Orlando Cancels Free WiFi Project 285
EvilStein writes "According to local news, the City of Orlando has cancelled the city WiFi project. The 6 month pilot program ran for 17 months instead of the planned 6, but in the end, it was costing the city too much money and very few people were using the service. Might other municipal WiFi projects go the same way?"
Noooooooo they can't (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Noooooooo they can't (Score:2)
Unbelievable!
not economically feasible not a surprise (Score:5, Insightful)
From the article: But city officials said that only about 27 people a day took advantage of the program -- not enough to justify the $1,800 the city paid every month for the service.
Maybe naively I've been waiting for the propogation of wireless to be everywhere and always available and if not free, at least very inexpensive, and ubiquitous. The quote above snapped me back to reality. Sure wireless everywhere is the buzz these days, but how many people really need, or want it? I would venture even in the techno-elite slashdot crowd many wait for wireless everywhere but only a relatively modest subset of those would actually use it, and of all who use it, it would not likely be at great volumes everywhere (as in, that's kind of what it needs to be to sustain and maintain the infrastructure).
Wireless internet isn't the same as cell phones in the sense that wireless access to the internet is nice, but doesn't drive communications as does telephony. Wireless internet access is a nicety but until wireless folds neatly into existing or expanding other necessary infrastructure (e.g., cell phone) I wouldn't be surprised to see other experimental free wireless internet sites suffer the same fate (really the question asked by the article).
If a city as large as Orlando didn't sustain the experiment there are many other cities that would point to that as justification for not even bothering trying, at least not in the near future.
(Doesn't mean I don't want it, just means it's too niche-y a market right now.)
Re:not economically feasible not a surprise (Score:5, Interesting)
Why would I want to surf the net at a park?
I used to think of all the cool things you could do with wifi everywhere but in reality I do not see all that much use for it.
Re:not economically feasible not a surprise (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:not economically feasible not a surprise (Score:5, Insightful)
When I was a kid, my parents bought their first cordless phone, replacing an old rotary phone in our living room. My Mom would always sit right next to the cordless basestation when she used it- not because she doubted the technology; it was just what she was accustomed to doing.
I think you see my point. Orlando was just a little ahead of the curve on this one..
Re:not economically feasible not a surprise (Score:5, Informative)
Seriously, I asked a number of people I know in Orlando if they knew this was even there and they have all said no.
This does not suprise me. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:not economically feasible not a surprise (Score:2)
Because I have AC in my office. All my books and references. Several test machines. And several other people I can work with face to face. Plus I am there to help the support staff if needed.
If there is no value being in my office I could just work from home and use my WAP to work in my garden.
It would also save on gas, travel time, wear on my car, and g
Re:not economically feasible not a surprise (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:not economically feasible not a surprise (Score:2, Insightful)
Some people who can't get/afford broadband go there to do their work. You probably have it at work and/or home.
Re:not economically feasible not a surprise (Score:2)
Yes I have it at work and at home.
To be honest I have never seen more than one person using it when I am have been there.
Where I would like to see it is at more truck stops and restaurants near the Interstate.
My wife and I drive from Florida to teas at least once a year.
It would be great to stop and grab the latest weather radar, send an email or two, and check the traffic ahead.
We went for one the hurricanes when we evacuated.
Spent the week visiting family but o
Re:not economically feasible not a surprise (Score:2)
Re:not economically feasible not a surprise (Score:3, Insightful)
Because it's unencrypted, like the one near me?
rj
Re:not economically feasible not a surprise (Score:2)
I don't currently have an office, however, as I am doing contract work while looking for something more permanant.
Re:not economically feasible not a surprise (Score:3, Insightful)
My point is that, unfortunately, this is one of those things that requires time for people to
Re:not economically feasible not a surprise (Score:5, Insightful)
At this point in time, small wireless network hotspots are not all that useful except in certain situations, such as your home, your office, or a type of business such as a fast food joint.
WiMax (or an equivalent solution) is, of course, the only way that something like this will become effective. If user realizes that wireless access will be available ANYWHERE, not just some half block area, then more than 27 users will take advantage. Plus, when this happens, it will pave the way for VOIP services for mobile phones.
I have yet to make up my mind if this is a service that should even be provided by the government. It may be better left to private organizations to ensure that the government does not restrict or monitor information across the network.
