managed to send me one bill ;)

      --The Dude

  28. This line is a Gem by missing000 · · Score: 1

    "Jeff Dunn, a spokesman for Qwest, which provides high-speed Internet service, said his company is not worried about competition. He said consumers are more concerned about service, especially when their Internet connection stops working in the middle of the night."

    Really? If Qwest thinks I would suffer worse service under any alternate provider they are seriously delirious. Great job guys, you certainly have my vote :)

    1. Re:This line is a Gem by rkelly · · Score: 1

      I've had Qwest DSL since 1999. I haven't had any connection problems in the last two years, and very rarely before that. I have an 18 system network with a /27.

    2. Re:This line is a Gem by pete-classic · · Score: 1

      Great. I live in the city and county (or is it covnty?) of Denver. Not in the boondocks; in the city proper.

      Quest won't sell me DSL. I live in a place CALLED THE TECH CENTER, FOR FUCK'S SAKE!

      I'm a little frustrated.

      Oh, and they tried REALLY hard to fuck me on a repair charge last time I had a land line. It is a Scientifically verifiable fact that Qwest is teh suck.

      -Peter

    3. Re:This line is a Gem by tnsimonson · · Score: 1

      I live in the Denver Metro area and have had Qwest DSL with a /29 static block for about a year now and have to admit that their service is pretty good but Lord help you if you ever have a technical problem. Just getting through to their tech support on the phone is a 1/2 to 1 hour ordeal and then keep your fingers crossed that you actually end up on the line with someone who has even the slightest chance of helping you. I'll admit they have a few support techs that really know their stuff but I can't for the life of me figure out how to get ahold of them when I need them.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my coffee - tied up in a sack and brought to me by Juan Valdez.
  29. Dayton by Reignking · · Score: 0

    Colorado, and everyone else, is just following Dayton's lead!

    --
    One man's Funny is another man's Offtopic.
    1. Re:Dayton by ElDuderino44137 · · Score: 1

      Is that Dayton Ohio?

    2. Re:Dayton by pooplips · · Score: 1

      yup

    3. Re:Dayton by ElDuderino44137 · · Score: 1

      Wow,

      I fled Ohio (Cleveland area), about two years ago. I'm shocked that something of that magnitude is happening under the belly of the grey elephant. Although Dayton is far enough south to avoid Lake effect snow / sleet / rain / elephants.

      Cheers

  30. How long by derainged+chicken · · Score: 1

    before cable and DSL providers start complaining about this. I can understand if the speed isn't going to be all that great, but why would someone pay $20-50 or cable/DSL when you can get decent wi-fi for $16? Also how do they plan on securing such an infrastructure? As we just read, the Feds cracked WEP in 3 min.

  31. Portland's experience by Zilfondel2 · · Score: 1

    Portland, Oregon has been slowly working on a plan like this for awhile. Unfortunately, the process has proven to be just as slow as a company like Qwest.
    http://www.bizjournals.com/portland/stories/2004/1 2/13/focus3.html

    At least we have the Personal Telco project:
    http://www.personaltelco.net/static/index.html

  32. Why did they need a law? by iammaxus · · Score: 1

    Can someone explain why a law had to be created to allow this?

    1. Re:Why did they need a law? by cdcarter · · Score: 1

      Allocation of tax dollars

      --
      "Love is like a trampoline, first it's like "SWEET!!" then it's like *BLAMM!*"
    2. Re:Why did they need a law? by ElDuderino44137 · · Score: 1

      I too would like to understand this !?
      Doesn't make much sense to me.

      Unless it's the camera mounted big brother system that they're really voteing on ... and it's wrapped up in cheap wifi access ?!

  33. All you people think this is great and all by hsmith · · Score: 2, Insightful

    But how many government programs have been a success? They will mess this up, you can bet the farm on it. Governments made this mess in the first place by signing exclusive deals with only one provider and providing them with a monopoly. now look at what they are doing.

    this will end up a mess.

    1. Re:All you people think this is great and all by ElDuderino44137 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I can also as this:
      How many software projects are a success?
      Answer 1 in 10.

      I could draw this conclusion.
      Don't get into software.

      But when I compare the two statements ...
      I tend to believe that many projects just fail in general.
      It doesn't matter what category they're in.

    2. Re:All you people think this is great and all by Narchie+Troll · · Score: 2

      > But how many government programs have been a success?

      Rural electrification? The interstate highway system? The Clean Air Act? Head Start? To some extent, Medicare and Medicaid? A number of aspects of NASA?

      WIC? Senior centers? Food stamps? Subsidized school lunches?

      In some areas, police and firefighting? Sewer systems? Water systems?

      Bueller?

  34. Free WiFi! Just let us chose what you see! by WoodstockJeff · · Score: 1, Interesting
    Let's see, SanFran wants to regulate web logs, and people are cheering a law that lets cities to install government-controlled WiFi networks to drive the "greedy" private companies out of business....

    Not to mention fact that the FBI can hack a wireless net in 3 minutes, so they'd never need to get a wiretap order to watch what you do... (and neither would the RIAA/MPAA)

    Yep, sounds like the sort of thing every Slashdot reader should champion!

    1. Re:Free WiFi! Just let us chose what you see! by chivo243 · · Score: 1

      Get out of my mind! This is just what I was thinking when I read this post... More chances for gov't monitoring/control, hmm just what we need. No thanks, I will keep paying the best ISP in the Netherlands to keep the gov'ts hands off my internet activity, I'm glad I no longer live in America anymore when I hear of this kind of double talk. Great post!

      --
      Sig Hansen?
    2. Re:Free WiFi! Just let us chose what you see! by juuri · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Why is it every knee jerk reactionary opinion like this gets modded up on slashdot.

      Fuck moderators the first "fact/link" isn't even remotely accurate. SF wants to moderate blogs used for electioneering where people are paid. This is no different than moderation of printed campaign materials. ... and to the second, if they wanted the FBI could watch your wired connection just *as* easy. Do you really think it is hard to get a federal wire tap against a private citizen?

      Why don't you try being more informed before posting? And moderators stop bumping up crap just because it looks "smart".

      --
      --- I do not moderate.
    3. Re:Free WiFi! Just let us chose what you see! by ElDuderino44137 · · Score: 1

      The whole internet was completely government funded at one point ...

      The FBI can break down my door in about 3 seconds.
      But they don't.
      Because it isn't right.
      You may want to believe that everyone is out to get you.
      But all in all the government is of / by / for the people.

      Cheers,
      -- The Dude

    4. Re:Free WiFi! Just let us chose what you see! by bfields · · Score: 1

      Let's see, SanFran wants to regulate web logs, and people are cheering a law that lets cities to install government-controlled WiFi networks to drive the "greedy" private companies out of business....

      Not to mention fact that the FBI can hack a wireless net in 3 minutes, so they'd never need to get a wiretap order to watch what you do...

      Why wouldn't they? (An honest question--is a government-run service somehow exempt from wiretap orders?)

      Also, if anything I'd think that a government-owned network would be *harder* for the government to censor, since the first amendment applies more directly to the censorship performed by a government agency than it does to, say, censorship performed by a private company to avoid a suit from a customer under stupid decency law.

      --Bruce Fields

    5. Re:Free WiFi! Just let us chose what you see! by WoodstockJeff · · Score: 1
      It doesn't matter what types of web logs the SF council wants to regulate - the fact that they want to regulate some of them is indicative of the mindset of government agencies. When they provide you with a service, they get to chose what that service involves, not you.

      Take the example of waste pickup. Chicago decided that's a government job, so you get the service and restrictions that Chicago imposes. If your needs aren't covered by their rules, you get to pay for private pickup AND the public pickup you can't use. Other cities regulate which private companies are allowed to pick up garbage, and you get stuck paying whatever the licensed company wants to charge for the service.

