Friday, February 26, 2010

"I am the ghost of Christmas past..."

McDonald's
3255 Main, Kansas City

802.11g
SSID: attwifi

As Santa and ath64 promised before the holidays, all you have to do at an unwired McDonald's anymore is click through two pages-the second with a checkbox indicating you agree to Ma Bell's acceptable use policy (and if you think Verizon's AUP is long-winded, ath64, you ought to get a load of this one) and you're off and running. Like just about all the free-and-open Mickey D locations that preceded the Great Emancipation, this one doesn't have any power outlets available, making it a battery-only proposition. Well, they don't call it fast food for nothing.

And after having taken a gander at McDonald's restaurant finder, it seems to me that we might have to rethink how much of an effect their joining the free world will have on narrowing the local digital divide. Even with their new locations, there's still a great dearth of known sites in the areas served by the Bluford and Southeast branch libraries. In fact, unless anyone else knows otherwise, those libraries are still the only hotspots around.

Nonetheless, the more free and open sites there are-regardless of where they are-the more pressure there is on those still clinging to play-for-pay-and that's not a bad thing.

It's free, open and in KCK...for now, at least.

Drink A Latte
3900 Rainbow Boulevard, KCK

802.11g
SSID: Drink A Latte

Get there and enjoy it while you can, because not only does it close early for a coffeehouse (5 p. m.), but it may be closing for good in the next few months, since it lies in the path of the massive development project planned for the KU Medical Center area that's just been approved.

That proximity to the med school, by the way, may have something to do with this location's other big downside-almost no convenient parking. Had one of the two spaces reserved for its patrons in the lot of the tiny strip mall it's a part of not been available, I'd have faced a bit of a problem, to say the least.

That aside, the router is a bit glitchy, as the barista on duty volunteered when my first connection attempt failed, but there are a couple of seats next to power outlets along the walls. I don't think the east-facing windows would be a big problem except very early in the morning, and they're tinted dark enough not to raise an issue after that.

Well, here's hoping they find nice nearby accommodations if they do get shunted aside by progress. Wyandotte County needs all the hotspots like this it can get.

Talking the talk is only half the battle.

Memo to the owners of the new establishment where The Coffee Girls used to be:

It's nice that the buzz generated by your launch indicates that you supposedly offer free Wi-Fi. What's not so nice is someone stopping by and not being able to verify that. I mean, who can tell which if any of the dozen or more access points visible from your sidewalk is yours?

O, how long and loudly must the gospel of Help The Customer By Naming Your Access Point To Identify It As Yours be preached? How long?

By the way...you might want to take a look at some of those SSIDs yourself. One of them seen there this afternoon would definitely not be something I'd want to be mistaken for anything associated with my business.

Saturday, February 20, 2010

As Tony Soprano would say...

Had an errand to run out west yesterday afternoon and on the way I thought I'd drop in at the newest public library location over in Wyandotte County just to check things out.  After all, since it's a community library that's only affiliated with the KCK library system as opposed to being a directly administered branch, there was always a chance that its Wi-Fi, as opposed to KCK's, would be truly free and open, right?

Well..fuhgeddaboutit. 

Not only is it restricted to cardholders just like KCK's branches, but the login page still isn't properly secured to protect users' authentication credentials.  It would be bad enough that KCKPL still falsely advertises this network as open on its website even without putting the identities of its patrons at risk of theft.  Then again, I was the only potential user present during my brief visit.  Nor do I recall seeing any other laptops out the last few times I popped into the main KCK library to see if there'd been any change.  I guess some people just don't know how to take a hint.

Sadly, that's a malady that seems to be infecting the private sector as well.  You can also take Tony's advice above with regard to the new coffeehouse with the catchy name and "Wi-Fi" emblazoned on its windows over on the Missouri side in the Armour and Broadway area, unless you want to hassle with obtaining credentials and hooking into a WPA-protected network.  There didn't appear to be anyone there who did when I made a brief finder-scan-and-look-in-the-front-window stop on my way home.