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They don’t have a snakes-on-a-plane logo parody, I’m sorry to say: The BWCS consulting firm will host its second conference on installing Wi-Fi and Internet access in trains. Train systems worldwide are piloting and rolling out service, the most advanced stages of which are in the UK and Sweden at the moment; California is a coming flashpoint, too. Putting Wi-Fi on a train isn’t just about giving commuters or long-route travelers access to email and YouTube. Rather, it’s about offering in-transit entertainment through media servers on trains; sending train telemetry back to control centers; remote video surveillance; and voice communication while en route. Passenger access is a bonus, of course.
The conference runs June 6 and 7, 2007, in London. Leading specialized firms and train operators will be presenting and sponsoring the event. (I would normally suggest attendees visit the London Transport Museum as well, but it’s closed until this fall!)
Posted by Glennf at 1:07 PM | Comments (1) | TrackBack
If you’d like to understand how important network access is on a moving railway car, attend Train Communications Systems 2006: While this is a highly specialized event—taking place June 7 and 8, 2006, in London—it shows the tremendous scope of interest in the area. It’s not just a few commuter trains and a handful of long-haul trains at stake here, but rather a radical rethinking of the role of telecommunications in rail businesses.
The first day is a workshop, with more a focus on information technology and telecom issues for rail operators managing their train lines. The second day has a greater number of speakers and panels and turns the attention on providing Internet service, looking at the whys and hows. The two days together cost £1350.
Posted by Glennf at 3:07 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack
The first summit hosted by CUWiN was in 2004, and apparently connected a lot of dots (and faces) for those focused on politics and others on technology: This year’s event, March 31-April 2 in St. Charles, Missouri, splits tracks for technology, implementation, and policy. Based on the previous event, there’s very little talking heads up on a stage, and more symposium-like interaction. The cost ranges from $65 to $675 depending on type of registrant.
Posted by Glennf at 11:52 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack
UnWired: Rural Wireless Conferences runs Nov. 1-2 at U of Georgia, Tifton: The conference will focus on the use of wireless technologies to enhance farm operations and rural life. I was asked to attend, but it’s a bit geographically and topically far off from my usual haunts. Still, there’s a lot of intrigue in statements like, “representatives from Cattlelog will show how radio frequency identification can help the cattle industry run smoothly and safely.”
Posted by Glennf at 1:24 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack
The summit includes the city, non-profits, and Michael Oh: You can’t swing a Yagi antenna in Boston without hitting something that Michael Oh is working on. This summit is due in part to his efforts along with others interested in expanding wireless Internet access. The agenda is to figure out how wireless technology could make Boston better without, it seems, any particular hook like “free wireless for everyone.” Meeting details are on Boston Councilor John Tobin’s Web site.
Posted by Glennf at 4:24 PM | Comments (1) | TrackBack
Events move so fast, my head spins: a few days after covering the flurry of activity around the New Millennium Research Council’s report discouraging municipal broadband, I was asked to moderate a panel on the discussion on March 14 during the South by Southwest (SXSW) music, arts, and interactive festival and conference in Austin, Texas. Esme Vos is also on the panel, from MuniWireless.com, and we should have a rip, and might I add, roaring time. The interactive part of the event runs March 11 to 15; the overall event is from March 11 to 20.
Posted by Glennf at 12:59 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Analyst Craig Mathias takes a look at the technology of the future discussed at Wi-Fi Planet: Mathias obviously made good use of his time, and has a great summary of the event.
WiMax and mobile WiMax: Fixed has lots of potential, but mobile is a more complicated issue (as we’ve maintained in this forum) because it may take long enough to reach market and require enough spectrum and operator support that 3G (and 4G) combined with metro-Wi-Fi are good enough, cheap enough, and early enough to beat it. Mesh: One radio or multiple? The debate continues to rage. Antennas: Don’t discount the role of an antenna in overall system performance.
Posted by Glennf at 3:03 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack
The Blog Business Summit will take place in January 2005, focusing on how to use Web logs in, for, and around business: I mention this Jan. 24-25 event partly because Wi-Fi Networking News is a business blog of sorts—we’re advertising supported through relationships with Jiwire and Google AdSense—and because I’ll be speaking at the event. I’ll talk on topics that include building a successful and profitable content blog.
Posted by Glennf at 4:19 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Michael Oh attended Making the Connection: The 2004 National Summit for Community Wireless Networks in August: Michael Oh is the fellow behind NewburyOpen.net, and the owner of tech superpowers, inc. He sent in this report:
First off, I think the biggest thing was simply that everyone got together. The CWN (Community Wireless Network) world is something that we’re all very involved in, but we’re all very locally focused. It’s almost by definition that we’re mainly interested in our own hometowns, but sometimes that keeps us from seeing that CWNs all end up having a lot of the same challenges.