      My opinion is not "knee jerk". It's based upon 40+ years experience with government "helpfulness", plus time spent in the bureaucracy. Government doesn't do anything without an agenda, and it's rarely the published one. Government has already expressed an interest in regulating what you view via internet, such as Utah wanting ISPs to block porn sites. Government has already expressed an interest in being able to watch what you do on internet, especially if they don't have to get pesky wire-tap warrants to do it, as is often brought up every time the word "PATRIOT" appears on this site.

      Government-run internet service is the perfect combination - the ability to regulate what you can connect to and to monitor what you do without waking up a judge. If someone petitions the city government that site X is in violation of city decency ordinance 555.1212, what is the city going to do, cite freedom of speech, or block site X on city-run internet?

    6. Re:Free WiFi! Just let us chose what you see! by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Look, the government can trivially get access to my packets, anyway. If I really don't want them reading what I'm writing, I can use an anonymizer and encryption. So what if it's easier with WiFi? It's just as easy to secure and if you don't ever assume the internet is secure (I don't - I just don't try to profit from illegal activities which is the exclusive right of the government apparently and thus I assume no one gives a shit about me) then you can't have any less security on a government-run wireless network.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    7. Re:Free WiFi! Just let us chose what you see! by juuri · · Score: 1

      It doesn't matter what types of web logs the SF council wants to regulate - the fact that they want to regulate some of them is indicative of the mindset of government agencies. When they provide you with a service, they get to chose what that service involves, not you.

      Pay attention. The proposed regulation is *nothing new*. Only an extension of already existing policies for electioneering to a new medium.

      Everything else in your post is just misguided strawman attacks on something you obviously haven't even bothered to read.

      --
      --- I do not moderate.
    8. Re:Free WiFi! Just let us chose what you see! by Nastard · · Score: 1

      I agree with you completely, but don't you think the "I don't moderate" in your sig should preclude you from bitching about how others moderate?

    9. Re:Free WiFi! Just let us chose what you see! by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting
      "Not to mention fact that the FBI can hack a wireless net in 3 minutes, so they'd never need to get a wiretap order to watch what you do..."
      That makes about as much sense as saying "Policemen can manipulate doorknobs, so if a door is unlocked there is no need for them to get a search warrant." Your phone system transmits everything unencrypted, and yet they're still required to get a wiretap before listening in on it. The barrier to wiretapping is legal, not physical.

      I'm a bit skeptical of government-based WiFi, because I believe the barrier to entering the WiFi market is low (far lower than trying to provide cable or DSL Internet service). The argument in favor of such an endeavor is simple, however: government should intervene in areas where the benefits of an endeavor are large, but hard to translate into profit.

      For example, if there was a benefit to giving better Internet access to homeless people, it might help them find jobs, tell them which shelters had room for them, or give them reminders to take their meds. The entire community would benefit, but no company would provide the service because the homeless are generally short on cash.

      In this case, there may be a benefit that accrues to the city as a whole when anyone can hook in from anywhere, but no individual benefit is enough that a private enterprise could capitalize on it. Maybe the hope is that a more tech-savvy population will attract businesses, or that the increased communication will have public safety benefits.

      Regarding San Francisco, it looks like they're attempting to close a loophole in campaign finance law. They've botched it badly, and I think the free-speech issues trump the fair election issues by a wide margin, but I can see their rationale. It's far different than, "The government is censoring weblogs to keep people from saying things it doesn't like". All in all, I don't think a government network is going to be any more likely to censor its customers than a private one would be.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    10. Re:Free WiFi! Just let us chose what you see! by cthrall · · Score: 1

      That's why we have OpenSSH.

    11. Re:Free WiFi! Just let us chose what you see! by juuri · · Score: 1

      One would think... I actually stopped moderating with a whiney post complaining about how moderation was broken and I would resume when it was fixed.

      That was over two and a half years ago.

      --
      --- I do not moderate.
    12. Re:Free WiFi! Just let us chose what you see! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And what about the rest we have now? Socialists always have the same blind outlook.

    13. Re:Free WiFi! Just let us chose what you see! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The proposed regulation is *nothing new*"

      now see.. I had lost my list,but I think this was number 7

      sheeple auto-answer #7:"They always have done/will do this..."

      "Everything else in your post is just misguided strawman attacks on something you obviously haven't even bothered to read."

      It seems this applies perfectly to YOU...did YOU read his post??...as someone with govt experience, I'd say he's 100% right.

      nice try though, FUDmeister

  35. SB 152 restricts municipal wifi you twit by JKarp · · Score: 2, Informative
    Zonk is clueless.

    http://www.freepress.net/communityinternet/=CO

    SB 152 was a POS legislation from the get-go, and many of us Coloradoans have been actively lobbying against it. State senator Jennifer Viega threw this gem together to pay back the telcos that financed her campaign. While the revised bill passed is better than the original, it's still bad news for municipal services.

    http://www.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/opinion/arti cle/0,1299,DRMN_38_3545616,00.html

  36. Economics are good! by John+Seminal · · Score: 1
    When you get a large group together, you can get services for pennies on the dollar.

    This is no different to me than a university buying a HUGE satelite dish and buying cable programming directly from vendors. When I was in student government, we voted on what channels we wanted to buy. I remember cnn was something like $0.02 per person, sci-fi was a dime, we even got HBO for a dollar a person. All the others, TBS and MTV and USAnetwork were all under a dime each, some under a nickle. The whole budget of 25 channels came out to under $2 per person. My home cable bill is 50 times as much. Plus, at school we had free internet. This was all done by student fee's, which was much less than what anyone could buy from a company.

    The ONLY complaint I had was the damn Pepsi vending machines. It was impossible to get a Diet Coke on campus. And a can cost a dollar.

    It all depends on how good the oversight is. If the local town has sharp people governing, and they cut all the crap out and just provide the basic service at the lowest cost, everyone wins. If they start thinking "since cost is so low... we'll add in $0.50 per person and use it for some unrelated expense" then we are all fucked.

    After that experiance, I lived in a condominium building. I tried to get the board to pass a resolution where we would all buy cable collectively and negotiate a price with the provider. I knew other apartment buildings worked out deals where the per unit cost was less than half the bill of someone buying directly. Unfortunatly, the old geezers on the board did not want cable, they were happy with CBS, NBC, and ABC over the airways.

    --

    Rosco: "If brains were gunpowder, Enos couldn't blow his nose."

  37. 96.1 square miles by JohnAllison · · Score: 0
    Milwaukee is NOT 16 square miles. It is 96.1 according to

    http://www.realestatejournal.com/cityprofiles/milw aukee_wi.html


    Second source here:

    http://www.jsonline.com/recruitment/basics.asp


    It is going to take a bit more than 600k to implement.

    1. Re:96.1 square miles by TheFlyingGoat · · Score: 1

      Read that first link again... that's Milwaukee County, which is MUCH bigger than the City of Milwaukee. I couldn't find the actual size of Milwaukee, so I estimated, which I feel qualified to do since I've lived here almost my whole life. I think I'm actually overestimating the size, given the fact that West Milwaukee, Wauwatosa, and Shorewood cut into the city significantly.

      --
      You have enemies? Good. That means you've stood up for something, sometime in your life. --Winston Churchill
    2. Re:96.1 square miles by TheFlyingGoat · · Score: 1

      I stand corrected. That first link is worded very poorly. I actually think where I went wrong is that certain areas that are definitely part of the city are referred to differently, which lead me to believe they were separated in census data as well. Oh well. :)

      --
      You have enemies? Good. That means you've stood up for something, sometime in your life. --Winston Churchill
  38. Milwaukee - 16 square miles? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wager that Milwaukee is much larger than 16 square miles. 16 square miles is 4 miles by 4 miles. I imagine that a city - *any* city - is much more liek 16 miles square. That's 16 miles by 16 miles, or 256 square miles - 64 times larger (and thus, 64 times more expensive to provide WiFi coverage).

