The newest addition to the Wireless Toronto network is Grapefruit Moon. It’s not in the photo, but they have a great patio, too.
The newest addition to the Wireless Toronto network is Grapefruit Moon. It’s not in the photo, but they have a great patio, too.
Last weekend a few Wireless Toronto volunteers has a great time at the BIG on Bloor street festival. Despite a rainy start, we managed to set up a mesh network covering  Bloor Street between Ossington and Dovercourt for the duration of the day, and meet some cool people along the way. Imagine if Wi-Fi on Bloor was a permanent thing! See some images from the day below, or at our Flickr group.
Thanks to everyone that helped out.
As the recent flurry of activity on this blog may suggest, we’ve been up to quite a bit at Wireless Toronto over the past few weeks. This month we find ourselves at our fourth anniversary and passing another significant milestone, the 20,000th registered user of Toronto’s free community wireless network.
After four years we remain passionate about the opportunities that free Wi-Fi in Toronto’s public spaces can present for community and continue to do our best to encourage its development, implementation and use.
For those of you who don’t already know, we’ve been using Twitter and our Facebook page in an attempt to communicate more effectively with interested people and users of the network – so make sure to follow us there if that’s your thing.
Below is the official press release that was sent out to mark the occasion:
Â
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Wireless Toronto Celebrates 4 Years of Community Wi-Fi with 20,000th User.
TORONTO, ON June 9, 2009 – Wireless Toronto has been quietly and creatively championing free wifi in the city’s cafes, parks, and public spaces since 2005. This month, the all-volunteer group also celebrated signing up its 20,000th user to its network of over 30 hotspots across the GTA, including the newly-upgraded Dufferin Grove Park, Yonge-Dundas Square, St. Lawrence Market, and Harbourfront Centre.   Â
Wireless Toronto employs a community-centred model for deploying free wifi. Internet connections and wireless equipment are paid for by the hotspot venues, or sponsors. There’s no cost to users who want to use the network, and there are no ads on Wireless Toronto community portal pages. Users are simply asked to login each time they use a hotspot. The community wifi model has been championed in Canada by Montreal’s Ile Sans Fil, and has been successful in several cities in Quebec, Edmonton and Vancouver.
In addition to enabling users to work, learn, and communicate, Wireless Toronto hotspots offer a unique interface linking to location-specific content, which can be an opportunity to connect with people and events in the surrounding neighbourhood. Â
Or, as co-founder Gabe Sawhney says, “as much as Wireless Toronto is about wi-fi and technology, it’s also about community and public space”. Â
For more information and updates about Wireless Toronto:
Website:Â http://wirelesstoronto.ca
Blog:Â http://wirelesstoronto.ca/blog/
Hotspot map:Â http://auth.wirelesstoronto.ca/hotspots_map.php
Twitter:Â http://twitter.com/WirelessToronto
Facebook:Â http://www.facebook.com/pages/Toronto-ON/Wireless-Toronto/13780966710
Media contact:
Hilary Krupa, hilary@wirelesstoronto.ca, 647-258-1686
Dufferin Grove Park is already the largest free outdoor hotspot in Toronto, however, this weekend it got even better. A small group of Wireless Toronto volunteers spent the day digging holes, climbing ladders and installing a new mesh network in the park. The park is our first official attempt at deploying a mesh network using the open-mesh system and the result is greatly improved coverage and signal strength throughout the park.
Although we are still tweaking it a little, you can now connect to the network from almost any corner if the park, from the far north-east tip of the playing field to the southern cob structure and playground (where park staff regularly serve up great food) right down to the tree-covered Garrison Creek Hollow.
There’s always great things happening at Dufferin Grove, so make sure to get out this summer and check it out. I plan on making the park my office for the next sunny day.
You can see some pictures of the day in the gallery below. In true Wireless Toronto fashion there was climbing ladders, minor excavations, organic hotdogs, conduit piping, tiny hacksaws, good coffee, miles of ethernet cable, multiple laptops and of course, beer. A great day.
Matt Hartley wrote an impressively balanced article on free wifi in today’s Globe and Mail: Free My Wifi. (I particularly appreciate the teaser on the front page of the Globe: “Is WiFi the future or the past?”) The first line refers to the WT spot at Harbourfront Centre, the article quotes WT friend Catherine Middleton, and Hartley graciously gives me the last word: “An effort to make Internet access more easily and cheaply available to low-income residents of the city seems like a great initiative. But the devil is always in the details.”
As the article mentions, Councillor Minnen-Wong is still working out the details of his plan to provide free wifi in the city’s public housing. We haven’t spoken with him yet, but hope to soon. His project is ambitious, and — we suspect — would be prohibitively expensive if implemented following a traditional approach to IT management. A community approach — besides being cheaper — could have a wide range of unexpected benefits, like creating opportunities for inter-generational and -cultural collaboration.