From MuniWireless: What ails Toronto’s city wireless network?
Author Archives: gabe
Toronto Hydro Telecom for sale
For sale: Toronto Hydro Telecom, IT World Canada.
I doubt the carriers will be interested in buying OneZone — it’s a lot of expensive infrastructure that’s not actually worth much strategically.
I wonder if this’ll be the first “muni” network that gets sold off? (It wasn’t a real muni network in the first place, and this ensures that no one will ever again make that mistake!)
New hotspot: Buff Nail Lounge
Our newest hotspot is in a new kind of venue for us: a nail lounge. Victoria Thorpe, the owner of Buff Nail Lounge, says that many of her customers who come in during the day have asked if they have wifi available, so that they can check email and keep in touch with the office…
New hotspot: St. Louis Bar & Grill at Atrium on Bay
Downtown omnivores may be happy to know that the newest Wireless Toronto hotspot is at St. Louis Bar & Grill, in the Atrium on Bay (and with an entrance on Edward Street, right across from World’s Biggest Bookstore). It opened just this summer, and looks great!
New hotspot: Harbourfront Centre
A big launch for Wireless Toronto today: it’s the official launch at the York Quay Centre at Harbourfront Centre. With festivals every weekend in the summer, and year-round galleries and events, it’s a great new addition to the Wireless Toronto network…
MuniWireless: the monorail of the decade
Anthony totally-on-the-mark:
“They are the monorails of this decade: the wrong technology, totally overpromised and completely undelivered,” said Anthony Townsend, research director at the Institute for the Future, a think tank.
From “Cities Struggle With Wireless Internet” from the Houston Chronicle. The article describes the hassles and disappointments experienced by users, citizens, politicians and city staff in relation to muniwireless projects in various cities in the US.
(more on) Toronto The Good
[From http://spacing.ca/wire/?p=1821 ]
When: Tuesday, May 15th, starting at 7pm
Where: Fermenting Cellar, Distillery District
Who: DJ Chris Thinn
How Much: $10 gets you into the building, plus food
Cash Bar
Dear Torontonian,
The Festival of Architecture and Design will take place again in May, and the folks at ERA Architects, Spacing Magazine and [murmur] are throwing another Toronto the Good party to celebrate your faithful city. This year the Toronto Society of Architects are also co-hosting, and they will be announcing the winner of their ‚ÄúDesign Matters‚Äù competition, which will be on display during the party. They also want to introduce all of you to Wireless Toronto, an all-volunteer community group celebrating their 2nd anniversary providing free community wireless hotspots in caf?©s, bars, and outdoor places like Dufferin Grove Park and Dundas Square. Come by anytime for some food, drink, interactive and wireless games, and a room full of nice people who care about me.
Love,
Toronto
OneZone no longer free
As of this Tuesday (April 24th), Toronto Hydro Telecom’s OneZone network started charging for access. Over the course of their 7.5-month free trial, they made some improvements to the network, hardware and software. An independent company rated theirs the fastest “municipal” wifi network around. Still, I often had trouble obtaining an IP address, getting to the login screen, and using any AJAX-based sites. Which is too bad, ’cause the two sites I normally want access to while I’m downtown are GMail and Google Maps — both of which were normally very sluggish on OneZone.
I wish them luck with their monetization. I’m unlikely to use the network again — I don’t live in the “zone”, and though my office is within it, there’s no signal in sight. (I guess the poles on Spadina weren’t part of the package they bought from the city, under questionable circumstances.)
If they’re short on cash, here’s a suggestion: pre-paid service with per-minute billing. I’ll happily today pay you $20 on my credit card, if I know that I’ll be able to (reliably) use the service anytime I’m downtown, at 5 (or maybe even 10) cents per minute.
Not many papers or blogs seem to have covered this yet; here are the ones I could find:
ITWorldCanada.com: Tale of two cities – WiFi gap between Fredericton and Toronto
http://www.itworldcanada.com:80/a/Voice-Data-and-IP/4f9ac4d0-9419-4af9-94fb-73a73dea7405.html
Tale of two cities – WiFi gap between Fredericton and Toronto
By: Nestor Arellano
ITWorldCanada.com (25 Jan 2007)
In a little more than a month from now, users of the country’s largest WiFi network – Toronto’s recently launched One Zone – will begin paying up to $29 a month for the privilege of cruising the information highway wirelessly.
By contrast, residents of City of Fredericton, New Brunswick will continue to enjoy free access to Fred e Zone, their city’s older, though weaker, WiFi network.
The WiFi divide between the two cities resides not in technology or funding but rather in vision and political will, according to an information studies professor.
The City of Fredericton and the Toronto Hydro Telecom Inc. (THT) made separate presentations on their respective WiFi networks at the Wireless Cities Summit in Toronto yesterday.
