Friday, December 15, 2006

Well, if you're going to Raytown anyway-

City Grounds
6200 Raytown Trafficway, Raytown

802.11g
SSID: City Grounds Coffee Shop


I took the long way back from Lee's Summit just to finally give myself a chance to check this location out. There are at least a couple of tables by power outlets, but the place is rather small so plugging in might be a problem if it's crowded. Also, it closes rather early for a coffee shop-7 p. m. On the plus side, the windows are narrow and have blinds, so I'd guess that LCD readability wouldn't be a problem in the daytime.

And the last one...

...is one I really needn't have bothered with.


Atlanta Bread Company in Lee's Summit now has WEP encryption on their wireless network, meaning the location-regardless of whether access is still free-is beyond this blog's scope. So I can't tell you whether you'd have a better experience there than I did a few months ago. Too bad.

Two down, one to go.

You can knock the Town Pavilion off the "Gee, I wonder if I'll fare any better there now that my laptop's Wi-Fi antenna is fixed?" list. The signal is still too low in my opinion, but I'm not getting repeatedly knocked off as I did during my last visit. Unfortunately, there are still too few power outlets and too many other unsecured networks to make for a totally pleasant experience. I think I'd only bother with this place for a quick lunch or something similar-which is probably what the management has in mind.

And are they ever going to lose that stupid login page?

Thursday, December 14, 2006

As promised...

...I've just made my first return trip to a location where I'd experienced signal strength problems before fixing my laptop's antenna. Sure enough, I'm showing all five bars and an "Excellent" strength rating at the Plaza Library. If memory serves, the only other places I really bombed out at were the Town Pavilion downtown (although I still think the problems there were on their end, since I didn't have trouble at the coffeehouse across the street) and the Atlanta Bread Company cafe in Lee's Summit. It'll be a while, but just to be fair I'll try and hit both again in the coming weeks.

Wednesday, December 06, 2006

Mea culpa, and a couple of other things.

As you may have noticed, lately I've tended to report problems with low signal strength at most of the sites I've recently visited. When I realized I was seeing them at more and more locations where they had never been a problem before, I began to suspect the problem might lie a bit closer to home-to wit, with my aging laptop computer rather than with the networks themselves. That suspicion grew to a near-certainty when I started seeing only one or two bars from my home access point in the next room.


Well, I was right.


One of the antenna wires on my built-in Wi-Fi adapter had chafed and come in two,
and after jury-rigging a quick repair, I'm happy to report that I'm now receiving the expected "excellent" signal strength rating at home. So...assuming the laptop holds out long enough (as you might expect, it's long out of warranty and has more of its days behind it than ahead, and it wasn't in the best shape even before my amateur surgery), I'll try to make a return trip soon to as many of the locations where I've had trouble lately as I can, and report the results here.


And while I'm here, a little more about AT&T's free access between now and Christmas. First of all, the offer isn't valid at any McDonald's restaurants. Sorry for forgetting to mention that. Second, I made a second trip to the Mid Continent Public Library's Blue Springs South branch, and while there are a few available power outlets against the back wall (look under the windows; there are also chairs and at least one table adjacent to them), I didn't get enough signal there to stay reliably connected even with my USB adapter connected via an extension cable, which leads me to believe that a return visit with my newly repaired laptop wouldn't be particularly fruitful. If, however, you're going there anyway and don't plan to stay any longer than you can work on battery power at the tables up front, it might be worth toting your laptop along.


And while once again
I stress that play-for-pay is really off-topic here, I feel I've got to comment on something. In addition to the library, I stopped at a bookstore with an AT&T hotspot hoping to perhaps cool my heels in the cafe for a bit and use the coupon code to check for any updates to my anti-malware programs while bringing my battery back up to full charge. Well, I could have settled for two out of three if I'd wanted to; there were no power outlets anywhere-not just in the cafe, but anywhere else in the store, as far as I could see. Now isn't that just ducky? Pay $8 a day for Wi-Fi, and only get to use it for as long as your battery lasts!

I can understand a free hotspot-particularly one that would be hurt by large numbers of "campers"-wanting to turn customers over by making them go battery-only, but if you're play-for-pay you don't have that excuse. You're partnering with someone who's taking money in return for something, and you have a shared responsibility with that partner to deliver it.

And speaking of that partner...shouldn't someone at AT&T be looking into this?