Re:not economically feasible not a surprise (Score:4, Insightful)
Cell phones only became a universally accepted technology once coverage was good enough that you could be assured of getting a signal in just about any urban or suburban area, and most rural ones as well. Going a bit farther back, I believe the same is true of TV, and before that, radio. It would be absurd to look at a small-scale experiment like this and conclude "municipal wifi doesn't work."
Re:not economically feasible not a surprise (Score:4, Informative)
I hope this doesn't disuade other cities from trying public WIFI. It would be a shame if Orlando's poor implementation of a good idea might doomed municipal WIFI.
On the other hand, perhaps Orlando is a bellweather of sorts. Municipal WIFI might fail for incompetence. On the other hand, without a municipality cluttering up the spectrum, interested residents of downtown Orlando might have the incentive to set up a cooperative ad hoc network. Er...right.
Re:not economically feasible not a surprise (Score:2)
I think this kind of thing is an enabling technology. What I mean by that is that you don't need it, until it is available, and then you can do various things so much better than you could before, that your life changes so that you then do need that technology. (By need I mean that things would be not nearly as good without it)
An example of this kind of technology i
Re:not economically feasible not a surprise (Score:2)
Re:Must be a parallel universe you live in (Score:2)
It's not that the Internet is free (you still have to set up and pay for an ISP account in order to get DNS to the rest of the world. Oh, yeah, this MAN is ISP-agnostic...), but if you're just doing stuff on their network, it's peer-hosted, fast, and probably good enough for most people, really. Probably what cable modems should h
Re:not economically feasible not a surprise (Score:2)
I mean, think of all the blackberries and treo's on the road today, I know I, and I'm assuming alot of others, would gladly buy a significantly cheaper and/or more functional PDA, scratch the monthly data charges, and use WIFI for the email services, heck if it were good enough use Skype for the voice (but regardless, even just the email would be awesome)
H
Completely disagree. (Score:2)
Assume for the moment that these were city employees. That's NOTHING.
I used to live in Long Beach, CA. They started a WiFi project and, like Orlando, it is a city that lives on convention income. As a benefit to conventioneers, this type of expense barely registers on the accounting books, yet it is GREAT PR.
Abandoning this sort of thing is just penny wise and pound foolish. It's a loss-leader. Get with the program.
Re:not economically feasible not a surprise (Score:2)
Whatever happened to tapping into the already existing T1 line the city uses, connect it to a router (ie: 1 TCP/IP address), and then just setting up a bunch of sub-routers with the 192.168.2.XXX ids? At today's prices it should only cost about $100.00 max per wireless unit. These are set up a block apart (so say a 10 block area which means 10 routers or a one time fee of $1,000.00).
Once set up it can't cost them $1,800.00 a month to run the
This is why (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:This is why (Score:2, Insightful)
Or did you think the government obtained the hardware and internet connections out of thin air?
Re:This is why (Score:2)
Re:This is why (Score:2)
Re:This is why (Score:2)
we can't get rid of the government, we should do our best to ensure they have the least power as possible
the biggest friend of big business is big government. everyone on this site that hates big biz should be fearful of big gov't. big gov't sells its favors to big biz, if you fear one, you should fear both
Re:This is why (Score:2)
What's the weather like on your planet?
free markets (Score:2)
The free market is self cleansing, it always will be.
What's the weather like on your planet?
Free markets are self cleaning, however we don't have a free market. What we have today is a corporate aristocracy.
FalconRe:free markets (Score:2)
Never have, never will. Pure capitalism is just as impossible as pure communism.
Re:free markets (Score:2)
Never have, never will. Pure capitalism is just as impossible as pure communism.
Unfortunately unless we evolve a lot this is too true.
Falconbig business and big government (Score:2)
the biggest friend of big business is big government. everyone on this site that hates big biz should be fearful of big gov't. big gov't sells its favors to big biz, if you fear one, you should fear both
While I have some concerns about big business I am afraid of big government, as you say, all too often government is the hand maiden of business.
FalconRe:This is why (Score:2, Informative)
They spent a mere $1,800 a month. This is a negligable expense for the city of Orlando amounting to one penny per metro area citizen per year, not "oodles of taxpayer dollars" and certainly a reasonable expense for an experimental project.
What happens when you let the "free market handle these situations"? Why don't you visit Sea-Tac
Free, as in beer (Score:2)
And while you're on it, there is a huge difference between Seatacs 'free as in choice' and Orlando's 'free as in someone else pays
Re:This is why (Score:2)
Re:This is why (Score:2)
Re:Private Industry + Government Money = Bad (Score:2)
I would say they're worse. Economically speaking, government drove up the costs, and there's no market pressure to bring it back down. You see this in sanitation, privatized sewer 'authorities', or recently deregulated power coops that still enjoy a government backed monopoly (TVA anyone?).