“Fredericton had the political will to stick to their objective of providing WiFi as a public service; our city did not,” said Andrew Clement, professor of information studies at the Knowledge Media Design Institute of the University of Toronto.
Toronto Hydro Telecom, the quasi-private corporation that owns One Zone, set out to build a paid service instead, said Clement.
He said One Zone has the more robust system that can penetrate the city core’s buildings and “urban canyons” while Fred e Zone was designed for lighter use.
Divergent “visions and ambitions” fueled the two cities’ quest for a WiFi network, according to Clement.
In 1997, Fredericton was paying premium fees to a telecom company for connectivity because there was no competition in their area and no market pressure to drive prices down, said Maurice Gallant, the city’s chief information officer (CIO). “We were paying three times the prices people in Toronto were paying.”
This drove the city of some 80,000 residents to consider, in 2000, to becoming its own wireless service provider.
Fredericton created a not-for-profit telecom co-operative called the e-Novations ComNet Inc. after learning Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) rules forbade governments from deploying network hardware on existing telephone and electric poles but allowed access to entities that compete with incumbent telecom companies.
The co-op was able to recruit 35 key businesses and organizations that became the paying subscribers. The rest of the users have free access because they consume the excess broadband that subscribers are not using.
Fredericton used city structures such as water towers, buildings and traffic lights to install transmitters. The first phase of the project cost $150,000 and the city provided an additional $300,000 for further expansion.
To date, Fredericton has more than 1,200 802.11 g WiFi access points. Gallant said Fredericton sees Fred e Zone as an “intellectual city structure” that should be open to the public. “You don’t charge people for walking on the sidewalk or strolling in the park. Why should you charge them for WiFi access?”
He admitted the network had some shortcomings. It cannot reach everyone and “theoretically free users might not be able to gain access if all the 35 subscribers decided to use up all their bandwidth at the same time.”
“No other city government is in the type of project we’re in because they can’t find the profit in it. But don’t ask me about ROI (return of investment), because we’re not looking for it,” said Gallant.
Sharyn Gravelle, vice-president, wireless, THT, holds a different view. “Wi-Fi networks shouldn’t be funded through taxes,” she says.
Toronto Hydro chose a “sustainable”, paid-for model for One Zone because the corporation “is not a part of the city or the public-private environment and has an obligation to its shareholders to turn in a profit,” said Gravelle. One Zone now covers a high density area of roughly six square kilometers, encompassing 235 city blocks. It offers connection speeds of up to seven megabits per second.
THT purchased light posts within the WiFi zone for $60 million and perched WiFi gear on every fourth or fifth pole.
Gravelle said Toronto Hydro Telecom is targeting a $2 million profit from most corporate users and hopes to recoup its investments within a year. The more profit One Zone makes, the more dividends Toronto Hydro shareholders get, she said.
The first six months of service are free, but come March 6 three payment plans will be offered: a pre-paid monthly subscription for $29, a 24-hour plan for $10 and an hourly rate of $5.
Clement, however, has qualms about this model.
“Why should the people who are supposed to own THT, have to pay a high price for something they own?” he asked, adding that THT is a telecom subsidiary of Toronto Hydro Corp. which is a fully owned by the city of Toronto.
However, Gravelle maintains THT is a “stand alone department of Toronto Hydro and not a part of the city or the public-private environment.” “There’s no such thing as a free lunch, someone has to pay for it somewhere,” said Gravelle.
She said One Zone has registered some 30,000 authenticated users and hope to bump this number up to 50,000 by the time it starts charging fees. Earlier this year an Ottawa-based not-for-profit Internet development organization said that THT was overpricing WiFi access .
Bill St. Arnaud, senior director of Canarie Inc. “Toronto probably has the most expensive WiFi in the world.” This was disputed by Gravelle who said One Zone charges competitive rates.
Roach Coach in Globe and Mail
From page 3 of the Toronto section of today’s Globe and Mail:
Pack up your modem in your old kit bag
A local activist’s portable hot spot brings the Internet in a backpack
BERT ARCHER
Wireless Toronto, a volunteer group devoted to providing location-specific Internet content across the city through a series of free Wi-Fi hot spots, has been meeting every month for two years to plan new spots and strategies.
But recently they decided they would like to have more fun in 2007, so starting this month, they’re getting together for something called Hack Nights.
Their first project, which they will be field-testing today, is a spanner in the growing Wi-Fi service-industry works, an ambulatory Internet system they call “the Roach Coach.”
“It comes from the nickname for snack trucks,” group founder Gabe Sawhney says. “It came from wanting to offer Wi-Fi for gatherings at Nathan Phillips Square.”