Last updated: February 21, 2008 - 8:34am
WHY WI-FI NETWORKS ARE FLOUNDERING
[SOURCE: BusinessWeek, AUTHOR: Olga Kharif]
The road is getting bumpier for cities and the companies they have partnered with in a bid to blanket their streets with high-speed Internet access at little or no cost to users. While 415 U.S. cities and counties are now building or planning to build municipal Wi-Fi networks, "deployments are slowing down slightly," says Esme Vos, founder of consultancy MuniWireless.com. Vos's tally still marks a nearly 70% jump from mid-2006, when there were 247 muni Wi-Fi projects on tap, but that's down from the torrid pace of a year earlier, when deployment plans doubled. Perhaps the clearest hint of trouble ahead is that some of the companies partnering with cities on these projects, including EarthLink and AT&T, are having second thoughts about remaining in the municipal Wi-Fi business.
http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/aug2007/tc20070814_929868.htm?campaign_id=rss_tech
* Community Wi-Fi comes to San Francisco
While EarthLink and Google are still hammering out details of their citywide Wi-Fi contract with San Francisco officials, a company called Meraki plans on blanketing the city with free Wi-Fi using volunteers who will deploy and manage the equipment themselves.
http://news.com.com/Community+Wi-Fi+comes+to+San+Francisco/2100-7351_3-6202624.html?tag=nefd.top
Related
- EarthLink vs. City of Philadelphia
- EarthLink rolls out citywide Wi-Fi in New Orleans
- Whatever happened to free Wi-Fi in San Francisco?
- San Francisco, EarthLink have tentative Wi-Fi deal
- Cities themselves may be muni Wi-Fi's savior
- Municipal Wi-Fi: A Failure To Communicate
- EarthLink studying muni Wi-Fi business
- San Francisco Wi-Fi plan may face political heat
- End Nigh For Muni Wi-Fi?
- ACLU slams final San Francisco Wi-Fi contract
- EarthLink To Shut Down New Orleans' Municipal Wi-Fi
- A cure to citywide Wi-Fi woes?
- What's Behind the Epidemic of Municipal Wi-Fi Failures?
- San Francisco picks Google, EarthLink
- Philadelphia Wi-Fi Moves Closer
Ratings
Login to rate this headline.