So, I have to give props to Sascha Meinrath and the crew at U of I that put this together - it was something that we knew there was a need for, but no one had done it - and they created it out of thin air.
I’m also surprised that so many people showed up for the event. By my count, there were somewhere around 150 people, from people like Rob Flickenger (of Metrix and O’Reilly’s Wireless Hacking book) to Michael Calabrese of the New America Foundation. More surprisingly, there were people there because their grants had funded them to come and do research on how wireless can help community development. That means that CWNs are getting a lot of exposure - and not just to the people that make them.
The turnout solidifies one thing - that CWNs are here to stay, and they are about a lot more than “competing” against for-pay wireless.
CMNs are about community, not about wireless. It’s simple to say, but very complex to understand, since community is such a broad-based word. Still, this movement is one of the quickest forming community movements that I’ve ever seen or been a part of - and we all share the same idea.
That idea is that we all believe that community wireless will make a better world. We don’t agree how, and we certainly don’t agree what technology it will use, but we’re pretty certain it will change how the world interacts. And this change is very different from how the corporations playing with WiFi in public spaces imagine.
The meetings were organized in three tracks - Organizational Models, Technology, and Policy. Going in, I thought that 2 out of 3 were of interest, but the Policy track was really kind of strange to me. I didn’t understand fully how spectrum policy really would help the future of our cause.
This is one of the big benefits of the Summit - spending time with the policy “wonks” (which regardless of name, are very interesting people to hang around), at the very least because you’re happy that SOMEONE is interested enough in spectrum policy to fight in the halls of Washington for us. Howard Feld and Michael Calabrese were people that I met, talked to, and understood after the summit. You may even see me in Washington sometime if they have their way… :)
Organizationally, the other benefit was meeting all of the other major CWN players in the country. There were people from NYC Wireless, Austin City Wireless Project, PersonalTelco, and others… We got to hang out, share stories of crazy wireless projects gone horribly wrong, and drink beer. I’m hoping that one of the results from the Summit is simply communication between all of the different cities, so we can all work together to further the cause.
I would love to coordinate wireless festivals in 4 major cities on the same day, share technology, or at the very least just have WiFi webcams that allow people in 4 coffee shops all over the country to say hi to each other. We would love to see projects like our Boston Music Project not only exist in 4 cities, but also be connected between the different places, so that anyone in a coffee shop in Boston could experience the newest local bands in Austin. (FYI - this idea was sparked by Rich from Austin’s work)
It became obvious that CWNs were already diverging into ideas about culture, arts, media, and community content. While incredibly powerful in concept, we also risk losing the focus of people outside of the WiFi community with this divergence. If we focus on such broad-based ideas, we look a lot more like community non-profits and less like WiFi organizations. Unfortunately, “WiFi as commerce” is the baby of the business section, not “WiFi as community development.” In my opinion, that’s why all of the CWNs have “fallen off the map” compared to the T-mobiles and Tropos Networks of the world - they’re just no longer interesting to the business community anymore.
But I predict that the next wave will be when CWNs begin to provide “national local” content providing interesting local content for their respective cities, but as part of a national movement. That’s the vision that I have for CWNs going forward - it’s just a matter of getting others to sign on.
Fact is, we’re all volunteers, trying to feed ourselves with other activities, so the chances for success depend on how dedicated we can be to another cause when we’re already stretched for time. Luckily, there are already great examples of how this happens.
One of the best connections that I made was Prometheus Radio, the guys that came from pirate radio and now specialize in ‘powering up’ Low Power FM (LPFM) stations. I participated in the Portsmouth, NH, LPFM barnraising last month, and they sure know how to motivate people. FM people have been fighting the fight for many decades - pushing back against the incumbents, correcting FCC shortsightedness, and organizing disparate groups all over the country. CWNs could learn a thing or two from them.
I think that if organized well, we can make the community wireless movement more than just an annoyance to the T-mobiles of the world - by providing content that can only be found locally. And the 1st Summit was a huge step towards that - even if it was just getting everyone in the same room.
Thanks, Michael!
Posted by Glennf at 6:05 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack
The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign will host the 2004 National Summit for Community Wireless Aug. 20-22: The event is organized by CUWiN (C-U Community Wireless Network) which is working on an open-source mesh project, and Prairienet, with the help of other groups and individuals. Their goal is 100 attendees from across the U.S., and they’re attempting to raise funds for travel stipends for groups that would otherwise be unable to afford to send a representative.
The mission is statement is that the conference will focus on grassroots action, impacting national regulations and policies, and building a coalition of local groups, researchers, policy leaders, decision-makers, and community activists.
