Demographics, Devices and Cafes: Public Wi-Fi Revisited
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click generation the long tail on-line social media web 2.0 visualization mobility transformation shift [email protected]Trends and Technology Series irvin kovar strategic technology advisor Demographics, Devices and Cafes: Public Wi- Fi Revisited 2.0
Demographics, Devices and Cafes: Public Wi-Fi Revisited
A look at the trends behind the global increase in the wireless hotspot and how this may may postively impact the less-than-successful attempts in the US to bring Municiple Wi-Fi into a sustainable mode of operation. A review of success and failure , lessons learned and recommendations. Approaches include collaborative efforts that involve the work performed at the community level in the "free wi-fi" movement , the private sector and more secure public sector institutions to make public wi-fi a success.
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1. Trends and Technology Series
Demographics, Devices and Cafes: Public Wi-Fi Revisited
irvin kovar strategic technology advisor
2.0
2. trends
iPhone, Blackberry and dual-mode devices
are changing the landscape rapidly
Wi-Fi use grows in popularity as more people buy iPhones with
improved seamless log-on capabilities.
In the second quarter, AT&T (News - Alert) handled nearly 15
million Wi-Fi connections on its network, a 41 percent increase
over the first quarter of this year.
With approximately 25.6 million connections so far in 2009, Wi-Fi
connections this year have already surpassed the 20 million
connections seen in all of 2008.
Dual-mode (cellular and Wi-Fi) iPhone and Blackberry
applications are driving a substantial increase in WIFI hot-spot
connections. Thousands of niche applications and fast performance
keep people mobile and on-line.
http://telecom-expense-management-solutions.tmcnet.com/topics/enterprise-mobile-communications/articles/61311-apple-iphone-drives-41-percent-increase-wi-fi.htm#
3. trends
www.jwire.com
As a result public Wi-Fi Hotspots grow 400% worldwide
The number of public Wi-Fi hotspots around the world is on the rise
and has grown from 53,746 in 2004 to 258,853 in June 2009, a 400%
increase, according to a report from JiWire, which also noted 9%
growth between January and June of this year.
Source: Jwire Mobile Audience Insight Survey
4. trends
Apple dominates Wi-Fi useand AppStore names gaming as top
download
In statistics collected specifically from North America, the report
noted that the number of mobile devices accessing Wi-Fi hotspots
grew by 79% in the first half of the year.
Apples iPhone and iPod Touch remain the most popular Wi-Fi-enabled
mobile devices in North America, collectively representing 97.8% of
all mobile-device connections. The Palm Pre debuted as the #5 most
popular mobile device in June 2009, the report said.
Source: Jwire Mobile Audience Insight Survey
5. trends
Cafs double as offices and librariesbut are we studying?
There has been an 18.4% increase in monthly total public Wi-Fi
users from December 2008 - June 2009.
Wi-Fi enabled entertainment devices - such as the Sony PSP and the
iPod Touch remain popular on public Wi-Fi hotspots.
Though more than half of Wi-Fi users in North America access Wi-Fi
service from hotel/resort hotspots (55.3%), the research revealed
that 10.5% now use Wi-Fi services in local cafs and coffee shops as
extended home offices or college libraries, and 83% of these users
connect locally in their own neighborhood.
Those who use Wi-Fi in cafs and coffee shops comprise a desirable
demographic that may be planning more big-ticket purchases in the
near future, JiWire said. This audience is predominantly affluent,
male and between ages 25-49. Four in 10 are business decision
makers with management titles.
Source: Jwire Mobile Audience Insight Survey
6. trends
www.pewinternet.org
The gaming connection to civic participation?
Supported by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the
survey included a sample of 1,102 US youth age 12-17. It analyzed
the relationship between gaming and civic experiences among teens
to test the hypothesis that gaming might be prompting teen
withdrawal from communities.
Instead, it found that gaming can be tied to civic and political
engagement because youth get experience playing games that mirror
aspects of civic and political life, such as thinking about moral
and ethical issues and making decisions about city or community
affairs, according to Pew.
