Time Warner Customers Get Free Wi-Fi Hotspots 113
Hotspots writes with a link to a BusinessWeek article discussing a new service that Time Warner Cable is offering to its customers. Flying in the face of most business decisions about Wi-Fi availability, Time Cable customers will soon be able to turn their connections into public wireless hotspots. This privilege comes as Time Warner inks a deal with the Spanish startup Fon, which is already operating a similar deal with ISPs in Europe. "For Time Warner Cable, which has 6.6 million broadband subscribers, the move could help protect the company from an exodus as free or cheap municipal wireless becomes more readily available. Fon was founded in Spain in 2005 on the premise that people shouldn't have to pay twice -- once at home, then again in a coffee shop -- for Internet access. At first, the company offered software that let members, called Foneros, turn Wi-Fi routers into shared access points, but it took hours to get up and running."
With their reliability, TWC hotspots are worthless (Score:5, Informative)
Re:With their reliability, TWC hotspots are worthl (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:With their reliability, TWC hotspots are worthl (Score:4, Funny)
My verizon dsl was so much better,
but they won't wire my new apt.
something about the neighbor's
backyard and pitbulls were a few of
the obstacles they mentioned.
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Cable guy: upload 45kb/sec / stapled big thick black coax cable to brand new painted white wood, effectively ruining it, and cabled right across my removable radiator cover, rendering it unremovable.
At least this time he didn't pull out one of those 2 foot long drills and drill a hole straight through the wall like they usually do.
But Verizon actually gave up on their install at my new place.... so.
Don't get me wrong they are all evil megacorporat
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I understand their customer service could be better, but to say they are incapable of maintaining a cable connection when somebody else destroys it, is just silly.
Re:With their reliability, TWC hotspots are worthl (Score:5, Funny)
Re:With their reliability, TWC hotspots are worthl (Score:5, Informative)
We have a large list of all the zones in our district, all with specific building codes and regulations that state what we can and cannot do with the cable. Some places actually ban us completely from burying any new wires or doing anything to repair them (as the construction/tearup of the ground would look unsightly), so the most that we're left to do is to try and neaten up the cable as best possible (though some city zones even forbid this. You don't want to be a customer living in those areas.)
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You shouldn't have told me that - now I'm going to hassle you endlessly!
Seriously though, what's up with the crappy pixellated images on the digital cable channels, and the blocking and tiling on the HD channels? We've had reps out to our house to look at it, we've tried every suggestion TWC made to fix it, and it still happens. Is it like that for everyone, or do I just live in an area with too little bandwidth?
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Re:With their reliability, TWC hotspots are worthl (Score:4, Informative)
Obviously, some people have better luck than others. I am a very happy RR customer and look forward to using these hotspots as they come online.
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I look at AT&T for DSL every once in a while (and Grande for a bundle, too), but neither serve my area in north Austin with anything more than the lowest speed DSL (1.5Mbps). Since I wo
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Also, some time in the last few months, they have massively upgraded their news servers here in Kansas City. Not only do they have 2 weeks of retention, but I can download from the newsgroups at around 7.5mb/s
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Econ digression (and ranting about fscktastic) (Score:2)
Potential customers cannot easily measure quality, but can readily see who has the lowest price, so they usually make their decisions on price alone.
Naive potential customers can't. However, the general consensus in this area that the Cable is cheaper for the same speed levels, but the downtime over the last five years has averaged about ten times higher, including regular multi-day outages. This is easily discovered with even the slightest effort at research. The local university Mac support mailing li
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(Peopleware says that in software, this is ultimately more expensive than letting developers work to their on standards of quality. That doesn't apply in this situation, though.)
Re:With their reliability, TWC hotspots are worthl (Score:5, Insightful)
Your astute economic analysis explains why after 70 years that Toyota, the horrendously unreliable competition to ultra-reliable GM, is now the world's top selling car manufacturer
oh wait
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You know of a time when cars were designed to run for one million miles or fifty years, whichever came first?
The first cars, mass-produced or not, broke down ALL THE TIME. If they seemed to last longer, it's because (1) people didn't drive nearly as much as they do today, and (2) they were constantly maintaining them.
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Re:With their reliability, TWC hotspots are worthl (Score:2)
I don't use warner cable (Dish) because the "digital" cable signal was digital crap. The signals were much better five years ago than today. I don't think they are watching their satellites any more. You get something that is a bad signal on a 27" TV and yet other stations are crystal clear. To me that says they are taking a bad signal, digitizing it and sending that out.
However... my cable connection is fine and runs about $54 a month.
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Maybe it was for business class customers only.. but I don't think that was the case.