OTOH, there's a growing accountability culture in government that isn't actually being matched in the private
Free WiFi? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Free WiFi? (Score:2)
Vague Article (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Vague Article (Score:2)
That's what I was wondering too. I would guess either a dedicated line, or seperate connections to each AP. Either way, not a good way to do things. What they should be doing is using a shared DSL/cable 3 or 4mbit account. Throw up a linux box as a firewall (and to monitor bandwidth), and it's easy to scale up and load balance co
Re:Vague Article (Score:2, Insightful)
That's exactly what I was thinking. With Comcast and other providers offering residential downstreams of 4Mbps at $40-$50/month, it seems natural to go that route. But remember, we may not have all the facts. For example, the city might be bound by a contract with the local Telco, who insisted they leas
Why does government need to do this? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Why does government need to do this? (Score:2)
It's illegal and immoral to receive radio signals being beamed into my home? Damn! Honey call 911, KillShill says we need the Police to haul away our FM Stereo!
Understand (Score:5, Insightful)
A city running something like that would give me the willies anyway. Who's to say they wouldn't be monitoring every piece of information - and/or someone sitting there with AirSnort doing the same..
Re:Understand (Score:3, Insightful)
Who's to say your ISP isn't monitoring every packet you send and receive right now?
downtown Orlando (Score:2)
I live in Kansas City. If the city put in free wireless in our downtown - nobody would use it. There's nothing in our down town to do .. after 5:00PM (except buy drugs, hookers, or be on a cleaning crew).
Downtown Orlando isn't Kansas City if KC is like that. There's a happening nightlife in Orlando, at least there was when I grew up there. Church Street Station was a busy place, I don't know if they still do it but a show used to be recorded at the Cheyenne Saloon for the Country Music Channel, and yo
Re:Understand (Score:2)
But you've struck up a pretty good point. A lot of businesses won't or can't adopt wifi because it
Re:Understand (Score:2)
I live in Orlando... (Score:5, Interesting)
Why not? I'm a technically inclined 20 something who would have used this, had I known about it.
I think that is the real problem here. Their target demographic didnt even know about it!
Re:I live in Orlando... (Score:2, Informative)
There was absolutely no advertisement of it. I went downtown alot, and saw 1 sign in the last 6 months that said something about wireless, with no explanation what it was, or what the fee/cost was.
It seemed like it was someone's pet project, and no one ever advertised it to the masses. If someone here advertised it on TV or Radio, it would have been huge I imagine. Theres a number of cool eateries downtown that have ou
Re:I live in Orlando... (Score:2, Informative)
Saw the headline and thought WTF. Maybe I should look into this "Local 6" thing...
Hell, Lake Eola is a great place downtown - I would have have enjoyed this...
Re:I live in Orlando... (Score:2)
1) Put up WiFi
2) Fail to market it
3) Say it costs bundles
4) ???
5) Pocket the profit
Of course, with a Mayor who is being indited for fraud, not surprising.
Re:I live in Orlando... (Score:2)
That's probably just one part of a larger issue. If they had no idea how to advertise the product, it's likely they had no idea how to market it, and it's likely it was just a hair brained idea, not thought out and poorly implemented. My city can't even clean the streets 3 times a year without costing my block $500-1000 per visit in addition to taxes. There's no way in hell I'd trust them running an ISP efficient
Then you aren't too techincally inclined? (Score:2)
Why would the Government need to advertise this if you are so technically inclined? Sounds like to me you would just open your notebook and see an AP that you were able to connect. Didn't you notice it pop up in yellow or red in Kismet [kismetwireless.net]? Come on! You're a technically inclined 20 something! You don't need the man to tell you about a free Wifi AP!
Re:Then you aren't too techincally inclined? (Score:3, Funny)
We operate Disney.com, DisneyWorld.com, ESPN.com, Movies.com, Go.com, ABCNews.com, MLB.com, NFL.com, NBA.com, NASCAR.com, and *many* others.
Any other questions? Or would you like to continue mocking my technical ability?
Re:Then you aren't too techincally inclined? (Score:2)
Re:Then you aren't too techincally inclined? (Score:3, Funny)
Cool you know how to use Dreamweaver! U RAWK!!! I would get into this but a 20 something year old with 12 years of HTML experience is a tad bit too intimidating for me.