The survey also shows that youth who have such civic gaming
experiences are more likely to be civically engaged in the offline
world. They are more likely than others are to go online to get
information about current events, to try to persuade others how to
vote in an election, to say they are committed to civic
participation, and to raise money for charity.
Source: Pew Internet
7. biz models
A mix of pricing models may be best depending on municipal
objectives and policy
Free provided by local government or with the support of a sponsor
for co-branding opportunities. Local businesses can diminish
operating costs; the city is more attractive to new residents who
see a digital downtown as a value-add.
Free Supported by Advertising banner advertising that promotes
local advertisements for local vendors. Google Adsense is being
used to maximize advertising revenues with great granularity.
Subscription Based a premium-service with guaranteed features and
value. for participants
It would seem that the potential market for Muni Wi-Fi service
grows as businesses and communities converge upon their need for
information, entertainment and social networking. One key metric is
finding out: who are the Notebook and Tablet PC owners in our
city?
Source: Ipsos Insight Technologies
8. biz models
Lower-income or non-users would most readily adopt a no cost
model
Of those adults who are interested in jumping to muni Wi-Fi
service, an equal percentage indicated they would sign up for the
speedier premium service that would require a reduced monthly fee
(40%) as would sign up for the slower free wireless service option
(40%).
In contrast, the majority of those (>60%) who either rely on
dial-up connections at home right now or do not have internet
access at home would opt for the free-service. Migration of current
dial-up users to Wi-Fi-based broadband may represent an attractive
expansion of rich media and location-specific advertising targets
for some market players, according to Ipsos.
The volume of users that could migrate to municipal Wi-Fi access
has the potential to disrupt the online status quo in the US, since
users would not only likely switch Internet service providers, but
likely their current homepages and web search preferences as well.
This also could include a greater focus on location-driven search
requests and results.
Source: Ipsos Insight Technologies
9. free the net
www.betanews.com
Public WIFI has had its challenges
Private firms offered services that limited the true global
reach
of the user. Open, no-charge networks are now breaking down these
barriers
Large-scale private initiatives have proven to be too slow to
market and requests for funding considerable.
Costs of supporting the infrastructure were too high, and private
companies ultimately had to answer to shareholder concerns.
Based on the status of some of the previously mentioned municipal
broadband projects and companies, it appears that many of the
projects are having economic issues that have caused municipalities
or companies to change their plans, delay their plans, or
completely back out.
"After thorough review and analysis of our municipal wireless
business we have decided that making significant further
investments in this business could be inconsistent with our
objective of maximizing shareholder value," EarthLink's Huff
added.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wireless_community_network
http://www.betanews.com/article/Philadelphia-WiFi-project-now-in-jeopardy-EarthLink-may-back-out/1195487302
10. free the net
http://freenetworks.org/
However, non-profit technology groups (and business)
have continued to expand Wi-Fi to serve the community
Technology groups like FREE NETWORKS.ORG exist to create simple
community based ad-hoc networks - as long as it is for reasonable
personal, non-commercial use.
This trend is enabling community-based expansion of a WIFI network,
and relies on the goodwill of the existing DSL access owner.
Some risk may be inherent in these models where ISP and Carrier
Terms of Service may be violated. Better public WIFI solutions can
conceivably these control abuses, but for the most part a high
degree control seems to be exhibited by local business or activists
with strong community ties.
Finally, free and paid WIFI has been now a feature of major
business entities like Starbuck and McDonalds.
http://www.ilesansfil.org/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wireless_community_network
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Municipal_broadband
11. free the net
www.wefi.com
Public WIFI is seen by some as a fundamental right
Younger generations see DSL access as affordable to business and
government and a cost that should not be passed down to the mobile
user.
