Techmology Bits
4 Jun

This is fantastic news, and I say that with not even an ounce of my traditional sarcasm. Anytime I hear about a new WiFi hotspot in my area, I’m happy about it. If I had my way, I would see every square inch of Sumner County covered in a giant net of WiFi. (And I think that day will come… but not yet).
Hendersonville residents visiting Drakes Creek Park can now surf the web for free.
According to the article:
Its wireless Internet access has been available off and on since mid-May, parks Director Dave LeMarbre said. “Within the last week to 10 days, it’s been up and operational 100 percent,” he said. LeMarbre said it cost about $5,000 to install the Web access.
Now I can go to the park on Friday nights, and live-blog the pick-up volleyball matches. Or check email while I sit in the Little League stands. Or download White Castle nutritional information before walking across the street for some tiny square burgers.
Outstanding news. The park is already a favorite spot in town for many–this news only makes it more attractive. Instead of buying a Starbucks card just for the privilege of using their WiFi, I can just buy my grande latte and walk on down to Drakes Creek… and get my Internet for free… no hoops to jump through, no strings attached. Thanks Hendersonville!
7 May
A sweet new use for WiFi has been proposed: internal health monitors… in your body. All I have to say to that is… awesome!
The same BlueTooth technology that allows you to use a wireless hands-free device with your cell phone is going to alerting the hospital when you have emergency health problems.
From the article:
If the “in-body network” recorded that the person had suddenly collapsed, it would send an alert, via a nearby base station at their home, to a surgery or hospital.
Seriously, this sounds like something out of some futuristic sci-fi movie, but it’s not that big a leap. We’ve been keeping an eye on the vital signs of astronauts for decades. This just takes the technology inside the body, Fantastic Voyage style (although without the shrunken human beings in a space ship part).
Now, if this so-called “in-body WiFi network” can also let my spleen surf the Internet and allow my lungs to place a VOIP call to the Psychic Friends Network… then it’ll be the completion of a life-long dream of mine.
11 Feb
So the reason you’ve always had to pay for your WiFi connection at Starbucks is that the coffee chain had a contract with T-Mobile for their Internet service… and that contract was expensive.
Now Starbucks has switched over to AT&T for service, and that deal will save them some money. So they want to pass the savings on to you, in a way. If you are one of the Starbucks customers that uses a “Starbucks purchase card” (whatever that is), you will now get 2 hours of WiFi for free. Additional 2-hour blocks will be $3.99.
Oh, you can also pay for a WiFi membership of sorts, for $19.99, which will give you unlimited free access to the web at all 70,000 AT&T hotspots (even the non-Starbucks ones).
Here’s a quote from some Starbucks big-wig about the new arrangement:
Welday said the company viewed the deal with Starbucks as a “competitive opportunity.”
“Here we are with the nation’s largest Wi-Fi network,” Welday said. “Consumer trends are clearly pointing toward an increased need and desire to access broadband outside the home and office — what a terrific opportunity.”
Yes. It is a terrific opportunity… to rip people off. Look, maybe I’m closed-minded, but I tend to think that if I can get WiFi for free (at such wonderful establishments as Panera Bread or Krystal) then having to pay for it somewhere else is ridiculous. The list of places that carry free WiFi for customers is growing by the day. Starbucks is banking on their customer loyalty (to the coffee) to make some money off the WiFi, and that’s aggravating to me.
Sure, I like their coffee. Who doesn’t? But I don’t like it enough to pay extra just to view the Internet while I drink it. Panera’s coffee is pretty darn good too, and I can surf the web for hours on end there without having to pay any extra cost or hold a special type of purchasing card.
But I know that there are many of you who are Starbucks junkies, who have gladly paid the necessary WiFi fees all along. So for those people, this is probably welcome news.
It’s sort of like the Wall Street Journal news we covered recently (where they’re making more content free, but still charging a premium for other stuff), where something that used to cost a lot of money is made free-er, but still not completely free.
Also:
AT&T also is giving Starbucks’ more than 100,000 U.S. employees free wireless accounts and said it will soon extend the Wi-Fi at Starbucks to its wireless phone customers.
So great… if you happen to work for Starbucks…your WiFi will be completely free. In your face, customers!!
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