[1st-mile-nm] Fwd: Interesting Article on muni wi-fi
peter
pete at ideapete.com
Sat Mar 22 23:49:58 PDT 2008
Agreed they are a critical part, but to get municipalities to understand
the fact that to really use any form of digital technology fully, you
need to radically change the way you operate and do business, well ??
does anyone know of any government department that understands this and
is even trying
In NM the state and local government is spending a fortune on all sorts
of different protocol and web technology but the oxymoron pops up when
you see that the states AG is trying to make EMAIL an official method of
communication and there are a heck of a lot of government employees who
disagree with him
( : ( : pete
Peter Baston
*IDEAS*
/www.ideapete.com/ <http://www.ideapete.com/>
Richard Lowenberg wrote:
> There are a growing number of articles and studies coming out on the failures
> and downturns of evermore wifi companies and municipal/regional networking
> projects. A lot of lessons being learned. Wireless networks are a critical
> part of our developing networked society. Getting the local-global social
> model and the economic model to overlay neatly is a necessary, but not an easy
> task. Sasha Meinrath's good works and understandings deserve attention.
> rl
>
> Hopes for Wireless Cities Fade as Internet Providers Pull Out
>
> By IAN URBINA
> Published: March 22, 2008
>
> Excerpt:
>
> "He said that true municipal networks, the ones that are owned and
> operated by municipalities, were far more sustainable because they
> could take into account benefits that help cities beyond private
> profit, including property-value increases, education benefits and
> quality-of-life improvements that come with offering residents free
> wireless access.
>
> Mr. Meinrath pointed to St. Cloud, Fla., which spent $3 million two
> years ago to build a free wireless network that is used by more than
> 70 percent of the households in the city."
> ...
> In Minneapolis, the Internet service provider agreed to build the
> network as long as the city committed to becoming an "anchor tenant"
> by subscribing for a minimum number of city workers, like building
> inspectors, meter readers, police officers and firefighters.
>
> This type of plan is more viable, according to market analysts and
> city officials, because the companies paying to mount the routers and
> run the service are guaranteed a base number of subscribers to cover
> the cost of their investment.
>
> http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/22/us/22wireless.html?pagewanted=1
>
> ----- End forwarded message -----
>
>
> Richard Lowenberg
> 1st-Mile Institute
> P.O. Box 8001, Santa Fe, NM 87504
> 505-989-9110; 505-603-5200 cell
> rl at 1st-mile.com www.1st-mile.com
>
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