  39. We lose money but make up for it in volume! by wsanders · · Score: 1

    We lose money on every transaction but we make up for it in volume!

    Worst case the Texas legisature is considering a handout to Texas Utilities (TXU) (*) to allow TXU to tax all ratepayers to subsidize Broadband Over Powerlines. So the idea of a WiFi tax showing up in your mailbox isn't all that farfetched.

    (*) Link: http://powermarketers.netcontentinc.net/newsreader .asp?ppa=8knpp%5EZltmlupoXUnj%216%3C%22bfek%5C%21

    --
    Give a man a fish and you have fed him for today. Teach a man to fish, and he'll say "WHERE'S MY FISH, YOU IDIOT?"
  40. People don't run the government by koan · · Score: 1

    Corporations do, and they will smack any competition down like a one winged fly.

    This has been happening in several states already.

    All I can ask is where is the citizen outrage?

    It's time for a revolution.

    --
    "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
  41. What sort of service? by CdBee · · Score: 1

    Are we talking ISP-grade hardware here (non-NATted connection with all ports open to every user) or something simpler like a few dozen T1 lines and NAT routers on top of street-lighting posts (giving a connection which is good for surfing but bad for P2P as ports cant be forwarded)?

    --
    I have been a user for about 10 years. This ends Feb 2014. The site's been ruined. I'm off. Dice, FU
  42. Quick math... by The-Bus · · Score: 1
    Using 1990 Census data I've put together a quick report showing the monthly cost for wifi in over 350 metropolitan/population centers in the U.S. Note that I am assuming the $37,500/sqmi cost is constant and these figures rely on census data from fifteen years ago. Also, note the cost is per person, not per household.

    According to the estimates and data above, Jersey City residents could have wifi for $0.26 a month. Over 60 cities can do it for less than $5 per month, including Philadelphia, which is aiming to convert part of the city into a wifi zone.

    The following towns/areas can all do it for under $10m as a startup cost and for less than $10/m per resident. Note they are mostly concentrated in New England.
    1. Jersey City, NJ PMSA
    2. New Britain, CT PMSA
    3. Bridgeport-Milford, CT PMSA
    4. Stamford, CT PMSA
    5. Trenton, NJ PMSA
    6. Norwalk, CT PMSA
    7. Brockton, MA PMSA
    8. Lowell, MA-NH PMSA
    9. Salem-Gloucester, MA PMSA
    10. Bristol, CT PMSA
    11. Fall River, MA-RI PMSA
    12. Waterbury, CT MSA
    13. New Bedford, MA MSA
    14. Manchester, NH MSA
    15. Wilmington, NC MSA
    16. Fitchburg-Leominster, MA MSA
    17. Middletown, CT PMSA
    18. Lewiston-Auburn, ME MSA
    19. Pittsfield, MA MSA


    I really hope this takes off. It's a great idea, and another way to boost local economies.

    Sorry if this "report" is a bit limited, I just used data available while I had some free time. Don't base your business model on this. Or, if you do, and it's succesful, I want a cut.

    --

    Small potatoes make the steak look bigger.

  43. I'll pay the extra money for cable... by chipace · · Score: 1

    When the FBI can break wireless encryption in 3 minutes, I'll do my online banking over cable.

    I like my location (trafic, shopping, schools), it would take more than $300/year to get me to move.

    AT least my cable is going to get cheaper ;-)

    1. Re:I'll pay the extra money for cable... by gnuman99 · · Score: 1
      Huh? Don't you use HTTPS when doing your online banking?

      You can break into wireless networks and use them for your own purposes. This is completely different from HTTPS.

      The entire point of the weakness of wireless is that people should consider it a hostile network, just like the Internet. Nothing more, nothing less.

    2. Re:I'll pay the extra money for cable... by chipace · · Score: 1

      You are absolutely right... HTTPS is the extra security layer. Just all my other internet communications are subject to snooping to everyone and his dog.

      Now I will be able to read all my neighbour's non-encrypted emails (and learn his slashdot username ;-) )

  44. Corporations are people? by ElDuderino44137 · · Score: 1

    But corporations are made of people?

    They may be the oldest known illuminati ...
    but they are people.

    Why should I be outraged?
    Because you say so?
    You're only one person.
    A corporation is made up of many, many people.

    People like you and me.
    --The Dude

    1. Re:Corporations are people? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But corporations are made of people?

      They may be the oldest known illuminati ...
      but they are people.

      Why should I be outraged?
      Because you say so?
      You're only one person.
      A corporation is made up of many, many people.

      People like you and me.
      --The Dude


      The problem is that corporations, while made up of real people, have goals and wills more or less independent of any single person inside of it. The really bad thing about this is that if corporations are judged by the same psychological criteria as a human being (and if we are to treat them as human in other senses why not this as well?), most are clinicly sociopathic. They can also accumulate more wealth than then the vast majority of citizentry. So you have a large, powerful, sociopathic entity with most the legal rights and protections of an actual citizen, but with far more resources at its command.

      Does this strike you as a good thing?

    2. Re:Corporations are people? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      people like him and you suck big ones, dude.

      back off my life, Mr. Corporation.

      you and your buddy big business already own my house, my loans, my bills, lobbying for tobacco [smokers are a very small percentage of the population, second hand smokers however, a far greater number], lobbying for environmental distruction

      and if you could tie me to a wall, and get a dollar for every time i was punched in the stomach, you'd do it.

      because thats what you "people" do.

      not to mention mob ties, porn ties, drug ties, and inciting warfare.

    3. Re:Corporations are people? by koan · · Score: 1

      And who runs the corporation? People like you and me? I don't think so.
      Corporations *are* run by people but the concept takes a life of its own, it's driven by profit margins.

      I don't think it's too much of a stretch to see businesses as "entities".
      Our government is no longer run by the people because "the people" don't participate (not enough any how) but lobbyist for corporations do participate and get paid quite well.
      So laws are passed favoring business over the good of people.
      You may not see it now (I don't know why because it's apparent) but you will before too long.

      There just isn't enough room to say everything here, but watch what happens with this...it won't pass, it will be tossed aside because it cuts into cable companies profits etc.

      --
      "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
    4. Re:Corporations are people? by ElDuderino44137 · · Score: 1

      Nope,

      I'm not pro-cinicly-sociopathic.

      Big Business.
      Big Government.
      They're not the problem.

      People do things ...

      Example:
      People buy guns ...
      People kill people ...

      People group together.
      You can't outlaw this type of behavior.

      If one person can say "lets be cinical" ...
      If another person can say "lets be sociopathic" ...

      Then there just has to be another person that says "lets do the right thing" ...
      And another to say "lets give back to those that give to us" ...

      Yeah.

      Cheers.

  45. Health? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Are there any health issues to consider when spreading a network of wireless access points across an entire city?

  46. Qwest says "we have better service" -- right! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative
    Jeff Dunn, a spokesman for Qwest, which provides high-speed Internet service, said his company is not worried about competition. He said consumers are more concerned about service, especially when their Internet connection stops working in the middle of the night.

    For those of us in the Qwest "service" area, this statement borders on hilarious. They are, without question, one of the worst service providers in existence. I'd gladly put my internet connection in the hands of a local government before Qwest any day.

  47. Not illegal by WindBourne · · Score: 1

    but some companies are trying to make it so. Yet, they do not wish to offer wifi to places like Rifle or say west of pueblo.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  48. How else could we spend the money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is it really that important to solve every murder? And what good does it do to increase police patrols in crime-ridden neighborhoods? I think we can all agree that public school teachers are horribly overpaid, and our roads are all in perfect condition. And of course it goes without saying that nobody in their right mind would want their tax rates lowered.