Reading, surfing and networking are seen as an integral part of the
daily activity of the mobile user like a portal book
A longer stay means, a higher chance of being influenced by the
surroundings, a higher rate of impression and selling products or
services
Better access to government information should not come at a
cost
Promotes a sense of good-will and welcome in a location
Word of mouth promotion to the free portal or location attracts
users and groups of people
A proven higher degree of loyalty to the physical location with
free wifi
39,000,000 hotspots identified world-wide and growing
http://www.wi-fihotspotlist.com/browse/ca/2000256/2100197/
12. free the net
http://www.icasit.org
Counter-argumentsits just a convenience.
What about public interest such as religious groups, political
content, and libellous content? How is the municipality responsible
for claims and concerns?
WIFI is never really free it must be funded somehow. Either through
new grants from other levels of government or new taxation policy.
Public messaging, open access will eventually come in conflict with
advertising on open portals as a way to pay for the service.
WIFI and wireless technology is not static and evolving at a rapid
rate. Large scale network investments run the risk of being
obsolete too rapidly to service ever increasing needs of bandwidth
and applications.
Business has already made significant investment in public WIFI
solutions either paid or free but see competing with a heavily
funded local government as unfair competition. It will eventually
drive them out of the WIFI solution space and take away a tool used
for competitive advantage in the marketplace.
Public WIFI will hamper innovation and runs the risk of remaining
static overall. Business may be able to under-cut the cost of the
municipality and cause wholesale disaffection with the service and
destabilize the investment
The system will have to answer as to how they will create policy
for porn-filtering, to protect against hackers, organized crime and
those who have questionable agendas when they stumble upon a free
wi-fi network.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Municipal_broadband
http://www.eweek.com/c/a/Mobile-and-Wireless/Two-Sides-to-the-Municipal-WiFi-Story/
13. social capital
http://pewinternet.org
Applications and programs drive adoption
Public WIFI allows physical places to nurture social capital
through access to programs and social networks which have the power
to bind the community and inspire the individual
Economic Developers of the New Economy
The on-line presence of local government to promote networking
events, agendas, groups at career development centres, has replaced
the traditional lobby for big smoke stacks.
Address Niche Community Needs for Development,
Promoting local programs and local entrepreneurs
at the CDC brings in new participants. Free wifi changes the
foot-traffic and increases participation.
Neighbourhood and Community Content
Non-profit programs that teach the use of simple
on-line content creation tools and empowering individuals. These
can skills can be transferred into the creation of on-line
micro-businesses that enrich the community.
Neighbourhood Reclamation and Mixed Use Projects
Neighbourhood reclamation projects where arts and mixed-use
business residential, are unique in concept, can further benefit
from WIFI to create mini pockets of digital downtown.
Source: Cities Online: Urban Development and the Internet John
Horriagn, Pew Internet
14. program support
http://www.govtech.com/gt/586482
Bottom up initiatives identifying community leaders and supporting
their community vision. Poll and survey utilization rates then make
the appropriate investment.
Encouraging the long-tail acknowledging the Canadian Entrepreneur
who is connected, creative and web-savvy. Develop micro-strategies
that acknowledge community business character
Financial support, public funding, better wired services for local
governments is essential to supporting performance. Also publicity
and media support to raise profile.
Bridging the interests of low-income communities. Low-income need
more access to essential services.
Vigilance for Net Neutrality the government can help protect the
open and entrepreneurial nature of the Internet as Internet.
Public WIFI will require policy that acknowledges the network as a
public service first a gateway to help communities better serve
themselves
Public-purpose media
education, jobs, immigration,
health care, and other vital issues
Helping low-income join the mainstream.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_neutrality_in_Canada
http://www.mediawithapurpose.com/
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-09-93A1.pdf
15. http://www.muniwireless.com/
public wi-fi 2.0
Recommendations for better Public WI-FI
Better Sponsorship for Stability-Protective Partnerships
Essential
Business cannot be relied upon, even through contract to deliver
fully on the public contract. Public WIFI needs institutions and
entities (schools and libraries for instance) that will not be so
readily subject to market-forces and changes in leadership and
leadership ideologies and priorities.
Training De-Mystify Technology for Key Users
Train residents, specifically those technologically challenged, on
how to make meaningful use of their new found wireless Internet
service.