The cost is low: $30 for students and low-income; $75 for all others. They’re encouraging press to attend, as well.
Posted by Glennf at 11:42 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack
U of Georgia’s Mobile Media Consortium has free event Apr. 24: If you’re in Athens, you can see the mobile future in this afternoon-through-evening free event at “America’s most beautiful university campus.”
Posted by Glennf at 2:27 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Wireless Week is posting PDFs of its complete show daily from the CTIA cellular industry conference this week: The show daily rounds up more than the press releases with a number of reporters (including Wi-Fi Networking News’s own Nancy Gohring) interviewing company principals and filing reports at the show. The show runs through Wednesday.
Posted by Glennf at 12:41 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Alan Reiter notes that the cellular industry’s big CTIA event next week is in a conference center that thought it had Wi-Fi covered, but didn’t: Alan notes that the conference center’s management said they had Wi-Fi coverage, but when the CTIA organizers checked it out, the venue had seven APs (and two dead ones) covering millions of square feet. Needless to say, the CTIA stepped up to the plate with sponsor Cisco’s help to provide free Wi-Fi in all common areas during the event.
Remarkably, the Atlanta Georgia World Congress Center hasn’t had much call for Wi-Fi. This might reflect the paucity of service or possibly the center’s fee structure for it, too. Or, when organizers discover the dysfunctional system, they book elsewhere. Let’s not do a posteriori reasoning here, Atlanta!
Posted by Glennf at 10:32 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Conference and trade show managers see a trend toward small, targeted conferences, according to a recent survey: Apparently the hottest conferences in 2003 discussed Wi-Fi and the managers expected Wi-Fi to continue to be a hot conference subject through this year.
Posted by nancyg at 10:27 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack
The WiMAX Forum is holding a meeting the day before the Wireless Communications Association’s conference the end of January: A portion of the WiMAX Forum day will be open to anyone and will review current activities of the forum and look at the future of WiMAX.
Posted by nancyg at 11:26 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Wi-Fi Planet announcement round-up: Check out brief coverage of announcements being made at Wi-Fi Planet by a number of companies.
Posted by nancyg at 10:30 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack
SciNet, a volunteer group, will build a massive network to support the SuperComputing Conference in Phoenix next week: Volunteers will build the network in a week then tear it down in two days. It sounds massive—the network will support 150 aggregate gigabits per second and will use more than $16 million in donated gear. Apparently that amount of bandwidth is more than some countries, including Germany, have available in total. As for the Wi-Fi component, the volunteers will deploy 67 access points to distribute the bandwidth around the conference.
Posted by nancyg at 9:46 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Here’s a good excuse to go there: A tourism and technology conference will happen in Cannes, December 11-12. One topic on the agenda is the business case for Wi-Fi in hotels.
Posted by nancyg at 9:39 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack
The fellow who brought you the inexpensive VOIP Wi-Fi phone last week, brings you a wireless summit, Nov. 10-11: I’m the program chair of this really great event from Pulver, the folks behind the VON conference on IP communications (voice over data networks) and Supernova, Kevin Werbach’s event.
Called The Wireless Internet Summit, and running Nov. 10-11 in Santa Clara, Calif., this is an event that if you’re trying to understand the scope of what’s happening across many segments of the Wi-Fi and wireless Internet world, you’ll want to be at. The people who will be presenting are doers and makers. They’ve changed or are changing the world, and will do so again.
What I like about Pulver’s events is that they pull from the entire spectrum: it’s not all commercial, all public sector, all open source — it’s all aspects of a subject. I mean, dig the line up on this panel on the case for free Wi-Fi hot spots: Matt Peterson, Founder, BAWUG (and a Surf and Sip employee); Matt Westervelt, Founder, SeattleWireless.net; Mike Masnick, Founder, Techdirt; Scott Bruntjen, Mayor, Town of Nederland. I can’t wait.
Like many niche events with a laser beam focus, it’s not cheap: $1,795 if you register before Nov. 10. However, since you’re a beautiful, handsome, and intelligent reader of this fine publication, you can get 25 percent off by using the simple code FLEIS when you register. See, I just made you some money today, because you were planning to come to this event already, right?
Full disclosure: I don’t get a cent from referrals.
Posted by Glennf at 3:41 PM | Comments (3) | TrackBack
If you can make it to San Diego next week, the 2003 International Wireless Symposium starts Sept. 22: They’ve got a bunch of wireless industry folks lined up to speak and are touting a panel on ultrawideband. There will also be a venture capital panel on Tuesday, for anyone trying to get their hands on some cash.
