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Help Wanted

February 28, 2007 by james | Comments Off | Filed in Life, Technology, WiFi

With only three and a half months left in Grand Rapids, it’s time for me to start passing along one of my few locally-based responsibilities. Building up Grand Rapids WiFi has been a great way to get to know the city and to learn a few new coding tricks, and I hope to keep enhancing the code, but it needs someone locally based who can keep their finger on the pulse of new wifi hotspots and make occasional visits to keep the site up to date.

So if you’re based in Grand Rapids (preferably the city rather than the ‘burbs, as that’s where most of the hotspots are) and would like to help out, let me know. The minimal advertising revenue to the site doesn’t cover its hosting costs, so there’s no money in it, but it’s really very little work and makes a satisfying little contribution.

Wood TV’s WiFi Scare Mongering

January 10, 2007 by james | 2 Comments | Filed in Media and Politics, WiFi

As usual I’m spending some of the morning at Common Ground Coffee Shop. This morning a crew from local news providers, Wood TV 8 channel turned up and filmed those of us making use of the wifi service for a piece they’re preparing on WiFi in the City of Grand Rapids. When they asked to film me, I told them about my WiFi site and they said they may interview me.

But they didn’t. Instead they talked to every other customer using a computer, asking entirely wrong-headed questions about security issues those customers were clearly not all that familiar with. They were suggesting that other customers could be sniffing the network and stealing, for example, banking information. They skipped the fact that every reputable banking site encrypts that data from the web browser to the bank’s server.

There are real issues to be confronted if using WiFi for sensitive work and most people don’t encrypt their email and some usernames/passwords when working on public networks. Software vendors and service providers need to do more to help people learn what and how to encrypt. But most banking sites do a pretty good job of using encryption, as does almost anyone accepting online payments, and it’s not hard for a web user to be shown how to make sure that encryption is being used. And once that’s done you’re probably more at risk from someone watching over your shoulder as from sending the data across the network.

It’s not really that I care to be interviewed by the local (corporate shill) media. It’d be nice to promote a website I work on, but that’s beside the point. What’s really frustrating is having just experienced corporate media scare-mongering so close up but had my offer to clarify the issues rejected. Maybe it’ll all be edited out or someone who understands these things will be invited to comment, but I’m not holding my breath.

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WiFi at O’Hare International Airport

August 23, 2006 by james | Comments Off | Filed in WiFi

I was very pleased to hear that Chicago O’Hare finally has wifi available for travellers. They’ve been lagging behind other airports in that regard. Previously the only option for getting online were booths where you pay around $5 for 15 minutes access.

The new system is not free, but it does seem to have pretty good coverage across the terminals. Unfortunately it is also painfully slow quite a bit of the time, making me wonder if the convenience of being online is worth the frustration of waiting quite so long for sites to load.

In true “web 2.0″ style, the service is marked “beta”. Hopefully that means it’ll improve with time.

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Sweetwaters

August 23, 2005 by james | No Comments | Filed in Front Page, WiFi

I’ve been doing some work focussed on the west side of Grand Rapids so have been taking the opportunity to explore a part of town I rarely make it to. Today’s destination was Sweetwaters, a small coffee shop on West Fulton, a little further west than Hungry Heart Cafe. It’s a distinctive place, with wood panelled walls, faux-antique lamps, lots of framed prints and posters, and some appropriately ugly sideboards.

There’s a broad range of gourmet coffees on offer alongside the usual range of espresso drinks and a small sandwich menu. Power outlets are easy to find along the walls and there’s one in easy reach of all but three of the (ten) tables. Access is stable and fairly speedy and the atmosphere is low-key enough to make this a pretty good place to get work done.

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WiFi: FreedomNet (Citywide WiFi Trial)

June 2, 2005 by james | 4 Comments | Filed in WiFi

Having had some problems using the Four Friends network this morning, I decided to have a go with one of the areas being used to trial the service of a possible Grand Rapids Citywide WiFi vendor. Since I was close to the 60 Monroe Centre location for FreedomNet’s service that was my first port of call.

The range was good (I discovered I could actually detect the network from outside Four Friends), but unfortunately I wasn’t able to use the service. My laptop picked up the network and (after quite a while) directed me to the FreedomNet homepage to log in, but on trying to log in I was presented with the message:

Your MAC address is undefined. Problem with the gateway?

Since the problem persisted for several minutes, I gave up. Hopefully future attempts will be more successful.

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WiFi at Bite

February 2, 2005 by james | No Comments | Filed in WiFi

Bite‘s staff know how to brew their (starbucks) espresso drinks well, and their connection is a very reasonable 300kbps up/212kbps down, but other than that it’s hard to recommend the downtown Grand Rapids bistro as a destination for WiFi usage.