Needs Assessment Niche Deployments Based on Needs
Bottom-up instead of top-down approach. In particular, identify
community level individuals and groups to develop specific
community needs assessments and gauge, (i.e. through
polling/surveys), the expected utilization rates.
Public/Private WIFI Leverage Existing Infrastructure
Focus Wi-Fi on areas with existing infrastructure and with a
specific use: public-housing, education or government services.
Treating WIFI as a utility for police, fire and other municipal
needs. Technology now can create an efficient and functional
separation of service. A lower cost of municipal service makes them
more efficient, and supports the WIFI initiative.
http://www.betanews.com/article/Philadelphia-WiFi-project-now-in-jeopardy-EarthLink-may-back-out/1195487302
16. public wi-fi 2.0
Lessons learned include realistic expectations.
Foster more realistic expectations, proposing smaller networks that
can be expanded later. Wi-Fi may not be free at the out-set. Dont
underestimate the cost of un-wiring a network and over-estimate the
revenues you can generate..
Local government to act as anchor tenants" -- or clients -- for the
network, ensuring a stream of revenues to the provider from the
start. Once EMS are solidly using the WLAN for evidence grade video
for instance, and other security applications, expansion can take
place.
Find ways of being more flexible about how providers can price
their service.
A new approach a holistic mandate uniting policy, technology, the
community and the individual user
For example: To support specific community initiatives with pockets
of free WIFI, utilizing new Mesh technology and existing
infrastructure to create a public/private hot-spots. Use pro-active
Managed Services to provide key security and real-time remote and
on-site support to ensure a continuous, high-performance user
experience.
http://wirelesstoronto.ca/blog/2006/08/03/nonprofit-approach-for-city-wifi-boston/#more-47
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122840941903779747.html
17. technology
Wi-Fi Mesh still appears to be a multi-layer approach between
real-world existing technologies.
Private / public spectrum (2.4 GHz, 5.x GHz and 4.9 GHz) can now
co-exist on the same Access Point but the benchmark in quality and
viability will be around providing seamless voice and video
quality.
Technology is still competing for primacy
Wi-fi 802.11 a/b/g/n largest group of client. Lap-tops and
smart-phones drive the continue growth of Wi-fi hot-spots
WiMax 802.16e now growing due to WiMax/ Wi-Fi chipset being offered
by Intel in high end lap-tops. No longer a back-haul technology,
major US players are adopting WiMax/Wi-Fi
Strategies with a few cities offering USB dongles. Landscape may
change radically if the iPhone moves to WiMax.
Femto Cells cellular technology in an access point, the concept is
still under-development. Femto will make strong in-roads in Asia
and Europe by 2012; but its perception as a disruptive play may
stall in adoption in North America.
Cellular as primary and Wi-Fi as the secondary layer, with emerging
WiMax is the main approach to creating a Mesh environment. Data
speeds at 20MB with 300MB back-haul to wired can be
expected.
18. technology
Technology issues still existwith a matrix of players combining
different
radios, antennas and software to improve the mesh experience
Hidden Node interfering clients causing disruptions
Performance degradation through hops packet degradation with each
hop or node must be anticipated and solution-engineered
Maximum number of clients Performance availability for a large # of
clients in a given area, increases infrastructure costs
Spectral Interference on-going issues with other radio frequency
interference
WLAN Technology Leaders and Mesh offerings:
BelAir - WiMAX 802.16e base station, a Wi-Fi access point, and a
DOCSIS cable modem
Nortel - IEEE 801.11b/g WLAN standards operating in the 2.4 GHz
band. The transit link (TL) radio sub-system is based on the IEEE
802.11a standard operating in the bands at 5.740 - 5.840 and 5.4
GHz in release 2.0.