Posted by nancyg at 10:16 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack
The availability of a network might reduce…what was I writing? Oh, yes, attention span: Matt Richtel turns in, as usual, a hilarious piece that combines technology and sociology as he paints a picture of the alpha geeks with something approaching attention deficit disorder.
I, too, am a sufferer. With a wireless network around, I’m compelled to check email, send email, write blogs entries, and communicate via instant messaging.
Maybe I should just listen to the presenter?
A useful exercise for those of us afflicted: take a trip without electronic devices and communication. During a week in Costa Rica, a country with abundant Internet cafes, I limited myself to one mid-week 30-minute email check to confirm that all my systems were running and that no emergencies had cropped up in which someone couldn’t reach me. It was a lovely experience, and worth repeating.
Posted by Glennf at 12:36 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack
The Wall Street Reporter hosts a Wi-Fi sector conference call July 30: The list of roundtable panelists is up on the site, focusing on investors. Fee is $125, and the one-hour call will include time for audience questions.
Posted by Glennf at 11:41 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Good session, but several questions were answered at the end that go beyond what’s generally reported with Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA).
I asked whether in a pre-shared secret situation with WPA, which is what most home and small business users who aren’t running authentication servers will need to use, the master key used to create the encryption session could be used to unlock other users’ encrypted packets. The answer is yes: that is, even though WPA provides robustness, unless you use 802.1x and an authentication server, the shared key allows the same (although perhaps involving more work) transparency of other network traffic.
WPA will be required after August 31 for Wi-Fi certification. Interestingly, even though EAP-TLS, one way of running 802.1x, isn’t part of WPA, the test requires that a device passes two EAP-TLS tests — so it’s not part of the formal standard, but it is required!
With Microsoft developing 802.1x/xEAP clients, is there room for Meetinghouse (one of the presenters’ companies) making other clients? Hard to compete against Microsoft, but room for clients for Mac, Unix, Linux, etc.
Posted by Glennf at 8:17 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Microsoft’s Jawad Khaki (Corporate Vice President, Windows Networking and Communications Technologies, Microsoft Corporation) delivered a keynote here at 802.11 Planet in Boston in which he showed a number of current uses, but then had several of his team demonstrate pervasive collaborative computing performing voice over IP over wireless, streaming multiple high-definition video streams, and playing Xbox games. None of it is per-se cutting edge, but it was all simple interface, it worked, and had consumer interests at heart.
Announced: Windows CE .NET 4.2 Network Gateways Solution: secure network gateways, deploy them in an integated fashion, extensible architecture. I really know nothing about how this, but it’s apparently news. Many many vendors (AMD, Braodcom, Intel, TI, etc.) buying off on this.
One of his remarks: “What I call the evil NATs” are stifling the ability for people to get connected. (Interestingly, Bob Frankston, who worked at Microsoft to develop home networking the mid-90s, told me in late 2002 that he calls himself the father of NAT and said that NAT was one of the biggest mistakes he made. He shoulda gone with IPv6, he said.)
Khaki said 25% of Microsoft users say they save 1/2 to 1 hour per day with Wi-Fi. He asks, “Did they use that time to improve their lives or did they give it to Microsoft?”
Posted by Glennf at 6:53 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Seaport Hotel appropriate for 802.11 Planet conference in two weeks: Free wireless in public areas; free wired in rooms. I guess that answers the question on one of the panels I’m moderating, “Will People Pay?” at 802.11 Planet.
After noting Wyndham’s free By Request affinity program, which provides free wired and wireless broadband in rooms and public areas for free, I spoke to a Marriott PR person today, who noted that Marriott has a very successful new offering: $9.95 per night for unlimited local calls, long-distance (US) calls, and high-speed service. This is far from free, of course, but it’s often the consistency and single price that drive the business market.
As the Marriott spokesperson pointed out, cell phones don’t always cut it in hotel rooms, and offering this ten buck package certainly will appeal to travelers trying to have a predictable bill. At a recent stay at the Westin Santa Clara (California), they offered the same kind of package but for about $15 per night.
I continue to think that the end game will involve hotels realizing that performing 2.5G and 3G cell phones remove the modem and casual data market, requiring them to really understand how to charge for those services (if they charge at all) moving forward.
Posted by Glennf at 9:48 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack
First international conference on moblogging: Moblogging ties together smart mobs (groups using technology to exchange webs of information through portable devices) and blogging (people like me writing about things other people have said) into collaborative news and commentary. The conference is one day in Tokyo from 10 am to 6 pm. More information should follow at the site.
Posted by Glennf at 2:16 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack
802.11 Planet conference in Boston June 25-27: I’ll be there with bells on moderating two panels. I expect the discussion and trade show to be even better than the excellent event last December in Santa Clara.
Posted by Glennf at 12:37 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack