Cerritos Joins
the Wi-Fi Age
The entire city will have high-speed Internet access
through wireless data transmitters
The city of Cerritos is planning to become the biggest Wi-Fi
hot spot in the nation.
The city inked a deal Monday with Aiirnet Wireless to install
wireless data transmitters throughout its borders to give
residents, businesses and city employees high-speed Internet
access.
Wi-Fi, short for wireless fidelity, operates at speeds comparable
to DSL and cable-modem service. It is popular in so-called
hot spots — usually no wider than a 300-foot radius — such
as hotel lobbies, coffeehouses, airport lounges and malls.
Experts expect it to spread as new technology allows for
wider service areas.
When Cerritos' Aiirnet service goes live in January, customers
will have a seamless online connection throughout the city,
whether from a desktop computer at home or a laptop in a
city park.
"The community is excited about this," City Manager Arthur
Gallucci said. "We've been getting complaints almost every
week from people who want high-speed service and can't get
it."
Until now, some of Cerritos' 50,000 residents have had only
one choice for high-speed Internet access and the rest have
had none.
Verizon Communications Inc., the local phone company, can't
provide DSL service to the southern third of the city, and
the cable service, recently sold to Knology Broadband of
California Inc., hasn't upgraded its wires to provide high-speed
service, Gallucci said.
"It's not unusual to have pockets, or holes in coverage,
in urban areas either because of aging cable systems or because
phone companies' central offices aren't close enough to customers
to provide reliable DSL service," said Stan Hirschman, chief
executive of Aiirnet, which is based in Woodland Hills.
Aiirnet has identified about a dozen Southern California
communities that fit that description, but Hirschman wouldn't
disclose the names.
Turning an entire city into a Wi-Fi hot spot hasn't been
done before, though some companies have gone bankrupt trying,
said David Chamberlain, a Michigan-based analyst for Probe
Group, a research firm.
Aiirnet will deploy its shoe-box-sized radio transmitters
for free on traffic light poles, ball park lighting structures
and city-owned buildings throughout Cerritos, Gallucci said.
The city will have to pay only for the Aiirnet accounts it
wants for 60 building inspectors, code enforcement officers
and others who work in the field and need access to the office
computers.
Meta Group analyst Chris Kozup of San Francisco warned that
interference from other Wi-Fi systems could present a major
problem to Cerritos customers. Wi-Fi operates on an unlicensed
area of the spectrum, and that inevitably leads to collisions.
And it's only going to get worse as more wireless technologies
and customers crowd into the market, he said.
But Aiirnet's chief technology officer, John Griebling,
says the company's technology can reroute calls when a path
is blocked by interference or for other reasons.
Both the company and the city tested Aiirnet's network over
the last few months, looking specifically for interference
and other problems.
"We have a very accurate picture of who's transmitting at
what frequencies," Griebling said.
The contract makes Cerritos the largest customer for 9-month-old
Aiirnet. Gallucci said doing business with a company that
lacked a track record wasn't a problem.
"It's easy when you don't have the service and no one else
is willing to provide it," he said.
Courtesy of the Los Angeles Times
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