Re:With their reliability, TWC hotspots are worthl (Score:1)
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Re:With their reliability, TWC hotspots are worthl (Score:2)
I've really had no issues with RoadRunner that I can remember for the last 5 years.
Of course, from what I've heard Time Warner / RoadRunner San Diego is one of the best.
Re:With their reliability, TWC hotspots are worthl (Score:1)
let the phishing begin! (Score:4, Insightful)
Moves like this really don't seem to help the public in terms of security education, IMHO...
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But...??? (Score:4, Interesting)
http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=07/04/23/1
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If you troll child porn chatrooms and have DVD's loaded with kiddie porn, then is probably isn't for you. 8)
Re:But...??? (Score:4, Informative)
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How is this any different from the data that they could be collecting on their customers right now?
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Why would a home broadband customer (Score:3, Insightful)
want to turn their connection into a free wireless hot-spot?
You pay for a 1-4 MB connection and have the potential to share it with 20-30 of your closest friends or what? Wouldn't be worth it in my opinion unless you're a business or something and just want to attract customers.
Re:Why would a home broadband customer (Score:5, Interesting)
That's the theory. In practice, I don't see hotspots in any locations I might want to get access from (because they're nearly all residential and I use wifi hotspots on business) and, for the same reason, I can't see a residential hotspot generating much revenue.
Re:Why would a home broadband customer (Score:5, Informative)
Aliens - Non-FON users who pay for access at FON access points belonging to either of the following groups.
Linuses - FON users who do not receive any monetary compensation (other than a majorly discounted router), but get free access to any FON access point owned by a Linus or Bill
Bills - FON users who get 50% of the proceeds from aliens using their access point. They don't get free access to other FON APs owned by Bills or Linuses.
So if you live in the middle of nowhere, it makes lots of sense to become a Linus. Your AP will almost never be used by others (and if it is, you can restrict their bandwidth to a reasonably large degree), but you get free access to any other FON APs when you're on the road.
Re:Why would a home broadband customer (Score:4, Funny)
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(and of course if you link out to some other pay site then....)
Why a home broadband customer would ... (Score:1)
I've got two net connections to my house, 6MB down/.5MB up & 20MB down/2MB up, so a typical 802.11g connection or two isn't gonna be much of a hit. The net traffic most hotspots
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Huge implications (Score:3, Interesting)
Second, no-one can sue you if they can't prove you were downloading the movie... if you've got a public WiFi, it could've been anyone, right?
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And those people will then get WoW, SBC/Ameritech or dialup connections and use those for better performance/reliability...
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the reverse dns for a Road Runner customer should look like cpe-#ip address#.#region#.res.rr.com
this breaks down to
cpe= Customer Premises Equipment
ip address = what do you think?? you do belong on Slashdot right??
region = "which" timewarner
res =residential service
rr.com = primary domain
(oh btw triad ips seem to be more or less static)
"Free" wifi hotsputs, huh (Score:1)
I pay Time Warner for bandwidth. Then I use Fonera's software so that I can give my bandwidth away to others. They pay Fonera a couple bucks for a day of access, and Fonera splits this price with Time Warner.
Anything I'm missing here?
Seems like you'd be better off investing in some quality Florida swampland
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Re:"Free" wifi hotsputs, huh (Score:5, Informative)
You maintain a hotspot (with two SSIDs, one with a 10 digit WEP key, the other open) and let people access your hotspot over the open SSID. In turn, you either get half the revenue generated on your hotspot, or you get free access to any other hotspot operated by FON. If you live in a high density area (near a Starbucks, big apartment etc) you can subsidize your hotspot, if you don't you get free wifi roaming. If you're not interested in either, don't get the router. It's not like Time Warner is going to force you to sign up.
They charge $2 a day for access and don't have density in the US yet (they're bigger in Europe and Asia) but they seem to be growing. Personally, I've run across one FON hotspot when I actually needed one, and found two more when I didn't really need access or had a wired connection, but there's a Starbucks near my house (in Toronto) where the Chinese restaurant next door runs a FON access point. I've never been (don't like Starbucks coffee) but my friends use the FON signal all the time.
Ultimately, what this means is that Time Warner is allowing (encouraging?) people to maintain open access points, and will update their terms of service to reflect this.
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It'd be cool if they gave you two IPs (Score:2)
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So...basically both open.
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So wait,
I pay Time Warner for bandwidth. Then I use Fonera's software so that I can give my bandwidth away to others. They pay Fonera a couple bucks for a day of access, and Fonera splits this price with Time Warner.
Anything I'm missing here?