    So considering that every other municipal problem has been solved and we have to do something with all this excess cash, the only reasonable course of action is to offer free public wireless access.

  49. What gives? by vvaduva · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I don't understand why you guys are all so bent on the government providing internet access for people? Have we all not learned that the government can rarely do anything right? Has anyone thought the whole thing through, such as the long-term cost of maintaining the infrastructure, the security implications, legal liability, children exposure to pornography, illegal activity, etc? What does it cost to hire qualified people to maintain the whole thing, perform repairs, etc? And why is the government better at doing it than a private corporation? The government controlling your internet access is not the way to go. You are just asking for trouble, from any perspective you want to name. Freedom of speech, security, online well-being of children, financial losses, increased taxes, etc. What jackass bureaucrat will dictate what websites you can and cannot go to, or what kind of traffic you can and cannot put on the network?

    1. Re:What gives? by JKarp · · Score: 1

      Because the vast majority of CO, like most Western states, is rural. There is no cable, no DSL, and no cell phones. There's no plan whatsoever from "private corporations" to move into such unprofitable areas. The only option is to form co-ops or muni access. SB 152 as originally written, would have made these options impossible and even made existing co-op/munis illegal, like this: http://www.freepress.net/news/7060

    2. Re:What gives? by vvaduva · · Score: 1

      That's fine - DirecTV's internet offer is always a possibility. The bottom line is the government is not a corporation and internet is not a public service. The instance it becomes a public service, it will also become highly regulated. YOu won't even be able to take a crap without them knowing what tcp ports your toilet is using...

    3. Re:What gives? by JKarp · · Score: 1
      Umm, yeah. You used DirecTV's Internet service? 1,000ms+ latency, 20Kb uplink (best case), and that's when it works.

      Oh, and if you don't think "they" don't already know the IP address of your commode, you're living in a world of illusion.

    4. Re:What gives? by vvaduva · · Score: 1

      Sorry bud...I am a libertarian. You'll never be able to convince me that it's ok to take money from my pocket to give someone else free Internet access. It's illegal, it's unconstitutional and it's immortal. It's also stupid from a technical perspective and it would be a financial disaster.

    5. Re:What gives? by Narchie+Troll · · Score: 1

      Since when is it unconstitutional for states and municipalities to levy taxes to provide services?

      The US Constitution limits federal powers. There's nothing in there that limits the ability of local government to tax you.

      So it's not illegal or unconstitutional. I'll leave you your mortality (sic).

    6. Re:What gives? by JKarp · · Score: 1

      That's funny, I'm a libertarian too. Voted proudly for Banarik. As a libertarian, I don't need a state senator who's pockets are lined with telco PAC funds telling me who I can / can't get services from.

    7. Re:What gives? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Corporations want to fuck you over. That's the purpose of their existence - taking your money and giving you something worth less. Governments are incompetent and can go bad, but you can vote them out and get elected yourself - you could be the Mayor with the investment of only a few months of your time, but you will never be the CEO of a major telecommunications company. Nor are you likely to ever hold enough shares for them to give a damn about you.

    8. Re:What gives? by vvaduva · · Score: 1

      The US Constitution limits federal powers. That's assinine! The Constitution doesn't limit anything. It lays out the makeup of the Federal Government and protects INDIVIDUAL freedom and liberty from abusive government. I am all in favor of state power, but when my income is being taxed by socialists like you in order to get something "free" simply because they make less money than I, or they are too lazy to get jobs, it is in fact immoral and unconstitutional. By that idiotic logic, the federal government should never be involved in regulating abortions, yet they are doing just that. Why are they not leaving it to the local governments to regulate abortions if the U.S. Constitution limits federal powers? Troll indeed...

    9. Re:What gives? by Narchie+Troll · · Score: 1

      Excuse me, but the Bill of Rights is undeniably a list of limitations on federal powers. What part of "Congress shall make no law..." doesn't make sense to you? Sections 8 and 9 might also be illuminating.

      Can you quote a single line of the US Constitution that forbids states or cities from taxing for a given purpose? Have you ever read the document? You don't seem to have the slightest semblance of a grasp of it.

      The federal government does a lot of things that the Constitution doesn't allow it to. They often lump these extra powers under national defense or regulation of interstate commerce. You might want to thumb through a reference on constitutional law before shooting off at the mouth.

    10. Re:What gives? by vvaduva · · Score: 1

      Cool - how can you then justify this kind of wealth redistribution? :) You don't get any more un-libertarian than that...

  50. Is that really how it works there? by biglig2 · · Score: 1

    So, you're saying that the Colorado State legislature has to pass a law before the City government is allowed to do anything?

    Why do you bother with a City administration then?

    --
    ~~~~~ BigLig2? You mean there's another one of me?
  51. Look at the conformist policestaters whining! by Cryofan · · Score: 1

    What a hoot to scroll through this slashdot page and see all the whining and screeching from the conformists/police-Staters/libertarians/freemarket
    cultists!

    Don't worry, cultist--the analysis of this bill as posted by Zonk is wrong. Just see the post on this page by the Colorado leftist who points out that this bill instead outlaws muniWiFi.

    You may now return to your regularly scheduled whining/screeching, on some OTHER post...

    --
    eat shiat and bark at the moon
  52. Foot in the door for internet censorship? by zombiestomper · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Supposedly, the FCC can censor and fine because they are 'moderating' the public airwaves.

    What happens when the internet is a 'public' service? Will obscene/controversial/pr0n materials be subject to censorship and/or fining because they offend the public? (Like Stern, Bubba the Love Sponge, Janet's b00bie, etc?)

    In which case, I (and many internet users) would opt to *pay* for unfiltered/moderated internet access. So what's the point beside giving the government another entity to spend money on and more power to control what people see, hear and read?

    I used to think it was a good idea. Then the the rapid FCC started throwing it's weight around. Then congress and the FCC started talking about regulating cable and sattelite radio for decency. Now I am just paranoid of another piece of government regulation.

    Remember, the Chinese are trying their damndest to regulate the internet, too!

    [I can't define what is pornography.] "But I know it when I see it."-- Potter Stewart, SCOTUS Justice

    1. Re:Foot in the door for internet censorship? by vvaduva · · Score: 0

      That's exactly my point!! As the Internet becomes the defacto standard of communication, most people seem to LACK the basic intelligence required to make any sound judgment, and they are all seemingly very willing to turn the main communication channel over to the government. I wonder what would happen when a state or city-provided Internet medium will be used to expose state or city corruption. How long do you think that will be tolerated?

    2. Re:Foot in the door for internet censorship? by chivo243 · · Score: 1

      Didn't Larry Flynt say that? No that is not it..it's..."I'm just guilty of bad taste..."? China has thousands of internet police! 30,000± That is pretty f%c#in scary.

      --
      Sig Hansen?
  53. what visionaries by sacrilicious · · Score: 1
    The state Senate will vote today (April 5th) on Colorado Senate Bill 152, which would allow cities to provide wireless internet access.

    So what, we should be down on our knees thanking them for allowing it? It's already allowed, unless there was prior legislation prohibiting it, in which case I'm not exactly going to pretend to be grateful. Last week at the Freedom to Connect meeting, Susan Crawford began her posted comments with the following:

    A right to connect, or freedom to connect, signals that we need permission -- rights only operate against someone who has the ability to say no. Freedom of speech, all of that -- all operates against the government. A digital bill of rights assumes that someone has the power to cut those rights off.

    We're here to affirm that we don't need permission. We are more threatened by ourselves and our willingness to look to government for permission than by anything else.

