Just thought I would pass this article along. Wi-Fi access planned for Mears, Loring parks Wireless networks would allow outdoor Internet access via = laptops or handheld computers BY JULIO OJEDA-ZAPATA Pioneer Press Dense "clouds" may soon descend upon two of the Twin Cities' = best-known urban parks =97 not wispy puffs of water vapor, but rather = swarms of invisible, rapidly moving bits of digital data. And while they = won't help keep the parks green, they would be a boon for e-mail junkies = and Web surfers. "Cloud" is computer-user slang for a wireless Internet = network. If separate but similar projects unfold as planned, such = networks will soon envelop downtown St. Paul's Mears Park and downtown = Minneapolis' Loring Park. Both networks would rely on a popular kind of computer = networking known as 802.11b or Wi-Fi, already in use for wireless online = access in coffeeshops, airports, schools and offices. The networks allow anyone with a wireless-ready laptop or = handheld computer to gain high-speed Internet access at little or no = cost, a grand social experiment already attempted in other outdoor = public venues such as New York City's tony Bryant Park. Mears Park likely will be "lit up" first, to use another = wireless-networking catchphrase. By this week, a transmitter atop a = Lowertown office building could be blasting bandwidth at the park lawns, = trails, benches and bandshell just below. Online access will be free. The Loring Park network, a more ambitious undertaking, = remains in the planning stages but could be ready by summer, organizers = say. That network, much larger than the one in Mears Park, would = potentially be available to thousands of residents, students and = visitors in the much-trafficked neighborhood. While free Wi-Fi networks have proliferated in indoor = gathering spots around the Twin Cities, outdoor networks are much harder = to find. That's why Ralph Jenson of Lowertown's VoxNew tech firm = wants to light up Mears Park, which he can see through his office = window. On warm days, he wants to stroll onto the grass with his = Apple PowerBook so he can work while sunning himself. He wants to offer = that amenity to other computer users from all walks of life, no strings = attached, to make the park and neighborhood a more vibrant place. "I'm not expecting to get anything out of it," says Jenson, = whose fledgling firm specializes in Internet-based voice services. "I = just hope it attracts more people to Lowertown." To spark this influx, Jenson will use Ethernet cabling to = extend his office network on the top floor of the Railroader Printing = House building to a Wi-Fi device stashed in a nearby elevator shaft. = That device will be connected to a transmitter near VoxNew's rooftop = deck. Once pointed at the park, the transmitter will provide = nearly complete Wi-Fi coverage. Jenson hopes to obliterate scattered = "dead spots" later, with the city of St. Paul's blessing, by installing = a network-extension device on the park grounds. In Minneapolis, Leif Utne of the nationally renowned Utne = magazine is spearheading a community campaign to light up Loring Park = for reasons not unlike Jenson's. Utne, the magazine's online managing editor whose offices = overlook the park, envisions cash-strapped students from the nearby = Minneapolis Community and Technical College availing themselves of free = or low-cost bandwidth. He wants to attract others in the Twin Cities who = crave online access but can't pay stiff monthly fees. "The location of Loring Park is very interesting in that at = one end you have the Walker Art Center and at the other, you have MCTC," = says Alex Huff, head of the Minneapolis-based Blue Turtle = tech-consulting firm and creator of TCwireless.net, a Twin Cities Wi-Fi = online directory. "Bridging (these locations) would create an amazing new = medium for artists to extend art through the use of technology," says = Huff, who is helping Utne push for the Loring Park network. "Students = would be able to use the park for group meetings, studying and social = purposes." While Utne and Huff aren't promising the network will be = erected, they say they've encountered great community enthusiasm for the = project and, so far, no insurmountable obstacles. "Theoretically this could happen next week," Utne says. "But = we need to get some funding in place." -- --*--SpencerUnderground--*-- http://autonomous.tv/ spencer at autonomous.tv Key fingerprint = 173B 8760 E59F DBF8 6FD2 68F8 ABA2 AB08 49C7 4754 -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 189 bytes Desc: not available Url : http://shadowknight.real-time.com/pipermail/tcwug-list/attachments/20030410/f1b47675/attachment.pgp