Chicago To Consider City-Wide Wireless Network 190
Mitchell writes "Chicago Indymedia reports on developments pertaining to community internet in Chicago. A press release from the Center for Neighborhood Technology reports that the city's Finance Committee has commissioned a study to explore the possibility of low-cost wireless internet across the city of Chicago, and reserve Chicago's right to establish a citywide Wi-Fi network. It could run into efforts underway now in the state capital by Big Telecom to shut out muni Internet in Illinois." Several readers also pointed to the Chicago Tribune's story on this possibility, including efforts to head off regulation which would make municipal Wi-Fi difficult.
Good move... (Score:2, Funny)
How will MSN respond? fp
Re:Good move... (Score:2, Funny)
Tell me, are "daaa bears", "ditka" and "polish sausage" pr0n words? cuz I was under the impression that Google handled much more requests for pr0n than local culinary curiosities...
Re:Good move... (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Good move... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Good move... (Score:1)
Re:Good move... (Score:1)
After shelling out all that bri^H^H^HPOLITICAL Contributions, the corporations are getting what they duly deserve. An "Up yours!"
Re:Good move... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Good move... (Score:2)
Well, it is to those of us who live here - or depended on Meigs Field. Ok, maybe it wasn't funny. This is exactly how he shut down Meigs. Sent bulldozers in the middle of night to carve huge Xs in the runway rendering it useless. He caught EVERYONE flatfooted with that move.
Re:Good move... (Score:2)
OMG! (Score:2)
What's this newsgroup for, anyway?
is city-wide wireless too costly? (Score:5, Informative)
more here:
http://informationweek.mobilepipeline.com/
Re:is city-wide wireless too costly? (Score:2)
Re:is city-wide wireless too costly? (Score:5, Interesting)
If the citizens of an urban area decide they want to pay for Wi-Fi, why does a state representative from downstate Hooterville think they can say otherwise?
Re:is city-wide wireless too costly? (Score:2)
Oh yeah, let's not forget how today's telcos so favor competition. Anything anybody does that goes against telcos' interests cannot be bad for consumers.
Oh and besides, Dave Molta's an idiot imho...
Re:is city-wide wireless too costly? (Score:4, Insightful)
I think it should be up to the town. Here in my town, you have 1 choice if you do not want dial up connections that run at 19.8k (nasty old phone lines). yep, you can call the cable company, and pay them $35 (oops, just went up, make it $45 a month to get online.) In my community, there is alot of people that can't afford that. We have a Library with probably 15 pc's with internet access. Pushing a free wireless system would probably go over very, very well in this town. And if the majority of people want it, and there is no meaningful competition providing it already, why not? Thats how police, fire, ambulances, and even water and utility services started..
Re:is city-wide wireless too costly? (Score:2)
Will the government accept private companies' bids on this project?
Re:Stalin's Corpse Is In My Refrigerator (Score:2)
Re:is city-wide wireless too costly? (Score:2)
If the citizens of an urban area decide they want to pay for Wi-Fi, why does a state representative from downstate Hooterville think they can say otherwise?
But they don't end up paying for all of it. State and local taxes are deductable, so the Federal government ends up subsidizing this.
The more and more services a city provides, the less and less they pay a share of Federal taxes.
And some states let you deduct city taxes from your state income tax, so the rest of the s
Re:is city-wide wireless too costly? (Score:2)
That is completely backwards. It's the urban areas that are supporting the rural areas - not vice versa. Do you really think the six of you living out there are paying enough in taxes to build that road?
Re:is city-wide wireless too costly? (Score:2)
I said, A city, not cities.
Those cities with lower taxes subsidize those cities with higher taxes.
So the rest of us means those living in cities that are frugal versus those cities with high taxes.
Re:is city-wide wireless too costly? (Score:2)
I take from your statement that it's you that hasn't bothered to do the math.
The state and local tax deduction last year amounted to a savings of $47 billion. Sure, not huge compared to the rest of the budget, but it actually represents 10% of the deficit. That's significant.