Re:Then you aren't too techincally inclined? (Score:2)
I have a PhD in computer science and biology. I was consulted in the design of the PowerPC microprocessors. I worked at BBN and refined a bit of TCP/IP. I had (and have, and still own) the 2nd (or is it 3rd?) "personally owned" domain name.
Well, I have a lower /. UID, so there. ;)
uh, dude (Score:2)
"404 Error
Gee, I've looked everywhere but I can not find http://www.afp548.com/News/index.html [afp548.com].
We're sorry, but the file you have requested does not exist. Please feel free to check the main page or the search page to see if you can find what you lost."
Point, the other guy.
increase of business for restaurants (Score:2)
However, if they advertised it, I think alot of people would have taken advantage of it, and some of the sit-down restaurants downtown might have seen some business increase.
Yeah I could see more people going to either of the two Chinese restaurants on Orange near the library, if they're still there, or to Church Street Station. Maybe to Chapter's Coffeehouse if it's there now.
FalconRe:I live in Orlando... (Score:2)
What? I visted Orlando in March and they had signs up all over downtown and the Lake Eola area that said free Wifi. If I could find out about it in the 2 days I was there, surely you should have been able to notice the same.
"Free" and "Cost Too Much" ah, the irony (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:"Free" and "Cost Too Much" ah, the irony (Score:2)
Though in this case, it costs X dollars to have a Y bits/sec network running.
You could have I subscribers pay X/I dollars to have it run and not likely use Y/I bits/sec each
OR....
You could have J taxpayers pay X/J dollars to have it run and likely hit the Y/J bits/sec average. The trick here is J is probably much larger than I.
Obviously I think as a community some control should be put on it. I'd say i
It's Great In Theory, but... (Score:5, Interesting)
That's because... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:That's because... (Score:2)
I don't want WIFI (Score:2)
We have this crap in my town (one of the first in the country). Word is, it totally sucks.
The company that provides the equipment is local; looks like a typical corrupt local govt. deal.
SF, on the other hand, was WIFI all over the place, due to people just having open APs.
Re:I don't want WIFI (Score:3)
You mean, give you back your money (um, if you pay taxes). Otherwise, you mean, give you my money. There is no "government" money. Honestly, where do these memes come from?
The company that provides the equipment is local; looks like a typical corrupt local govt. deal
That's hardly an indication of corruption - more like giving a local vendor the business so that the increase in their local economic activity pumps a piece of that
Re:I don't want WIFI (Score:2)
It really looks like they are propping up a corpse of a local company. Robbing Peter to pay Paul.
It looks like it was sweetheart deal (local politics here is totally corrupt), and the technology is a failure.
More freedom (e.g. take less taxe
Seems to follow the no-progress trend. (Score:3, Interesting)
We don't see much of that anymore here in America. Few people have the time or interest to go beyond the mundane around them. The concept of progress has become the idea of people selling things to people, with little else involved. Science and education just aren't that important anymore, except for expanding markets.
Am I surprised this experiment failed? No - who is going to have the time to use even free bandwidth to try something new? Not many people anymore. We're just not interested.
That's not to say that it's a truly bleak picture - but we as a population do seem to be stuck waiting for progress to come to us, rather than going out and making the progress ourselves. We need science, social thought, meaningful public education, healthy debate and journalism, and a much greater interest in human progress.
It's not about liberalism versus convervatism - it's about humanity doing something to make the world better, so it's not such a horrible place. It's about doing something to outpace the destruction we're causing, at least on some level. It's about seeing beyond dollars, and using our vast resources towards creating a future where we all know more, not just avoiding the terrors that will never stop coming in new forms.
It's not experiments like these failing that we should be depressed about - it's that we have so very few experiments like them at all anymore (relative to population increase over time).
Ryan Fenton
Re:Seems to follow the no-progress trend. (Score:3, Insightful)
Potential such as new ways of spreading knowledge and teaching subjects - the wikipedia concept is a superb working idea as an extension of an encyclopedia, and it's an idea that can be expanded further. Beyond detailing and linking concepts, the simple idea of teaching someone based on what they know could be one such branch of such developments. Many new elemental ways of using existing knowledge more freely and appropriatly have yet to be touched, or are even po
Biggest Problem.... (Score:3, Informative)
figures.
blah (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:blah (Score:4, Interesting)
Face it, free wireless is neither a high priority nor a fundamental necessity of life to the vast majority of people, and that will be true for the foreseeable future. If it's really that important to you, you can get it from a commercial provider (at a cost, but hey, it's really that important, right?).