    --
    - First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then ???, then profit.
  54. So where will this go? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First, this only helps those who have computers, and even then they might only be able to support the most common platform, thus engraining MS Windows/80x86 trash even further. Next, upon realizing this is spending money on people who have money to begin with, i.e., people who have money to buy computers, then they'll have to buy computers for everyone else. Further, although porn will have to be defended with all out violent force, those offensive right wing bloggers will have to be removed from the internet at all costs.

    I'm sorry guys, this is poorly thought out and just plain stupid. At least when you buy the service from a private company, you are implicitly agreeing to receiving all the subject material that comes with it; it's easier to protect that subject material to which you do want access; and it's easier to filter out most of that which you want blocked---an option you'll lose if the private sector is forced out of the business. And welfare for the middle class and well-to-do is just buying votes with tax money that could be better spent.

    How about public restrooms instead? Both rich and poor could use it, it would be to a greater advantage to the poor than to the rich, and Colorado is definitely lacking in that department. Boring, huh? Well, most things that are practical and sensible are. But I guess computer geeks never to need to take a dump. Or if they do, they think their shit don't stink.

  55. Worse than that by jimbro2k · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I used to work at UPS (in the accounting office). At that time, and probably still, UPS and FedEx were required to have their rates (within the US, at least) approved by the U.S. Postal Service, which kept those rates artificially high.
    Not, I think, that UPS or FedEx ever object too much to that.
    If the Federal government were not orchistrating this scheme, it would be an illegal trust (cartel?).

    --
    There is not nearly enough love in the world, but there is far too much trust.
  56. I'll tell you what's next ... by ElDuderino44137 · · Score: 1

    Free health care ...
    I would have said dogs doing it w/ cats ...
    But I cought my Beagle in action the other week ;)

  57. Muni Competition by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 2, Informative

    The "High Tech Broadband Coalition" has published their "Policy Position on Municipal Broadband". Briefly, they support municipal efforts to ensure universal broadband access, even if the city has to provide broadband itself. Consisting of the BSA, CEA, NAM, SIA, ITI, and TLA, the position is important, if not completely surprising. But the TIA, which represents telcos who compete with these municipal efforts, is very surprising as a member of the coalition. TIA members are busy buying legislators to keep municipal competition out, while their trade org is promoting keeping city governments in. Are Mark Cuban's complaints about the RIAA misrepresenting his content corp starting to sound familiar?

    --

    --
    make install -not war

  58. Re:Mmmmm...anti-sports rhetoric! by leoval · · Score: 1

    Do you realize that your argument is a huge non-sequitor ?

    I am bad at almost all the sports known to the human kind, and yet I manage to enjoy most of them, I don't see how complaining about tax spending is a reflection in the sporting abilities of the original poster.

    I do agree with the mayor premise though, the goverment will find ways to spend our money, and most of the time we will not agree with them. But that is the price of a Republic: someone else, empowered by the "people" makes the decisions, period.

  59. Fractions of a Penny by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mmmmm...anti-sports rhetoric! (Score:1)
    by fluxrad (125130) on Tuesday April 05, @02:58PM (#12146151)

    Get over it. The tax on the stadium was $.01 per $10 and the referendum passed by an overwhelming majority. Get a 50%+ vote for WiFi and you'll get it, but until that time your post is just taking another pot shot at pro-sports for no other reason than the fact that you're probably bad at them.


    $0.01 here, $0.01 there. Pretty soon those fractions of a penny start to add up.

    The fact that it passed by 70% or so just shows that people are stupid. The Roman Empire had bread and circuses. We have beer and football.
  60. Wifi given a HiFive by OSXexpert · · Score: 1

    No wonder the Colorado Native is more ellusive than the NW's mysterious Sasquatch.

    --
    --- Old Time NeXThead
    1. Re:Wifi given a HiFive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As Bill Owens just noted:

      "The natives are getting restless."

      http://www.fox43tv.com/global/story.asp?s=3153249& ClientType=Printable

  61. A compromise between municipal and commercial ISP by Krellan · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I was thinking about the recent conflict between municipal and commercial Internet access providers. Government-owned Internet access that blankets an area, whether it be via wireless or fiber-optic cable or something equally useful, is a great thing to have from a property-values and quality-of-life standpoint (hence the city's motivation to build it). However, it obviously competes against commercial ISP's, which (rightfully) feel undercut by the government.

    How about this compromise:

    Government-owned ISP's focus on doing what they do best: building out infrastructure and reaching through the unprofitable "last mile" to get all customers -- not just the most desirable large corporations or dense urban populations -- hooked up. The purpose of this infrastructure would be to transparently pass packets through, acting as a pipe between their customers and the Internet.

    Commercial ISP's focus on providing content and configuring the network to deliver that content. IP address assignment (DHCP), provisioning of subnets, useful servers (email, web hosting, newsgroups), etc. would be handled by competing commercial ISP's. All the various levels and varieties of access found today would still be available: customers could choose to pay extra for a static IP, or certain premium content, or whatever else strikes their fancy. All of this content would be delivered via the municipal infrastructure! Both commercial and government play useful parts here.

    Do you think this compromise would actually work in practice? I'd love to see it given a chance somewhere....

  62. Who wants government internet access? by dragmorp · · Score: 1

    I predict this thing to become more censored that you can imagine after the first busy body mother finds her son looking at something offensive on the internet.

    What happens when children are caught chatting with people innappropriately of the wrong age...

    These municipal internet connections will be highly politicized as soon as they become popular and guess what... they may make it unprofitable for a company to provide the access.

    So then you are left with government censored internet access with no commercial alternatives.

    Please people... let's let private enterprise compete it out.

    1. Re:Who wants government internet access? by Hyperspac · · Score: 1

      let's let private enterprise compete it out.

      What compation? Right now my option are give Time Warner a check or use dial up since the phone lines arn't good enough for DSL. Maybe once all the low hanging fruit has been picked the lines will get upgraded, but I'm not holding my breath.

      I'm all for private enterprise and compations, but if I don't have choices why shouldn't my neighbors and I be able to do something about it? The local public library hasn't put the book stores out of business and they let you have the books for free. I find it hard to imagine something simialar won't be possible with internet.

      I would think a forum like this would be a good one to discuss ideas and possiblities. (And some people have mentioned some good ones.) But it seems that its easier to get mod points for saying the sky is falling or in gerneral being negative. Pointing out downsides and issues is one thing, but do it in a way that can be debate and discussed in a useful fashion instead of just assuming the worst and trying to be the fist to post it.

  63. Here's the thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Corporations are entities that are set-up to make profit at all and any cost. They will lay-off as many workers as possible in order to do this. They will off-shore as many jobs to poor countries to keep their costs low and prop up as many despots as they can in order to keep the population of those countries in line. They will destroy the environment to make a profit, they will destroy lives to make a profit, they will kill people to make a profit, they will do anything and everything to make a profit. PERIOD. So what? If local governments have a project that will keep these greedy, self-serving, world destroying, people abusing corporations from earning more money for themselves and their moneygrubbing shareholders then MORE POWER TO THEM!

  64. Ricochet info by Erbo · · Score: 1
    Ricochet gives you bandwidth anywhere from 128K to 400K, depending on conditions. I used to use it before we outgrew it (they have a 1 Gb/week download maximum, and, if you exceed it, they can cut you off) and switched to a Comcast cable modem, but I still think it's a good solution. Ricochet does work well with Linux, once you set up the kernel drivers correctly.

    This municipal wireless network thing would be interesting (perhaps as a backup to the cable modem), but I haven't been able to use my 802.11b card with my notebook ever since I upgraded to FC2 and a 2.6 kernel.

    --
    Be who you are...and be it in style!
  65. I'm in CO...this doesn't justify a TAX. by WaxParadigm · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I have a couple criteria in determining if something should be provided by the government (i.e. you should be taxed to pay for it). To be justified, it must get a "yes" for both of the following questions.