And nothing changes the fact that people using cities to pay for services that others pay for directly get a tax subsidy for doing so.
Re:is city-wide wireless too costly? (Score:2)
Re:is city-wide wireless too costly? (Score:2)
Of course I haven't done the math and you haven't either.
So how do you know if it's ridiculous? You don't. My statements offend your biases and that's enough for you. You're a typical leftist. You call your prejudices "thinking".
What you've done instead, is to cherry-pick some piece of data that suits you and ignore the mountain of information that counters your theory.
What the hell are you talking ab
Re:is city-wide wireless too costly? (Score:2)
I'm confused: If you're a leftist, why the heck would you want the government controlling your Internet access? If it's government pipe, how big a stretch is it to imagine *Them* controlling what you can/cannot download? Or *not* controlling what you see, just taking copious notes about who downloads what and when? Do you believe that the case for your "right" to Internet privacy is strengthened or weakened
Re:is city-wide wireless too costly? (Score:2)
In fact, get rid of all subsidies. How's that?
Re:is city-wide wireless too costly? (Score:2)
Re:is city-wide wireless too costly? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:is city-wide wireless too costly? (Score:1, Funny)
-- the Cat
Re:is city-wide wireless too costly? (Score:2)
Re:is city-wide wireless too costly? (Score:3, Interesting)
The basic argument against metro Wi-Fi deployments boils down to three major points. First, these initiatives are viewed as inappropriate expenditures of public funds that are likely to result in higher than expected ongoing operational costs. Second, the report asserts that such efforts are both anti-competitive and will have a chilling effect on private efforts to expand broadband services. Finally, the authors maintain that the goals espoused for these projects, which range from economi
Re:is city-wide wireless too costly? (Score:4, Insightful)
Who are the network suppliers? Oh yeah, the big telco's. So they still get their money. They just don't get to set profit margins as high because they have to be low bidder to get the contract. Would this make an interesting alternative to legislating price controls? The city is simply a big customer, and market forces rule.
Re:is city-wide wireless too costly? (Score:4, Interesting)
Oh yeah they will. Someone has to have his finger on the pursestrings. Maybe not the technical portion, but you can bet your ass that an office within the city govt. will be set up to administer this thing.
they'll contract the whole thing to the lowest bidder. Hence, competition among network suppliers.
and they'll pay that contract through money collected from everybody, not just people and businesses who wanted it. Like all other WiFi suppliers would have to.
For those who want the service, it may well be cheaper. For those who don't want/need it, no price is too low.
The city is simply a big customer, and market forces rule
The city has the ability to force everyone to be in the market. If TimeWarner could force everybody in town to pay up, they could (theoretically) lower their enduser prices as well.
Re:is city-wide wireless too costly or "stifle" ? (Score:5, Informative)
And the result is rather the opposite; a long list of companies emerged as a direct result of that: AnyWi [anywi.com], Gandalf [gandalf.nl], Wido [wi-do.com] and half a dozen others. Making Leiden and the direct region something of a WiFi focal point.
I would not call that effect "stiffling"... the only few people stiffed may be some big incumbents which where to slow to move.
Dw
Re:is city-wide wireless too costly or "stifle" ? (Score:2)
Exactly. Companies have had years to lease the lightpoles and give us city-wide wirless and they just havent. The dinosaurs dont want to do it and I'm sick of waiting for them to act. The city might as well do it and send the entire metropolis into the 21st century. Broadband penetration in the Chicagoland area isnt too hot and is mainly the local phone monopoly vs the local cable monopoly. Cell carriers aren't helpin
Molta is right, WiFi is the wrong technology (Score:2)
"Interestingly, the report only briefly touches on the immense technical obstacles associated with delivering broadband Wi-Fi services across a metropolitan area, especially in the 2.4-GHz band. Wi-Fi is a LAN technology that is well suited for many applications, ranging from home networking to enterprise LAN services to public hotspots. But using it for broadband wireless WAN services has always struck this pundit as ill advised. That's one of the key reasons 802.16 is viewed by many as a
Re:Molta is right, WiFi is the wrong technology (Score:2)
Re:is city-wide wireless too costly? (Score:2, Interesting)
This created jobs, provided power to people without eletricity, and helped reduced private utility companies prices.... Anyone see a parallel?
Chicago for WiFi (Score:2)
If people wanted to make money selling WiFi in Chicago, they woulda, shoulda, coulda already done it. They haven't. Nobody pays for WiFi in public spaces because there are too many Intelligentsia(TM) (an indy coffee house supplier) coffee houses giving it away to get some customer loyalty. Hotels downtown practically MUST have free wifi, or they would lose so many small business meetings.
Conclusion: WiFi is good for the city, but it does not offer enough margin to provide adequate business incentive. Ther
I knew it! (Score:3, Funny)
Save our DNA (Score:2, Funny)
Just watch.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Just watch.. (Score:1)
Richard M. Daley (Score:4, Insightful)
*points to where Meigs Field [wikipedia.org] use to be*
Gotta love that (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Gotta love that (Score:2)
grocery stores (Score:2)
Re:grocery stores (Score:3, Informative)
Re:grocery stores (Score:3, Insightful)
What makes you think you will have lower bills?
State ventures are usually much less efficient than private ones, so if anything, you would see either higher bills, or higher taxes. Either way, you'd end up paying more.
If you want state-run stores and industry, try moving to the last surviving communist countries - North Korea or Cuba for example. Good luck.
After... (Score:5, Interesting)
I just think it would possibly be an issue when they have people connecting and then more "computer literate" people scanning the networks for files, boredom (malice), etc.
SPAM haven? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:SPAM haven? (Score:2)
Re:SPAM haven? (Score:2)
Re:SPAM haven? (Score:2)
This is a problem with any type of open wireless network, not just city-run networks like the one being talked about lately.
On the one hand, I'm very much in favor of community-run open wireless networks. On the other hand, the potential for abuse is huge. If only people weren't such destructive as
Why wait/pay for Muni WiFi? its already free! (Score:1, Interesting)
see, theres already a bazillion free wifi hotspots. get a group to map 'em out (if they havent already), and bingo. you have free wireless almost anywhere you go.
http://www.seattlewireless.net/ [seattlewireless.net]
Left vs Right flamewar in T- ... (Score:4, Funny)
"This will show those monopolistic telcos"
"Those monopolistic telcos will stop this, damn them"
"This stifles business and is a wicked commie plot"
"Its socialism not communism, you dumb rednecks"
"This is all Bush's fault"
"Why are you bringing politics into this"
"Local government should stay out of the business sector"
"You mean like public roads"
"This is a even better/worse plan than Philly, they really suck/know what they're doing"
"Will they use OSS?"
bad idea (Score:5, Informative)
http://informationweek.mobilepipeline.com
muni WiFi is a bad idea. Many here are mentioning the waste of money, etc. But what about the choice of technology? The article says they want to deploy this with Wi-Fi. Wi-Fi was NOT designed as a wide area network technology. You only have 11 channels to work with and, realistically, only 3 because they overlap in the spectrum.
What about interference with user's home networks? It's bad enough that every Joe Computer has a wireless gateway set up in his room, but now those default-configured devices are going to suffer from an a/b/or g network flyin around the whole city.
The limitations of WiFi will cause a terrible quality of service, probably equating to slow dial up speeds with many disconnects as multiple users are trying to share this limited bandwidth.
Not to mention that it is difficult to imagine that the government is actually going to support and maintain this deployment as they should. Seems as if they are discussing setup costs and not Total Cost of Ownership.
Works for us in Calgary... (Score:2, Interesting)
Or at least, so is the 'hype', but let me explain how it is:
- Only a small portion of the city is, notably a portion of the downtown ocre
- Any one MAC address is only allowed one hour online at a time.
I realize the article is proposing more then what we have up here, but I was pretty impressed with what my city has done.
Basically, I can go out for lunch, and avoid some bad legal problems if I
That is all I need (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:That is all I need (Score:4, Insightful)
Hahahahahahahahahaha >coff<
Now, tell me exactly how much real competition there is among the private telecoms? Let's see, my local wired provider in Chicago is....SBC Ameritech! Hm. Who else? Nobody whose name I know, that's for sure.
I have DSL. Not SBC DSL either. But guess who provides the wire for that, too? Yep.
Where is that competition? Oh...I get it. You mean that if they have to face competition, they'll go out of business. About Damn Time, I'd say.
Re:That is all I need (Score:2)
Re:That is all I need (Score:2)
Re:That is all I need (Score:5, Funny)
Re:That is all I need (Score:2)
Re:That is all I need (Score:3, Insightful)
Exactly. Daley and his cronies can't pave city streets without massive fraud and horrible delays and plenty of taxpayer waste. Millenium park was 5 years late and hundreds of millions over-budget.
Why does anyone think municipal wi-fi will work at all, especially in Chicago? Corruption and waste will run rampant, just as it does in most other city services. As hard as it is to believe, Federal programs are typically models of efficiency and integrity compared to almost any urban government program - in Chic
As long as those damn kids dont......... (Score:5, Funny)
Will Bean Net give us Cookies? (Score:1)
Givin that, won't it be great fun to read about the latest gang cruising around in their warganging initiation?
fun (Score:3, Insightful)
See you all in Chicago!
Chicago War-chalking back in 2002 (Score:5, Interesting)
That lasted for about 6 months. Then December came, along with about a foot of snow. This covered up all the warchalking runes and made finding open networks a little harder.
Unfortunately, war-pissing never caught on, and war-chalking has become much less popular (see, e.g.: ) so I bought a little handheld wireless sniffer, and it's worked ok for those times I was desperate for an internet connection. But a municipal wireless network would be 100 times better. It would save a lot of time having to sniff around, and would have much more consistent and reliable coverage.
As a staunch Libertarian... (Score:5, Insightful)
The new regulations outlawing such measures are completely brain-dead, and do harm to the competitive environment while espousing "libertarian" values. Hell, even the venerable CATO Institute has become nothing more than a shill for corporations, and lost its ability to be objective and realistic.
From my perspective as a staunch Libertarian it is becoming increasingly clear that mixed economies provide the best soil for healthy competition, and that they do a better job of supporting the human and technological infrastructure required to foster a healthy economy.
Now, let the real competition begin!
You're no libertarian (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:You're no libertarian (Score:2)
Re:You're no libertarian (Score:3, Insightful)
Slightly cheaper to the people who would use it (you and I), infinitely more expensive to those who don't want it.
Re:You're no libertarian (Score:2)
Re:You're no libertarian (Score:2)
Re:You're no libertarian (Score:2)
Wimax cell size (Score:2)
Re:You're no libertarian (Score:2)
Real libertarians can support prudent and limited subsidies for internet access for the same reason they can support public libraries and public education: voting is a fundamental right, but it only is meaningful or workable if voters are educated and informed.
Of course, by "real libertarian" I'm assuming you mean a person who would like to see libertarian principles applied in the real world, and not just in badly written novels.
No t
Libertarian? You are are not. (Score:2)
The first rule is that Libertarians do not look to the government for a solution that can be provided by the people, which in turn means companies/corporations.
We do not look to take money at gunpoint from another just so we have something without fully paying for it.
No what you are is this offshoot that calls itself Libertarian but is nothing more than
Good for the cities, bad for the rest of us. (Score:3, Informative)
So, from a strictly self-interest stand point, cities should continue to provide more and more services, since that will lower their overall Federal tax burden.
Of course, that means more federal debt and eventually more taxes for the rest of us.
So the next time you wonder how it is a city can have high taxes and not be hurt much economically, remember that the federal government is making it possible.
This entry [blogspot.com] by an economist comments on the situation in New York City.
Re:Good for the cities, bad for the rest of us. (Score:3, Insightful)
Not really.
