Saturday, July 30, 2011

Just for the record...

...I made it out to both the remaining Borders locations in the last couple of days, and both apparently are still lit up. There's an open 802.11g network at each broadcasting a SSID of BORDERS. Whether the routers are still connected to anything, I can't say since I didn't bother bringing in my Mac-and since the cafes at both locations have been shut down, there's no place to sit with a laptop anyway.

Maybe one of you with a handheld device can drop by and fill us in, but you'd better do it fast. Those shelves are starting to look rather bare.

Saturday, July 23, 2011

Borders buys the farm

There'll be two fewer free and open hotspots in the metro soon-in fact, they may already be gone.  The remaining Borders bookstore locations around town-the one Macenstein reviewed last November in Lee's Summit and the Olathe location-along with a Borders Express location over on Quivira Road in Johnson County that wasn't lit up are currently conducting their going-out-of-business sales.  And according to Borders' website, the unwired 91st and Metcalf store closed in May (or was scheduled to).  Whether the routers in the remaining stores have been turned off, I won't know until one of us (or one of you) drops by and finds out.  Given that Borders was outsourcing its Wi-Fi to Verizon, it's likely they have gone cold for good.

Too bad.  Maybe they should have abandoned play-for-pay and joined the free world sooner than they did, as I intimated in this post commemorating the fifth anniversary of "One Unwired Day" nearly three years back.  It might have helped.

Arch-cybercriminality-or what passes for it-in Washington state

Had to laugh when I ran across this little tidbit from Freeland, Washington. You've got to wonder why anyone would go to all that trouble to "steal" what would amount to only several cents' worth of electricity. The gasoline this miscreant burned getting to the library's parking lot would have cost her much more. She's obviously never contemplated why counterfeiters don't make dollar bills.

And kudos to the library manager for getting right on the case. A suggestion, if I might: If the few dollars a month you stand the potential of losing via this outdoor outlet are worth it to you, call an electrician and have an internally-mounted switch installed on the circuit so you can turn it off before you leave each night. That might not be a bad policy to follow with respect to your wi-fi router(s) as well if users congregating on your property after hours is a concern.

Yes, technically this is stealing...but it's still hilarious when you think about it.

Tuesday, July 05, 2011

Why the rush-or lack thereof?

This just in, courtesy of Glenn Fleishman at Wi-Fi Networking News:  Taco Bell unwires-slowly but surely.

Seriously, if the tone of the press release Fleishman quotes is any indication, even Taco Bell's management doesn't seem too enthusiastic about the prospects for this combination Wi-Fi/television package, which won't even be in all 5,600 of their locations until 2015.  That's right-four years to roll out less than 6,000 hotspots.  By then not only will direct competitor McDonald's have roughly a decade-long head start as a Wi-Fi venue, as Fleishman points out, but both they and indirect competitor Starbucks will have been free and open for half  that time. 

And maybe it's just because I'm not the fan of Mexican food that others are, but Taco Bell has always struck me as being more of a grab-and-go place than a sit-and-surf one.  I'm sure that changing that perception is one of their motiviations for this, but once again, four years is a long time period over which to try and effect that change.  It's also still somewhat of an open question whether a scheme that sounds suspiciously like an attempt to replicate the shop-at-home craze that accompanied the rise of cable TV in the 1980s is the best way to do it.

Look for reviews once the rollout reaches the metro...if it ever does.