My understanding is something like this: Aliens pay Fonera $X per day of access. Fonera used to take a Y% cut of the money, and give the rest to you for the use of your bandwidth. After this deal, Fonera will take a Y% cut, Time Warner will take another Z% cut, and you get the rest for the use of your bandwidth.
That's a lot off the top, but if it's not worth it then don't sign up. I expect they will adjust their payouts until they get enough interest.
The big change here is that Time Warner is get
Wifi in cafes (Score:1)
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There are some restaurants and/or cafes in the US that offer free WiFi. Two that spring immediately to mind are Panera [panera.com] and the McDonalds I occasionally frequent with my 3-year-old (not all MickeyD's offer free WiFi, but the number that do has risen signficantly). Many smaller cafe's also offer free WiFi. Starbuck's is a notable exception; this is part of the reason I don't frequent Starbucks. Many of those smaller cafes with free WiFi also serve superior coffee :-)
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La Fonera Routers (Score:3, Interesting)
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You haven't seen any instructions? Where the heck did you look [google.com]?
Twice? I pay three times. (Score:1)
To be fair, I think that gives me access to T-Mobile hotspots, but I have no need for those.
TW not first, see Speakeasy (Score:4, Interesting)
FON is interesting for it's dual network access point. I'm running one right now (in Austria) and it does a fine job. It does seem to suffer a bit when both public and private networks are in use, though. It also "phones home" for regular updates that are outside my control. A few weeks ago one such update killed our ability to pick up Google Mail via SSL/POP. The fixed the bug within a couple weeks, but it is still odd to be running my network with an access point so totally out of my control.
Speakeasy no longer (Score:1, Redundant)
AT&T has had this for ages (Score:3, Informative)
Whoops, the part about having to pay twice (Score:1)
And? (Score:1)
New to the U.S., current business model for Europe (Score:4, Interesting)
ISPs who lease or just install a CPE box will have multiple WiFi SSIDs running. One for the client, the other advertising their network. So whenever a client roams and finds an access point with the name of their provider, they can use their login credentials and get their own internet connection. This second connection is completely separate from the client's connection, there is no shared IP address or bandwidth.
I think there is a big gap in knowledge of how modern broadband works between those in the U.S. and those in Europe or the Far East. I'm seeing this more and more on american oriented sites like slashdot, "ignorance" is too strong a word, but certainly "lack of understanding" comes close. Internet technologies are pulling way ahead outside of the U.S., where the last mile has seen great advances in both business models and creative uses of technology. When the bandwidth of the last mile (between a head-end and the customer premises) gets sufficient to put multiple channels down the line, the client can get much, much more than just an internet connection. With fibre installations going in, the bandwidth can support multiple HD video channels, multiple internet connections, multiple voice channels, private VPN options, roaming, etc. A client can just choose which bandwidth package they want, e.g. Symmetric or Asymmetric, 10 Mbps or 100 Mbps or more. A handful of TV channels, or more than you could ever watch. VoIP calling plans, that are so cheap that calling most of Europe or North America is free for the first few thousand minutes.
So one of the providers in the U.S. had an executive who took a vacation in Europe, saw the amazing new multiplay boxes, and decided it was a good idea to beat their few oligarchic non-rivals to the punch. I'm glad it's News for Nerds in the U.S., things are looking up over there.
the AC
this post needs some emoticons for slight amounts of sarcasm, some humour, and kind of a tsk-tsk sideways look indicating a mix of sympathy and pity, good luck finding
FONonymous P2P and Common carrier (Score:2)
When they serve their court order for the FON log the best they can get is a list of users who were connected at that time. I bet they w
I like FON (Score:2)
Free routers (Score:1)
is this different from lilypadusa? (Score:2)
project lilypad [lilypadusa.org] is a time warner thing in cincinnati... is lilypadusa like a prototype or something? i have heard about FON mostly in europe... they don't seem to have much density in the USA.
speaking of free access points for members, before lilypad in cincinnati, the local phone company cincinnati bell [cincinnatibell.com] offers access to hotspots free for it's customers. the cinbell solution seems to be mostly gas stations and family restaurants.
Time Warner not the first... (Score:1)
It would be interesting to see Fon hook up (Score:2)
The latter offers modified routers to small businesses like restaurants and cafes that would like to offer free WiFi to attract foot traffic. It's paid for by advertising which appears in a banner above the actual Web page as you surf. The advertising is entirely local businesses to local users.
Their concept is that the Net should be like TV - free with advertising - but non-intrusive advertising.
They're only in a few smaller cities at this point, but the business model is inter
And you charge for it? (Score:2)