What about those city dwellers that don't provide these extra services? They end up subsidizing those cities that do.
So if you live in a city and you pay money directly for a service that the city doesn't provide, you pay a federal tax on that money.
But the same person in a place paying the city through taxes for the same service doesn't pay federal tax on that money.
It's unfair for two people
Re:Good for the cities, bad for the rest of us. (Score:2)
The deduction cost the Federal government about $46 billion.
That certainly isn't a big portion of the budget, but it isn't insignificant.
I speak from experience..... (Score:1, Informative)
Why aren't telcom companies providing muni WiFi? (Score:2)
Because it's a stupid idea. WiFi was designed for short range LANs. The telcom companies are waiting for 802.16 (WiMax) to provide broadband wireless access. When the low power version is available (802.16e), they'll support mobile as well.
Good Move (Score:2)
The bar was originally set by libraries offering internet access. Now the government (Chicago) is just raising it slightly indicating that every citizen should have free and clear access.
This won't do anything to dissuade me from giving up my DSL because I like having someone to call and yell out when it isn't working (and all I need to do is reset the modem... but at 6am, I'm not all that
Muni WiFi is Wrong (Score:4, Insightful)
Folks,
Put aside your geekiness for a minute (I'm a huge WiFi user, too) and consider the unfairness and inefficiency of government-supplied Wifi.
My argument against municipal Wifi is two-fold:
1) Internet access is a "nice to have" convienence but hardly a public necessity (like roads, schools, etc.). By creating a government-sponsored network, you inevitably impose taxes on many folks who will never use, nor want, a wireless network.
2) Government rarely does anything right, except create more government. I don't know about Chicago but my city (San Antonio, TX) can't even fill the countless deep potholes that are springing up everywhere. Do you trust these people to deliver you a secure, fast, stable network? Do you want to pay *THEM* to deliver this network?
Wireless networks are best left to commercial entities. If the city government wants to do something to promote a private, low-cost municipal network, lobby your city council members to provide free/reduced-cost access of utility/light poles to the deploying company in exchange for subsidized access fees for the poor (or better yet, low fees all across the board).
Re:Muni WiFi is Wrong (Score:2, Interesting)
So, should government not provide public libraries? Museums? Parks? Most people don't use those, and you are inevitably imposing taxes on those that can't read and don't want books.
Private enterprise would probably create a technologically superior network, tr
Re:Muni WiFi is Wrong (Score:3, Interesting)
I disagree with that. Schools and libraries are essential to the functioning of a democracy because they help prepare voters. But schools and libraries aren't enough; voters also need fresh information and avenues for participation. This last election showed that the internet is shifting power back to individual citizens, but we'll never see the full flowering of that until access is pretty much unive
Re:Muni WiFi is Wrong (NOT!) (Score:3, Interesting)
As a Chicagoan (Score:1)
if 802.11b, then I am fine with it ... (Score:3, Insightful)
11b is nice and slow and CHEAP. There is new technology being developed that is much faster, able to penetrate buildings, etc. etc. But with Chicago doing a low-end cheap system, they set the bar for what they are willing to accept from somebody else. Hopefully, they will also resist the urge to offer monopolies. This can be a win-win all the way around.
Is city-sponsored wireless really a good idea? (Score:5, Interesting)
I know I'm going to get some flames for this because quite a lot of Slashdotters seem to believe that everything should be free, but I'm not absolutely comfortable with free city-sponsored wireless.
Telecom companies rank just below HMOs on the vileness scale, but having Chicago put up wireless APs everywhere is not going to result in a socialist Internet dream where the city pays for your pr0n downloads. What it does result in is some lucky corporation's dream, where everyone in Chicago pays the city (some more indirectly than others) to pay a single contracted telecom to give them wireless Internet.
Not everyone is going to use this service. That's OK, not everyone uses the school system, but we all pay for it...but in this case, I'm not even sure that a clear majority in Chicago use the Internet. And even if they do, some use it much less than others. Most Slashdotters probably would have a hard time going back from their broadband accounts to $10/mo dialup, but the average person who checks their AOL email once a day is probably under no pressure to switch anytime soon.
Furthermore, due to John Gabriel's Greater Internet Fuckwad Theory [penny-arcade.com], which I firmly believe in, I expect the city would end up having to do (or contract out) major security work to handle people with too much time on their hands. The issue of censorship comes up as well -- the city now acts as the ISP for a host of activities that may include breaking Illinois state law. This can probably be ironed out, but why deal with it at all?
As much as I love getting stuff free, I have to say that this screams "boondoggle". The potential waste and corruption (this is the Chicago city government we're talking about) of a deal like this, as well as the small number of potential beneficiaries, makes me very dubious.
What do I like better? Portland's Personal Telco Project [personaltelco.net]. It's not sponsored by (read: under control of) the city government. It's done by private contributors who choose their own ISP, allowing a wider range of solutions to be chosen, are responsible for the cells of their own network, and -- apparently -- make group decisions by consensus as opposed to mandate (as the city would be the primary controller of a municipal network, I'm guessing most decisions would be by mandate of some controlling committee). There is also less potential for fuckwad-related damage, since the people who put these up generally are nerds or assisted by nerds who know what they're doing. In short, it's much more decentralized and, IMHO, essentially more free.
Of course, it's not as easy to get city-wide municipal Internet the Personal Telco way as it is to simply tell all your fellow citizens to pay for a luxury that you want.
Re:Is city-sponsored wireless really a good idea? (Score:2)
I wasn't complaining about the fact that everyone pays for the school system; I was merely mentioning that there was precedent for paying for a city-wide service that not everyone (homeschoolers or those taught at private schools, for instance), but at least a clear majority, uses. The goods or evils of the public school system will perhaps be the subject of a different post.
As a Resident of Chicago... (Score:2)
I am also not worried about the telco's blocking a city-wide network. If Daley can completely ignore the FAA [aopa.org], I think he can handle the telco's and the FCC.
As a resident (Score:3, Interesting)
of the Chicagoland area, I've learned a few things about the way things are done in Chicago:
Granted, I like the idea of a city-wide WiFi network. But I know that if Chicago adopted WiFi, Daley and Co. would find some way to poison the well and ruin everything for everybody.
This isn't the free muni WiFi you were looking for (Score:3, Interesting)
Said company would charge people say 20$ a month for a password to connect to the service (or something like that) and said company would pay the city "rent" for the pole space.
This is in no way the free municipal wifi that people are daydreaming of. This is merely a city trying to find a way to cash in on the wifi craze by renting their property.
Free? Anonymous? (Score:2)
What about visitors that havent paid local taxes...
What about the evil 'terrorists' that use the network for evil...
Um...Daley... (Score:3, Insightful)
Apparently, you are not familiar with Mayor Daley. You see, in the US, the state legislates the city, but in Chicago, the city legislates the state.
Obsolete in 3 years! (Score:3, Insightful)
Anybody trying to use 802.11 (aka WiFi) to cover an entire city must be either clueless in technology or a politician.
The proper solution for this is just now emerging, in the form of 802.16a (aka WiMax) which gives coverage circles larger than 5Km, which can be used to provide city wide coverage, without too much pain. (Google it, there's plenty of stuff out there.)
WiFi was designed to get rid of that last 30 meters of Ethernet cable. and for that it serves well. People have been trying to use it in so many applications that it was never designed for.
Re:Wi-Fi - Coming "Soon" To Houston? (Score:2)
I kin hardly wait to dump both DSL AND phone by SBC and go VOIP over wifi....
Re:American Municipal WiFi... (Score:2)
Where I live on the other hand, we have good roads, good schools, lots of good new as well as old municipal and educational libraries with modern equipment and council members that ask for raises but don't get them unless they deserve it.
Sorry you seem to live in the most butt-ass part of the entire cuntinent, but don't drag everyone else down in to your shit hole with you please.