Posts Tagged Free Wi Fi

Cable is discovering the joys of Wi-Fi; why not mobile?

Posted by on Tuesday, 17 January, 2012

For the last few years, an alternate wireless network has been emerging in the U.S.; one not built by the mobile operators but by cable providers. Cablevision, Time Warner Cable, and Comcast have all launched numerous Wi-Fi hotspots in their service areas, and last week Bright House joined the club, turning on 2,000 outdoor and indoor hotspots across the state of Florida. The Multiple Service Operators (MSOs) have latched onto the idea of Wi-Fi as a way of extending their home and business broadband services to customers on the go, and its paying dividends. Why haven’t their mobile counterparts followed suit?

Apart from AT&T, U.S. mobile carriers have been slow to adopt Wi-Fi in their networks. Verizon Wireless only began limited use of Wi-Fi hotspots in big public venues last year. Meanwhile, Sprint and T-Mobile have been content to let their customers take advantage of the plethora of free Wi-Fi in the public domain, they haven’t launched any hotspots of their own. Even AT&T is being fairly conservative. It makes extensive use of use of the café/restaurant/airport network it acquired from Wayport to offload mobile data traffic, but it has only built outdoor networks extensively in New York City. In the rest of the country, AT&T’s outdoor access points are limited to handful of high-profile, high-traffic “hotzones” such as Chicago’s Wrigleyville and San Francisco’s Embarcadero.

Time Warner's Los Angeles WI-Fi network

In comparison, Time Warner’s Wi-Fi coverage of Los Angeles is a dense mass of polka dots covering major intersections, parks and public venues from downtown all the way to Santa Monica and snaking down the coast to Redondo Beach. The MSOs have even expanded their reach by signing network-sharing deals with each another, creating the cable equivalents of roaming networks. Wi-Fi has proven to be tremendously popular with their customers, who get to access the networks for free as long as they’re home cable modem subscribers.

The obvious answer as to why mobile carriers haven’t been as quick to pull the trigger the trigger on Wi-Fi is that they don’t need it from a geographic standpoint. Their networks already cover every conceivable area they could hope to reach with Wi-Fi, so the business case for carriers isn’t coverage; it’s capacity. As more customers consume more network resources, they place tremendous loads on the network’s high-traffic zones.

Many international operators have already gotten wise to the benefits of Wi-Fi for cheap data offload, probably none more than Free.fr, which is building its Free Mobile unlimited and data service on the back of 5 million Wi-Fi “nano cells” embedded in the set-top boxes of its broadband subscribers.

If you’re looking for an example closer to home, Republic Wireless is signing hotspot deals to create a “Wi-Fi first” service that, allowing it to offer unlimited voice and data for a mere a month. Republic acknowledges that it’s service is still experimental and it’s not sure if it can make its unlimited business case viable, but if it weren’t for Wi-Fi, it wouldn’t be able to make the attempt.

Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.

  • 2012: Data, spectrum and the race to LTE
  • Mobile Q4: The scramble for spectrum continues
  • Report: The Ongoing Battle for the Digital Home



alt=''
border='0'
/>


GigaOM


Skype Is Giving Away Free Wi-Fi in Airports for the Holidays [Skype]

Posted by on Monday, 19 December, 2011

Hold the phone: Skype WiFi free at 50 airports this holiday

Posted by on Monday, 19 December, 2011

Travelers this holiday season are getting a welcome gift from Skype in the form of free Wi-Fi access at more than 50 U.S. airports to place voice or video calls over Skype’s service. The year-end promotion runs from Dec. 21 through Dec. 27; a time when many are hitting the skies to visit relatives and friends over the holidays.

Skype’s blog offers an interactive map showing which airports will have the free wireless access for Skype services. Most of the major airport hubs are covered, but my local area of Philadelphia isn’t getting any love for some reason. Luckily, I’ve got a data-only SIM card combined with native Android SIP support to make free or low cost calls, and Google Talk video as another supplement!

Speaking of Android, Skype WiFi isn’t supported on Google’s mobile devices. However, you can use it in conjunction with Windows PC, Mac or iOS devices, including iPads, iPhones and iPod touches.

Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.

  • Connected world: the consumer technology revolution
  • Bluetooth to Feel Blue as Personal Area Network Battles Loom
  • Carrier IQ and the continued erosion of operator trust



alt=''
border='0'
/>


GigaOM


iPhone Video Chat and Sam Mendes Rumors, Times Square Gets Free Wi-Fi

Posted by on Tuesday, 25 May, 2010
iPhone 4G

Highlights from this morning’s other big tech headlines….