    1. Is it providing something that cannot be feasibly provided by the private sector?

    I live in Colorado (just outside Fort Collins) and have friends (in Windsor) who use a private wireless ISP because they are out of range for DSL and cable. My laptop in my office can see the APs for another wireless ISP (I use cable and also have the choice of DSL from several providers). There is also a local wireless COOP that can service anyone within a 12-25-mile radius (line of site) of Horsetooth Rock. I can think of 10 places in town where I can get free WIFI and several others where I can pay a couple bucks to use their connected computer (i.e. for those who can't afford computers).

    2. Is it important enough that the funding of it should be enforced by law/force (should people be thrown in jail and have their assets forfeited for not funding it)?

    The first question already disqualified this for me, but it fails this question as well. High-speed Internet is nice, but most people can get it anyway. Those who cannot can visit a local coffee house for a couple bucks, or use dial-up.

    Given that we've gotten a "NO" for both of these questions this is not a reasonable place for the government to provide services in.

    1. Re:I'm in CO...this doesn't justify a TAX. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm in rural Ft. Collins.... and, regardless of what your post says, it's not that easy. I have exhausted 5+ Wireless providers thus far. It isn't always feasible to hang out at a local coffee house with the college kids all day. I get paid for speed at my job... and dial up just doesn't cut it.

      In other words, your island isn't as perfect as you would like to believe. ;-)

  66. Want Jobs Vote Democrat? by KrackHouse · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    First of all, I'm not a republican and think Bush isn't qualified to be president.

    This slashdot article is really about Socialism. Should the government prevent free markets. In Germany the answer is yes. High minimum wages, extreme unemployment benefits, lots of government jobs, etc.
    "The number of people out of work increased by 92,000 to 4.97 million, according to seasonally adjusted figures from the Federal Labour Office. That pushed Germany's jobless rate to 12%, compared with about 5% in the UK and the US. "

    Does anybody here really believe that the lower taxes in the US and UK have nothing to do with that fact that we're more wealthy? That extra 10% unemployed are better off? Poverty is lower in Germany? Nobody, even the most right wing, would argue that capitalism is perfect but preventing competition is a sure way to stifle innovation in the long run. Hitachi's new nano-battery for instance could cut pollution by huge amounts. Why did they invent it? Because it's going to make them incredibly rich. The whole earth saving thing is a side effect. Now what if the government had set up gigantic bureacracy to invent that battery? Hitachi never would have tried to create it and unless you think communism was efficient you have to concede that the earth would have suffered while we waited for the bureaucrats to get the job done.

    --
    What if Digg added local news and a Slashdot inspired comment karma system? ---
    http://houndwire.com
    1. Re:Want Jobs Vote Democrat? by mlefranc · · Score: 1
      That pushed Germany's jobless rate to 12%, compared with about 5% in the UK and the US.
      [...] Does anybody here really believe that the lower taxes in the US and UK have nothing to do with that fact that we're more wealthy?

      It is a well known fact that when you take into account those people under poverty threshold that are not registered in the jobless rate, there are more poor in the UK than in Germany or France.

    2. Re:Want Jobs Vote Democrat? by KrackHouse · · Score: 1

      "The Florence-based Innocenti Research Centre of UNICEF, which carried out the study, says children are in poverty when they live in households with an income per head that is 50 percent or less of the national average for their country. "

      So if we suddenly doubled the income of every American guess how many would still live in poverty. You guessed it, the exact same amount. Poverty is relative, it has nothing to do with a standard of living.

      "UNICEF regional director in Geneva, Philip O'Brien, says that definition is relative. "The child living in poverty in the U.S. is clearly not as badly off as the child in Mexico," he said in a statement Tuesday (Mar. 1).

      --
      What if Digg added local news and a Slashdot inspired comment karma system? ---
      http://houndwire.com
  67. I live in CO also, & this doesn't justify a TA by WaxParadigm · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I have a couple criteria in determining if something should be provided by the government (i.e. you should be taxed to pay for it). To be justified, it must get a "yes" for both of the following questions.

    1. Is it providing something that cannot be feasibly provided by the private sector?

    I live in Colorado (just outside Fort Collins) and have friends (in Windsor) who use a private wireless ISP. My laptop in my office can see the APs for another wireless ISP (I use cable and also have the choice of DSL from several providers). There is also a local wireless COOP that can service anyone within a 12-25-mile radius (line of site) of Horsetooth Rock. I can think of 10 places in town where I can get free WIFI and several others where I can pay a couple bucks to use their connected computer (i.e. for those who can't afford computers).

    I know people outside of Colorado Springs, on 5-acre lots (so not a density you'd think is attractive to ISPs). They have access to a wireless ISP and a Cable ISP...and there are a couple DSL providers who think they can service them despite the long phone lines.

    I have a friend in **Brush** and even he has high-speed Internet.

    2. Is it important enough that the funding of it should be enforced by law/force (should people be thrown in jail and have their assets forfeited for not funding it)?

    The first question already disqualified this for me, but it fails this question as well. High-speed Internet is nice, but most people can get it anyway. Those who cannot can visit a local coffee house for a couple bucks, or use dial-up.

    Given that we've gotten a "NO" for both of these questions this is not a reasonable place for the government to provide services in.

  68. tax money by asoko · · Score: 1
    "The sponsor, Rep. Cheri Jahn, D-Wheat Ridge, said allowing taxpayers to decide is better than barring local governments from competing with utilities."

    No, it's not. They're letting people to decide whether or not to take other people's money to subsidize this. Would it be fair to allow a company to compete that could take money from people at will? Even people who don't buy the product?

  69. for the european people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It'll cost 11 250 euros / square kilometer.

  70. Are you kidding me? by stewymcstewstew · · Score: 1

    Why are people so against government provided WiFi. If you are given the option, then simply don't pay for it. If a group of people are willing to collect resources and offer a service that otherwise wouldn't be available, then there is nothing wrong with it. We have seen what happens when it is left to the private sector, if the government can provide internet at $16/m, then what am I paying $50/m for? On top of that, prices for broadband have becomed so comfrotably situated that it would take a radical buisness to push anyone in the private sector towards offering better services, at a lower cost. As for the people who are complaining about how poorly the government does things, the most poorly executed move by the government is to let the private sector grip us citizens by the balls. Unregulated and unrestricted buisness will just screw us over, and as part of the technology community, we are getting some of the worse of it. We are forced to pay rediculous prices, for services that can be as bad as they want, because it's a recent enough of a buisness model that no one has any idea what to expect from it, so they just accept being bent over. Also, just in case you weren't aware, there ARE people in this country that an additional $24/m can break them. To deny that the internet, as well as computers, are becoming necessary to funtioning in the real world. Cheap wireless internet access, as pointed out earlier, opens the door for all sorts of new oppurtunities, such as hand held VOIP phones, which would in turn create another service offered at a lower cost. And if you're happy paying $50/m for your cable, feel free to keep paying it. Better yet, enjoy paying $25/m for it after they start realizing that they need to stop screwing the consumer. If you're so concerned about the government doing a piss poor job, then why don't we, as people, try to govern ourselves. The fundementals of this country are built around ideas of people governing themselves, and not leaving all of the important descisions up to the figurehead. And as far as I'm concerned, the government is not a seperate entity that needs to stay away from the public sector, but is the very thing that defines the public sector. It is in place to allow people to provide people with goods and services as the people see fit. It's pretty weird how "unpatriotic" our current administration is.