Re:blah (Score:2)
Right. Sometimes the government can help people the most by cancelling unpopular bus routes and not trying to be an ISP.
At my old university (Ohio State), through a contract with the city, every student was required to pay a mandatory $9 per quarter bus fee. In my time at OSU, I paid around $150 for a bus service I only used once. Most everyone I know was exactly like me. According to a recent article in a local newspaper, the city of Columbus has one
Scope (Score:5, Interesting)
This failure is clearly because of a poor location choice. The main branch of the Orange County library is only a block away from Lake Eola park where this project was centered, but no signal was available in the library when I was there earlier this year.
Downtown in most US cities... (Score:2, Insightful)
Why do any cities offer this (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Why do any cities offer this (Score:2)
rj
In related news... (Score:3, Interesting)
bad area, poor service (Score:5, Interesting)
I hope they didn't kill the wireless in the library downtown though; that works quite nicely and is a great benefit when visiting for relaxation or research.
Civic issues (Score:2, Insightful)
Although subsidized-WiFi isn't as important as subsidized health, housing, education, etc... at least it's a public service subsidy. Most government subsidies just go to a few corporate stockholders.
If you're going to push something like this in the civic sector, you need to push the non-laptop uses ... kiosks, for example. At malls we're starting to see health & human service kiosks provided by non-profits & public agencies. This would be a lot cheaper to do if WiFi was pervasive.
May Have Lacked Advertising (Score:2)
It was only into my second week that I realized the wall jack in my hotel room provided internet access at no additional cost [sheepish grin].
If you want something done poorly... (Score:2)
Mickey Mouse Project (Score:5, Interesting)
How much could they have spent getting people to know about the service, known to everyone in business as "marketing"? And with that kind of tiny coverage, what possibility could it have had to be meaningful as "citywide"? None at all. Philadelphia's project will cost over $10M, complete coverage for 1.5M people. And it will not just be some "hotspot startup", it will be a complete coverage, so people can forget about the network, and just get access to Internet content, services and people. That has a good chance of success.
consider geography (Score:2, Funny)
Oh the irony... (Score:2)
it was costing the city too much money
Replace "city" with "unwilling taxpayers who were robbed at gunpoint by a few lobbyist nerds..." and you're right on.
Nothing's free, someone pays for it. Start a business, offer a service, do it that way.
Yeah, I want "free" wifi too. But I'm not going to use the Government to rob people in order to pay for my "free" wifi...
Lower price, better service, no Government monopoly... why is everyone clamoring for the Government to start running an ISP?
I'm from Orlando... here's the scoop (Score:3, Informative)
I'd use it! (Score:2)
Towards this end, I wrote a stupid-simple script for my Fedora Core Laptop that essentially is a "war driving" script. Basically, it runs 'iwlist scan' every 5 seconds, and does a pattern match to find unencrypted networks.
Typicaly scenario: I'm in my car, in some god-forsaken town, and I get a call on the cell phone. So, I cruise around the town, paying particul
Re:Short Article - Karma whore (Score:2)
But city officials said that only about 27 people a day took advantage of the program -- not enough to justify the $1,800 the city paid every month for the service. The service may come back, city officials said, if they can find a way to expand the service beyond a few downtown blocks, and if they can find a company to foot the expense.
$67/month per person isn't that bad, if the service were available city-wide. For $25 month more one could add vonage. Cancel the cell phone, land line, and DSL, and yo
Lake Eola Park (Score:2)
If I still lived in Orlando I would of been one of those using the service, especially at Lake Eola Park. After walking around the lake I liked to sit at the Chinese pagota on the east side. Now it would of been even better if wifi was available around Park Ave in Winter Park, I liked the park there and the old East India Ice Cream Company. Alas East India closed years ago. I'd imagine wifi is available around Rollins College though.
FalconRe:The Fundamental Problem (Score:2)
You're wrong. No one ever said that.
Re:The Fundamental Problem (Score:2)
You're wrong. No one ever said that.
He's right, it wasn't a someone, it was a disembodied voice.
Re:The Fundamental Problem (Score:2)
Re:waht? (Score:2)
rj
Re:$1800 per month????? (Score:2)
Not necessarily. You still need upload, too. Sadly, deals like that don't typically have good upload speeds. You would also need more than one connection, unless you have one really big hotspot. Then you need people to maintain it. I'm suprised they don't have at least one full time guy on it, that would be a minimum of 4k a month right there.
Anyhoo, it's