  • The latest episode in the intensifying iPhone 4G soap opera seems to indicate that the ambiguous, and perhaps dangerous, gadget will indeed provide video chat capabilities. Director Sam Mendes has also apparently been tapped to create iPhone 4G ads, prompting an excited auditioning actor to drop an f-bomb in a tweet. Yeah, potential employers love it when social networkers use profanity on their public profiles. [From: Engadget]
  • AT&T is installing its first free outdoor Wi-Fi hotspot in New York City. Instead of choosing a wide-open, relaxing area like Central Park, though, the company is providing it in the congested, cacophonous and chaotic Times Square. [From: Engadget]
  • Audi introduced the world’s first automobile equipped with Google Earth, and the manufacturer now plans to transform its 2011 A8 models into roving Wi-Fi hotspots. The technology will apparently enable the simultaneous tethering of up to eight devices. [From: Engadget]
  • In the wake of almost a dozen suicide attempts at China’s Foxconn factory, an undercover intern recently revealed a bleak and intimidating atmosphere of oppression. The factory, which is responsible for producing iPhone prototypes, promised to combat the tragic trend, but another employee has apparently become the eleventh attempt and ninth fatality. [From: The New York Times and Gizmodo]
  • The transistors used in current processors typically measure 42 atoms across, but a team of researchers has significantly reduced that number. Scientists from the University of New South Wales and the University of Wisconsin-Madison have constructed a transistor with only seven atoms, reportedly “the world’s first electronic device in silicon systematically created on the scale of individual atoms.” [From: Geekosystem]
  • Rupert Murdoch has been grumbling about implementing a pay model for his various News Corp publications, and two of his British papers have now fully employed the plan. The London Times and the Sunday Times will now be available online for a fee of one-pound-per-day or two-pounds-per-week. [From: Reuters]

iPhone Video Chat and Sam Mendes Rumors, Times Square Gets Free Wi-Fi originally appeared on Switched on Tue, 25 May 2010 11:35:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments


AT&T Can Save Their Network… With Wi-Fi? [At&t]

Posted by on Tuesday, 25 May, 2010

Time Warner Cable just gave New York free Wi-Fi

Posted by on Thursday, 25 March, 2010


Live in New York? Pop over here and register for your free Wi-Fi! If you have a RoadRunner cable account, you can connect to free WiFi in “several” locations around New York including Bryant and Madison Square Parks and some parks in Queens. If you’re thinking to yourself “Hey, a few parks in Manhattan, some DMZ out in the boonies, and some spots in Port Washington (probably where the uncles of Time Warner executives live) do not make overarching WiFi access for the masses,” then you’re probably right. But when’s the last time Time Warner Cable did anything nice for you? Maybe you could be appreciative?

Thankfully you also have access to “thousands” of Optimum Wi-Fi hotspots, so it’s not THAT bad. But then Optimum’s coverage isn’t exactly in Manhattan.


Time Warner Cable Wi-Fi Zones Now Available To New York City Area Road Runner High-Speed Online Customers

Time Warner Cable and Cablevision’s Optimum WiFi Partner to Provide Free Seamless Wireless Internet Connectivity to High-Speed Internet Customers of Both Companies

New York, NY (Vocus/PRWEB ) March 25, 2010 — Time Warner Cable’s NYC Region today introduced Time Warner Cable Wi-Fi service, giving its one million local Road Runner residential customers unlimited access to a fast and free wireless Internet connection at several locations in the NYC area. Through a partnership with Cablevision, Time Warner Cable customers will also have access to thousands of free Optimum WiFi locations throughout Cablevision’s service area. Time Warner Cable Wi-Fi is now available at several Wi-Fi zones in Manhattan and Queens, including several parks and some Long Island Railroad platforms and their respective parking lots in the company’s service area.

High-Speed Internet customers of both Time Warner Cable and Cablevision will be able to access free, unlimited Wi-Fi services in each other’s New York City metro service areas, allowing for a fast Internet connection at designated Wi-Fi zones. Time Warner Cable Road Runner customers will have access to Cablevision’s Optimum WiFi network, and Cablevision’s Optimum Online customers will have access to Time Warner Cable Wi-Fi zones when they travel out of their service area. Time Warner Cable’s New York City service area includes Manhattan, Queens, Staten Island, western Brooklyn, Mt. Vernon, parts of the Hudson Valley region, and Bergen and Hudson Counties in New Jersey. Cablevision’s coverage area includes Long Island, parts of New Jersey and Connecticut, Westchester, Rockland, Northern Hudson Valley, the Bronx, and Brooklyn.

“Our sophisticated network is a combination of wireless and wireline services, bringing a wide spectrum of products and services to our customers. This free new Wi-Fi option adds another dimension for Road Runner customers, bringing even more convenience,” stated Howard Szarfarc, Executive Vice President of the company’s New York City Region. “Road Runner customers can experience a fast, simple and easy connection from their laptops or portable Wi-Fi-enabled devices in Time Warner Cable Wi-Fi zones, meeting their growing need for mobility.”

According to Kevin Curran, Cablevision’s Senior Vice President of Wireless Development, “Optimum WiFi has become a valuable and popular enhancement for our high-speed Internet customers, who appreciate the ability to take their Internet connection ‘to go’ when they are out of the home or office. We are very pleased to help mark the launch of Time Warner Cable Wi-Fi by linking our networks and expanding our customers’ access to fast and free wireless Internet, especially as demand for mobile data continues to increase.”

Time Warner Cable Wi-Fi zones include:

Eight commuter rail platforms on the Long Island Railroad Port Washington line: Woodside, Flushing Main Street, Murray Hill, Broadway, Auburndale, Bayside, Douglaston, Little Neck;
Manhattan: Bryant Park, Madison Square Park and 79th Street Boat Basin;
Four parks in Queens: Bowne Park and Kissena Park in Flushing, Baisley Pond Park and Railroad Park in Jamaica.

Road Runner customers will also have access to thousands of Cablevision’s Optimum WiFi zones. For a complete listing of Time Warner Cable Wi-Fi zones, visit TimeWarnerCableWiFi.com. A user-friendly Q+A is available on the site too. For a complete listing of Optimum WiFi locations, visit Optimumwifi.com.