    1. Re:Are you kidding me? by SlothB77 · · Score: 1

      The low monthly rate, such as $16 or whatnot is assuming everyone opts for the service (or is forced to pay it through tax subsidies.) But, isn't this the rub - if everyone were willing to do it, we wouldn't need government to provide the service. Private industry would be providing the service. But they don't - because they know the demand just isn't there. For free wireless there is demand. But you gotta pay for it somehow. Some small entrepreneurs should take the risk and test out the market - but not the government. And unlike the highways, you can easily track the usage of the wifi network through individual user accounts, usernames and passwords. And before you fret, its being done right now folks, so don't fret. If you got a city of 100,000 people, it doesn't mean you'll have 100,000 wifi subscribers. That's idiotic. Even if you taxed them - forced your fellow citizens to pay, you'd maybe get the $16 from maybe 25k of the 100k. That may be too high as well.

    2. Re:Are you kidding me? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are no commercial entities willing to take the risk and lay the infrastructure for a measly $16 per month.

      They want cables laid down that only THEY own and then they want to charge $50 per month.

  71. If you don't like the arrangement-you can move by randall_burns · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Stevenson near where I live set up a free wifi mesh with funding from the local chamber of commerce. I can easily believe that by putting this sort of stuff in you can increase property values by more than enough to warrent the investment. Folks that don't like this-well they can buy property in a city that doesn't provide taxpayer supported wifi. This stuff is for a city infrastructure just like free drinking fountains-or free sidewalks. Probably one of the best things a city can do to spur economic development.

  72. Re:Mmmmm...anti-sports rhetoric! by fluxrad · · Score: 1

    Do you realize that your argument is a huge non-sequitor?

    I am bad at almost all the sports known to the human kind, and yet I manage to enjoy most of them, I don't see how complaining about tax spending is a reflection in the sporting abilities of the original poster.


    Eh? How's it a non sequitur? It's obvious the poster doesn't enjoy pro sports (as evidenced by his curt wording). Moreover, it's obvious that he's not a small government advocate (as evidenced by his support for municipal WiFi). So it's not any stretch to assume the original poster has "got something against" pro sports.

    You can hypothesize why all you like (maybe his dad beat him up when he was a kid). Me, I'd like to think it's because he's a fatty who can't run.

    Oh, and FYI:

    I do agree with the mayor premise though, the goverment will find ways to spend our money, and most of the time we will not agree with them. But that is the price of a Republic: someone else, empowered by the "people" makes the decisions, period.

    The Stadium was a voter-approved undertaking. If you'd like an example of the wasting of tax dollars you'd be better served looking into the activities of Mayor Webb.

    Personally, I think it's funny the amount of disdain geeks in Denver show for the stadium. One need not be an economics major to understand the ridiculous amount of revenue the Broncos bring to the Denver/metro area.

    --
    "It is seldom that liberty of any kind is lost all at once." -David Hume
  73. The counties are considered the Denver region by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The 6 counties that you list is considered the denver region (as opposed to C.Springs region which would also include a number of localities to it). The stadium was voted in, and if you truely object to paying for it, you are free to move to a different place.

    If you wish to base your vote on a fictional boook, please consider moving to Texas or Washington D.C. There are plenty of people in those locations who will join you in such things.

  74. Colorado Telecom Bill (SB 05-152) IS POOPY... by old_ranger · · Score: 3, Informative

    and I'll tell you why. THis is QWEST and the CO Telecom Assoc. getting a bill passed that PREVENTS local gov from doing what they NEED to do when QWEST WONT DO IT! Fact is it has alays been legal for CO local govs to build their own infrastructure nd offer it to the public if they wanted to. NOW, if this bill gets passed, there will be unreasonable restrictions to that activity. Some IDIOT at assocaited press failed to research before publishing, and spn it to look ike the bill ALLOWS, when it really RESTRICTS. And, for all you snivelling ninnies that want to "keep gov out of telecom" let me tell you the TRUTH: YOU live in a CITY. WE live in the STICKS, and no major telecom will build the infrastructure to serve us, because they dont care about us, because the "subscriber density" is too low. This is a typical reaction from a bunch of know nothing metro geekamo elitists that have never considered what it must be like to live in a rural area and be underserved in all areas of service that are taken for granted in cities. Anyway, if you live in COlorado, CALL YOUR LEGISLATOR and tell him/her to vote NO on SB 05-152. If you live in another state, you'll get your chance because the telecom lobby is gunning for you too, to restrict your right to do what you want, in all states. HERE is TRUTH: http://www.ruralcolorado.org/index.php?option=cont ent&task=view&id=275&Itemid=2 read it, know it, live it. Sincerely, Old Ranger in Colorado

    1. Re:Colorado Telecom Bill (SB 05-152) IS POOPY... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um, move out of the sticks? Anyone forcing you to live there? Talk about snivelling...

    2. Re:Colorado Telecom Bill (SB 05-152) IS POOPY... by lifespan · · Score: 0

      Um, move out of the sticks? Anyone forcing you to live there? Talk about snivelling...

      Um, who will grow your food then? Cities exist because rural populations feed them. Talk about ignorant...

      --
      -- Howto: Get +5 (1) Whine about M$ (2) Namedrop Gentoo (3) Casually Abuse Mods (4) Namedrop Early Computer Model
  75. The City Of Dayton Goes Wireless by pooplips · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    The city will pay about $5,000 a year for it... http://www.whiotv.com/news/4336419/detail.html

  76. We need affordable internet access ! Get it ? by zymano · · Score: 1

    Our KC Wi-Fi project was killed because of treacherous cable and phone companies. They don't give a damn about the poor or the casual user. They want broadband and internet access to be only funneled through them. They also know that regular/pots and cable tv is dying. What they are doing by buying up politicians is TRUELY criminal. More so than someone robbing a 7-11. Thats right. White collar legal crime is happening right now .

  77. THIS IS EASY FOLKS by dingfelder · · Score: 1

    This one is really easy folks.

    Have the government offer a FREE or almost free wireless service, but don't make it overwhelmingly fast.

    If business wants to compete, they will offer a better (faster) version for more money.

    Easy.

  78. Re:Mmmmm...anti-sports rhetoric! by leoval · · Score: 1

    Thank you for clarifying the last part of my post. I overlooked the detail about the Stadium being a voter-approved initiative.

    However my point still stands, the conclusion:

    - Person A is bad at sports

    Does not follow the premise:

    - Person A complains about its tax dollars being spent in a Sports stadium.

    Does not matter how much you want to dress your argument, it is still a non-sequitur (and you know it).

    Personally, I understand that you wanted to spice up your response to the original poster and in the process an ad-hominem was added. No big deal, each person has a different style in the way they respond to others.

  79. Re:Mmmmm...anti-sports rhetoric! by fluxrad · · Score: 1

    The example you just gave was a non sequitur. However, my post was not. Do you see why?

    --
    "It is seldom that liberty of any kind is lost all at once." -David Hume
  80. Why relying on government, get organized! by PeteQC · · Score: 1

    Government doing it? Well, you can expect it to be ready in 10 years...

    I really do prefer to trust an organization like Ile Sans Fil here in Montreal to get free urban wifi internet access in the city!

    These guys are really doing something cool.

    --
    Montreal - Best city to live in!
  81. Re:I live in CO also, & this doesn't justify a by RzUpAnmsCwrds · · Score: 1

    I'm also in Fort Collins, and here's the scoop on wireless:

    - At least 3 major wireless ISPs already exist (Digis, Colorado Wireless Exchange Coop, Skybeam.net)

    - Many business have free Wi-Fi. Mugs (2 locations), Moxie, Wired Bean, Bean Cycle, Alleycat, Bear Rock, Silver Grill, and many more.

    - The wireless spectrum is *way* over-crowded. There are over 7,000 APs in town, most on channel 6. In some locations, my built-in wireless can pick up as many as fifteen different access points.

    - Cingular already offers EDGE here, and Verizon/Sprint will probably offer EVDO in the near future.

