City Takes Fast
Track to High-Speed Access
Cerritos, CA Thomas Lee thought it was ridiculous
that he couldn't get high-speed Internet access at his Cerritos
home. Lee lives in the heart of this busy Los Angeles suburb,
which has a reputation for being high-tech.
Shipping
firm owner Thomas Lee can finally work at home nights, when
his overseas clientsare awake.
But his neighborhood, like many in Cerritos, is not served
by cable or digital subscriber line (DSL) providers because
it's too expensive or difficult for them to reach.
Lee complained to City Hall. Dozens of his neighbors did,
too. So city officials decided to bypass cable and DSL companies
and bring broadband directly to all 52,000 residents.
All it took was Wi-Fi.
Wi-Fi, or wireless Internet, sends Web pages through the
air via radio waves. The emerging technology is best known
for providing wire-free Web connections in coffee shops and
airports. But it can also bring broadband to homes and offices.
Cerritos
last week revealed a wireless network that covers the city's
more than eight square miles. That makes it one of a handful
of cities to offer Wi-Fi all over town. There are hundreds
of Wi-Fi networks across the country, but most are private
and limited to a few neighborhoods.
Wi-Fi start-up Aiirmesh built the network with help from
city officials. Its backbone: dozens of toaster-oven-size
antennas perched on buildings, traffic signals and streetlights.
Anyone in the city can get a DSL-quality Internet connection,
if they have a Wi-Fi enabled laptop. The network works the
same on a street corner as it does inside homes. Viewing
city Web sites is free; access to the entire Internet costs
about $30 a month.
Aiirmesh even sells an adapter, for about $100, that lets
personal computers without built-in Wi-Fi use the network.
It's a small receiving antenna that plugs into the back of
the PC, similar to how a cable modem would.
For Lee, who owns an international shipping company, it
means he can work at home in the evenings, when many of his
overseas clients are awake. His 22-year-old son, Wayne, uses
it to surf the Internet and e-mail friends. "We really like
it," Thomas Lee says.
Low cost spurs growth
Wi-Fi is in its infancy, but cities like Cerritos are propelling
it forward fast. Wi-Fi can be the cheapest, easiest way to
bring Internet access to under-serviced areas. It can also
attract laptop users and businesses to downtowns and give
communities a high-tech cachet.
For a major communications system, Wi-Fi is remarkably easy
to install. Wired broadband networks usually require a city
or company to lay expensive cable underground. Wi-Fi antennas
can be plopped almost anywhere there is electricity. "You
can deploy quickly. You don't have to dig anything up," says
Aiirmesh CEO Stan Hirschman.
And it's cheap. Cable and DSL companies told Cerritos it
would cost millions of dollars to bring broadband to all
residents. The Wi-Fi system cost "tens of thousands," Hirschman
says.
Wi-Fi's ease of use also makes it easy for start-ups such
as Aiirmesh to get into the business. The idea for the company
came from several former employees of an early wireless service,
which uses a technology similar to Wi-Fi. They partnered
with Hirschman, a veteran entrepreneur behind several computer
companies. Aiirmesh hopes to get started on eight to 10 Cerritos-size
projects by the end of the year.
But they face dozens of competitors, most similarly scrappy
upstarts with names such as Wayport and Verge Wireless Networks.
The negatives
Wi-Fi does have some drawbacks. It's less secure than DSL
or cable, since anyone with a Wi-Fi laptop can pick up the
signal. Companies and residents can implement security features,
but it takes some technical know-how. Lee says he avoids
doing banking and other sensitive work while on the Wi-Fi
network.
A Wi-Fi signal can also be less reliable. In some situations,
a large truck or tree branch could block a signal, causing
a user to temporarily lose an Internet connection.
Still, Cerritos officials say Wi-Fi is a good solution.
Bringing broadband to town cost very little. Aiirmesh paid
for and owns the network. In return, Cerritos allowed the
company to have access to city facilities, such as traffic
lights and buildings. Aiirmesh can use the electrical power
at those sites.
Cerritos has agreed to buy 60 subscriptions to the service.
They will be used largely by code enforcement officials and
other city employees to file reports while working around
town. Other city and county agencies, such as fire and police,
may someday use the network, too, says Annie Hylton, a Cerritos
manager who worked on the project.
That kind of deal could get more complicated as Wi-Fi matures.
Aiirmesh needs to make money selling subscriptions to cover
its costs. If Aiirmesh doesn't profit in Cerritos, it could
someday pull out, leaving Cerritos without Internet access.
That already happened once with Ricochet, an early wireless
Internet service that Cerritos tested in 2001.
Or, if the service takes off, competitors could want to
put their own antennas on Cerritos traffic lights and buildings.
The city says it will consider all proposals.
But these drawbacks aren't stopping Cerritos, or other cities.
Rural Nevada, Mo., recently built a Wi-Fi network after
being unable to woo traditional broadband carriers. The network
provides service to the entire town, which is about eight
square miles. "We spent $20,000 to do this ourselves," City
Manager Craig Hubler says. "The cable companies were looking
to spend $2 million (to install wired broadband)." The service
costs residents about $30 a month and is also used by police
and other local officials.
Twenty-four blocks in downtown Athens, Ga., have Wi-Fi,
thanks to a partnership between the town and the University
of Georgia. A group of students and professors spent about
$85,000 to build the network, which is free. About 75% of
users are students, and the rest are local professionals
who come to downtown to work. Telecommunications professor
Scott Shamp, who heads the program, says he expects community
networks to take off. "I'm getting calls from all over the
world," he says.
Provided by By Michelle Kessler
& Robert Hanashiro, USA TODAY
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