Tuesday, March 17, 2009
The Time Has Come To Free New York City...San Francisco's Sunnydale Housing Community WiFi Deployment shows Us How...
One of bigger joint projects is the Sunnydale housing community in San Francisco. You can see a video of the Mayor of San Francisco (Gavin Newsom), One Economy Senior Vice President Dave McConnell, and Meraki CEO Sanjit Biswas announcing the start of WiFi service at the Sunnydale community:
I hope that the leaders in NYC are taking notice. We CAN provide ubiquitous WiFi in NYC. Co-op City in the Bronx, lefrak city in Queens, the need is there. Sky-Packets, Meraki, along with the Town of Babylon have set the tone...let's keep it moving.
Monday, March 16, 2009
WiFi as a means to offer Muni-"over the air" applications? Cablevision is banking on it.
"Cablevision's Optimum WiFi service is rekindling interest in municipal WiFi applications among other large service providers," said Ben Kwan, who is analyst of wireless LAN research at Dell'Oro. "For this and other reasons, we believe municipal WiFi applications will become an increasingly important growth driver for the service provider mesh market in 2009."
The more free WiFi the better--but the key word here is Free. As it stands, Cablevision offers its Optimum WiFi service free to its subscribers only. It would be hard to reconcile in the minds of tax payers that tax dollars are going into supporting a private company in which the only way they are allowed to get "FREE" WiFi is to be a PAID subscriber. Outside of gaining more subs, Cablevision is hoping to "double dip" with the installed networks in order to provide services to the Muni's. The implications of having Muni-over the air applications running on a private networks would also imply that as the company goes, so does the municipality. A municipal WiFI should be about empowering the end-users and the muni becoming more independent of private sector.
The ideal solution would be to balance the use of the private sectors data networks (back hauls) and the public sectors implementation of SaaS solution like the one provided by Meraki Networks.
Steve Amarante
Sky-Packets
www.sky-packets.com
1+888.850.0245
Better living Through WiFi
Thursday, March 12, 2009
Lessons From The San Francisco Video Surveillance Study
certain limitations and negative results. Specifically, in certain areas, the surveillance cameras failed to deter crime. There where some aspects that where overlook during the installation process that can and should be leveraged when installing Wi-Fi IPCAM:
1. Make sure the right department has access and controls the IP Cam. oddly enough, it’s not the SF Police Department in charge of the cameras in SF, rather, a cluster of agencies are overseeing the project. This leads to communications conflicts and diluted accountability.
2. Attorneys and police officers not trained to use the footage; You have the footage now what? Who owns it? Who does what with it? A plan on what to do with the footage should be in place before the IP-CAM are installed.
3. Poor quality of the video: SF video cameras are set to film only three to four frames per second (movies shoot between 25 to 30 frames per second); This leads to a question if the right quality is even available when footage is needed in say a court case.
The study is pretty detail and we have provided here for download!
Steve Amarante
Sky-Packets
www.sky-packets.com
1+888.850.0245
Better living Through WiFi
Wednesday, March 11, 2009
Could The Recession Rekindle Momentum and Need for Public Wi-Fi Networks?
Last month, EarthLink began pitching "Connect for Less," an offering that pushes dial-up service for $7.95 a month, or about 25 cents a day. In December, NetZero introduced a $9.95-a-month plan. Both providers are marketing the offerings as a way to save money.
Historically, one of the obstacles in deploying Muni-WiFi networks has been public support. Amist the recessionary cloud perhaps there is a sliver lining. Although the efforts of EarthLink and NetZero reflects an economic down-turn, in the same breath the market for dial-up services is still declining. EarthLink's dial-up business lost 173,000 subscribers in the fourth quarter in 2008 , while NetZero lost 86,000 subscribers. With the new American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA), the publics need of getting something a little quicker then dial-up, and the publics need to pay a little less to log on, this may be the right time to re-introduce or implement that Wi-Fi Mesh network.
There may never be a better time for Municipalities, Goverment Agencies and local Business District to gain public support (and funds) on WiFi deployments then now...
Steve Amarante
Sky-Packets
www.sky-packets.com
1+888.850.0245
Better living Through WiFi
Tuesday, March 10, 2009
The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA)--Calling all Municipalities!!
Steve Amarante
Sky-Packets
www.sky-packets.com
1+888.850.0245
Better living Through WiFi
Monday, March 9, 2009
If Closing The Digital Divide & Increasing Broadband Penetration Is The Goal-- Should it Matter Who Installs WiFi?
Steve Amarante
Sky-Packets
www.sky-packets.com
1+888.850.0245
Better living Through WiFi
Wednesday, March 4, 2009
McDonald's WiFi Deployment a Model for Municipalities?
Steve Amarante
Sky-Packets
www.sky-packets.com
1+888.850.0245
Better living Through WiFi