    And wired:

    - Comcast provides cable internet to the public. It's fast (4.0/384), has good latency, and is pretty reliable. It's a bit pricey, but overall not a bad value.

    - Qwest provides some decent competition with DSL. 1.5/1.0 for $28 a month (+ $6 for their basic ISP) isn't too shabby.

    So, right now, there's quite a bit of competition.

    Government-sponsored WiFi isn't attractive, at least in Fort Collins, for several reasons:

    1: It adds to spectrum pollution. Try running an AP when the public network has already sucked up 1 and 11 and everyone else is stuck on 6.

    2: It's not necessry. We already have a major university with over 500 publically accessible computers, plus two libraries and countless free hotspots. There are already three WISPs operating in town. Wired broadband is available, and there is competition.

    3: It forces out WISPs. Digis and Skybeam aren't "evil corporations", nor is CWX. They spent a lot of money on network buildout. Regardless of whether Digis and Skybeam could compete on features or price, there simply isn't enough spectrum for them to continue operating. CWX is in better shape (they don't use 802.11), but how can they compete against "free" wireless?

    Look, there are some services that the government should provide - particularly when those services are life-critical (ambulance, fire, police) or can't be provided by private companies (roads). Internet, however, doesn't fall into that category. Particularly not when there is already a healthy market.

    There's a reason that the IRS doesn't make tax software: whatever they could create would suck compared to TurboTax or TaxCut. Why should the government spend tax money to do what is already being done - and done well - by the private sector?

  82. Re:Mmmmm...anti-sports rhetoric! by 2short · · Score: 1


    He seems to think, and I agree, that your post was a non-sequitur, because there is no particular correlation between pro-sports fandom and athletic ability. In my experience, quite the opposite. The athletic people I know aren't particularly likely to watch football, because they are outside instead; whereas the football fans are more likely to be out-of-shape couch potatoes.

    In any case, in discussing whether voters should be allowed to decide to spend money on a wifi network, it does seem relevant to note that an overwhelming majority apparently think it is fine for them to decide to spend it on a football stadium.

  83. To all Libertarians out there... by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1
    ... and other folks crying out loud because it's 'teh evil government' providing the service.

    You miss one important thing: it's not the federal government we're talking about. It's the local government: people directly elected by the citizens. If a local community, through its representatives, expresses the desire to have tax-subsidised WiFi (in addition to roads and other public services), then they have the right to get it. Isn't that exactly the 'power closer to the people' sort of thing most of you have been campaigning for?

  84. That's why voters must approve using tax dollars by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    RTFA. ".. cities would have to get the approval of voters to use tax dollars.."

  85. Re:I live in CO also, & this doesn't justify a by serutan · · Score: 1

    Criterion 2 means government shouldn't do anything without unanimous consent, because a law that isn't enforced isn't a law, it's a suggestion. So when you ask, "is it important enough...?" apparently you would have to be asking everybody to agree on that, which isn't gonna happen anytime soon on this planet. Civilization is about cooperation and interdependence, not about a bunch of loners in survival shacks.

  86. What....a....retard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "freemarket cultist"

    wow...I mean...WOW...
    y'know what...just forget it buddy...
    Go climb back up your tree and go back to throwing feces at us 'upright-walkers'

    My tolerance for you idiots that NEVER. FUCKING. LEARN. from history is officially gone.

    Somehow in your drug-addled excuse for a brain, you can equate the greatest mechanism for freedom and advancement for all individuals with a generic, mindless, deity-worshipping collective.

    Scum like you are why we're not colonizing planets by now...idiot

  87. Hang, on by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The same people paying are the ones voting to get the money spent. If most people don't want this to be paid for out of taxes, it won't happen.

  88. Re: Items not permitted ... by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    Is there anything you are allowed to take in? Sounds like a happening place. Not!

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  89. Re:I live in CO also, & this doesn't justify a by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm also in Fort Collins...

    Mugs (2 locations), Moxie, Wired Bean, Bean Cycle, Alleycat, Bear Rock, Silver Grill, and many more.


    Man. I grew up in Ft. Collins and I don't recognize any of those names. Next you're gonna tell me that College Ave. isn't the main drag in town anymore. What has the world come to??

  90. Reap What You Sow by lifespan · · Score: 0

    Communities such as this one have long been considered financially unviable to service providers as the subscriber density was far too low to return high enough profits. If a company displays ignorance and disregard to the service needs of a community in it's early years they can hardly expect to be welcomed into the local market when it becomes profitable.

    --
    -- Howto: Get +5 (1) Whine about M$ (2) Namedrop Gentoo (3) Casually Abuse Mods (4) Namedrop Early Computer Model
  91. the greatest mechanism by Cryofan · · Score: 1

    some cultist-sheeple wrote:
    "Somehow in your drug-addled excuse for a brain, you can equate the greatest mechanism for freedom and advancement for all individuals with a generic, mindless, deity-worshipping collective."


    First, the greatest mechanism for advancement of mankind is simply the written accumulation and aggregation of scientific knowledge, the growth rate of which is exponential, the same as the growth rate of educated people, people who are educated via the taxable dime, NOT through corporate largesse, you simpleton. Or rather, you ignoramus. The advancements we have made have been made through the steady accumulation of knowledge. However, the freemarket vultures have sold this advancement as having been a byproduct of "free" trade and economic liberalism. This is a falsehood and a canard. Learn. Read. Just as I did. I think you will switch to my side. If I can do it, you can do it, too...

    Second, anytime you hear the word "freedom," put your hand on your wallet. The word "freedom" is a propaganda touchstone.

    --
    eat shiat and bark at the moon
  92. Necessity by SeanDuggan · · Score: 1
    How do you define what a city should and should not provide for its citizens? Things that have been around the longest? Things that aren't technologically based? Police, fire, water, etc use a good deal of technology to perform their services. Is it really wrong for a city to want to provide services for its citizenry? Isn't that the purpose of government in the first place?
    Necessity. To me, the government should provide services that are necessary to civilization. Fire departments and utilities like water and electricity are government controlled because they're services that need to be available even when it's not profitable to do so. Ditto with the postal service. As I've said before to people talking about the benefits of privitization, the biggest problem with having private industry handle vital concerns is that the main purpose of private business is to make money. In comparison, the primary purpose of the government is to provide the service even if they have to provide it at a loss. We've seen this repeatedly with privitized services. It made more money for Enron to have rolling blackouts because they could sell their electricity at higher prices, and export it to other states. The cable companies do their level best to only allow one company in any given area so that they can force people to accept their rates because they're the only game in town. In areas where the service is not vital, such as Wi-Fi, the government has the advantage over any private industries in that they can throw as much money into it as they need to. And, essentially, you're forcing a monopoly, as everyone must pay for the services, even if they use an alternate prviate service. Admittedly, many services have carved a niche opposite public services. Private schools are still paid for by families who want the best education for their child. People still use Fed-Ex and UPS to send packages (Although personally, I think the US Postal Service is more private industry than any thing else these days. Heck, the post office in my hometown has actually been privitized since I was a wee bairn two decades ago.) due to greater convenience, more services, occasionally cheaper prices.

    Anyhow, back to the subject at hand, to me the WiFi access is not vital. The private companies, while expensive, are probably still costing us less than the government would be charging us in taxes to keep things running. (I work in government, and efficiency is not really the watchword a good bit of the time. As aforementionned, the goal is to make sure the service is always available, not to do it cheaply or efficiently.) As it is, such a technology is probably only going to help out a certain income range who can afford to get the laptop and wireless card, and to pay for the electricity to keep it charged.

    --
    This sig has absolutely no significance and serves only to take up screen space and waste the time of the reader.
  93. Repeat post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Parent just posted a repeat of previous post.