With prices rather higher than most of my usual wifi haunts, a complete absence of power outlets (short of unplugging some of the lamps) and small tables, Bite is one of the more disappointing offerings in the downtown area. It definitely has a charm and would likely be a good destination for lunch, but the prices and the lack of amenities rule it out for regular, serious usage.

I’m off back to Four Friends.

WiFi at Wealthy Street Bakery

January 28, 2005 by james | No Comments | Filed in WiFi

I was very pleased a couple of months ago when I was told that Wealthy Street Bakery had finally switched on their wireless router. Wealthy Street serve the best sandwiches in Grand Rapids, along with a range of great sweet foods. But somehow we’ve never had occasion to stop here for any length of time since then so I hadn’t been able to test it. Till now.

The connection speed is very similar to Four Friends, rating at 344kpbs up/274kbps down when I tested it. Everything has been running smoothly, though I’ve not been making any substantial data transfers or doing any remote working. From my limited use of FTP I’d guess working via SSH would be an option.

Over lunchtime the environment was a little noisy for high-concentration working, but once the rush drops off it’s a great space with a lot of light. As with so many locations that have lately added wireless, there isn’t much in the way of access to power. A few outlets around the walls are about as far as it goes, but when things are quiet that’s not a problem.

With so many other spots a short walk from our house I’m unlikely to make this a regular spot for work, but when good sandwiches are needed, it’s well worth checking out.

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WiFi at Four Friends

January 24, 2005 by james | No Comments | Filed in WiFi

Four Friends Coffee House has been one of those places I’ve been meaning to visit since I first started visiting Grand Rapids. One of the town’s more talked about coffee shops, it was also one of the earlier adopters of WiFi. Finally, this evening I’ve made it here.

The first thing that struck me was the good sized tables found towards the rear of the cafe. Too many coffee shops are stuck with tables not really suited to a work environment so a few tables with space for more than one laptop is a welcome sight. A few more power outlets and it’d make a very good spot for meetings. The connection clocks up at a respectable 345kbps up/228kbps down—nothing outstanding, but definitely usable for most tasks.

The atmosphere is difficult to gauge. In just half an hour the music has varied widely, and the current choice of 90s dance tunes isn’t the most conducive to a relaxed environment, but other than that the selection would mostly fit comfortably in films like “Almost Famous” or “High Fidelity,” options I’d say were about right. It may well be a case of picking your visiting times.

Four Friends is certainly one of the better options in downtown Grand Rapids, and the selection of coffees is great. It’s unlikely I’ll be back for a while as snow has rather curtailed my habit of cycling downtown and Common Ground remains my coffee shop of choice, but it’s good to know it’s here.

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WiFi at Global Infusions

January 15, 2005 by james | No Comments | Filed in WiFi

I’d been meaning to get back to Global Infusions with my laptop since I first noticed that they offer wifi access. Alongside a shop selling the fairly traded Ten Thousand Villages range of craft products and a selection of teas and health herbs, there is a tea/coffee bar and four tables, and the most multi-ethnic range of music of any of Grand Rapids’ coffee shops.

The atmosphere is very relaxed. There’s a steady stream of people in and out this Saturday morning but few enough that the shoppers don’t distract those of us who are here to read or work. Two of the owners are running the place and there’s a good rapport between staff and customers. I hear that things have been going very well so far for the shop, which opened at the same time as various other outlets in the new East Hills development. They’re offering live music every other Friday night, as well as a range of poetry and other events.

For WiFi users the connection speed seems good, though I’m the only user currently on the network, with decent download rates, tolerable latency for remote working, and a very strong signal. What is currently lacking are power outlets within reach of any of the tables, so don’t come here intending to spend a long time or with a low battery. If, on the other hand, you’re looking for a short stay or laptop use is only part of the reason for your visit Global Infusions is yet another worthy destination.

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Grand Rapids WiFi: Find Your Nearest Locations

January 8, 2005 by james | No Comments | Filed in WiFi

Since I took over the Grand Rapids WiFi site I’ve been wanting to let users search by location, finding all their nearest spots. What I lacked was any simple way of converting addresses into longitude/latitude so that I could then do the calculations required.

While exploring the Wireless London project recently I followed a few links and discovered geocoder.us, a site that provides just that data. So a quick interface to their web services offering, a little application of pythagoras’ theorem, and it’s all in place on the search page.

Inspired by the Wireless London project, I also added RDF/XML versions of all the location data on the site. For any techies so inclined, you can get to that through link tags in each location page’s html header.