Cisco - 2.4 GHz frequency and the 5 GHz band to backhaul
traffic
Meraki 802.11 b/g outdoor with solar mesh repeaters
Aruba - 2.4 GHz frequency and the 5 GHz band to backhaul
traffic
Motorola - 2.4 GHz and 5.x GHz radios that support a 3X3 MIMO
(Multiple Input Multiple Output) scheme
Stritx -802.11 a/b/g/n, 4 radios, WiMax and 4.9 Ghz
compatible
19. security
Security will be a critical issuewith millions of devices
scanning
the wireless air-waves with ever increasing sophistication.
The best mobile Wi-Fi scanner comes to the iPhone. WiFiFoFum scans
for 802.11 wireless networks and displays information about each
network it detects, including: SSID, MAC, RSSI (signal strength),
channel, AP mode, security mode and transmission rates. The radar
display provides a graphical representation of nearby WiFi access
points.Version 1.21 includes ability to save passwords, option to
view strength icon, and includes bug fixes.
for secure networks we have WPA2, which has not been fully
hacked
IEEE 802.11i (also known as WPA2) itself was ratified in June 2004,
and uses government strength encryption in the Advanced Encryption
Standard AES, instead of RC4, which was used in WEP.
19
20. Use network intrusion detection systems, host-based
intrusion detection systems, and/or intrusion prevention systems to
monitor all network traffic and alert personnel to suspected
compromises. Keep all intrusion detection and prevention engines up
to date.
PCI Standard
Section 11.4
security
A private/public Mesh network can use sensor networks
to provide a very high degree of security
200+ Threats Detected
Reconnaissance & Probing
21. Various DoS Attacks
22. Identity Theft, Malicious Association
23. Dictionary Attacks
24. Security Policy Violations
25. Clear-text Leakage
Minimal False Positives
Correlation across multiple detection engines reduces false
positives
26. Most accurate attack detection
Day Zero Attacks
Anomalous behavior engines ensure protection against all Day
Zero / unknown attacks
click generation the long tail on-line social media web 2.0
visualization mobility transformation shiftBell Wireless
20
27. applications
Many possible applications for municipal wireless.
Meter reading
Video applications
(Perimeter security, event monitoring,
Voice over IP
Asset Tracking
(Wi-Fi based rugged tags,
Geo-fenced assets in Wi-Fi foot-print)
Field workers / health care workers
Police and Fire EMS
Disaster Recovery
Pandemic Planning
Video Surveillance
Sensor networks for utilities
(power outage detection)
Fixed Mobile Convergence
(dual-mode devices can
now detach from cellular and retain PBX call)
28. infrastructure
Technology ideally positioned to provide a full gamut of public
Wi-Fi solutions
one size does not fit all municipalities must consider user-group
and environment centric solutions
Wireless Controllers expanding value-add:
Location-based asset management, as well as location-based
context-oriented applications
Role provisioning guest access administration for wired and
wireless guest identity management
Policy and resource management
Intelligent roaming for mobile unified communications (UC)
installations (multicast)
802.11 N adoption (greater bandwidth)
MESH capabilities (outdoor strategy)
29.
best practices
Its important to...
Eliminate FAT legacy APs not suitable for multi-media applications,
poor roaming capability
Perform LAN / WAN readiness assessment to meet IP requirements
(latency, video server, PBX compliance)
Ensure separate VLANs and network segments for wireless traffic,
esp. for VoIP
Always perform a full site survey and spectral analysis to optimize
AP placement and detect interference
Look for a tuned antenna strategy (low gain vs. high gain
,directional vs. omni)
Understand your bandwidth requirements user profiles, application
requirements, usage patterns. Bring application vendors to the
table and set-up pre-production environment
What can your controller really manage? automated power and channel
control, APs strategies in dense use areas, set parameters for
managing heterogeneous clients
Understand legacy WLAN management application is it scalable? Can
it provide global control?
Review corporate security policy VPN termination, 802.1x etc
Include hardware and support maintenance plan a must from the
start.
Scope out a test proof of concept in pre-production with mixed
high-bandwidth apps: voice + data +video
30. tech drivers
Mobility, the Cloud and Geo-Location
One Year or Less Mobility
A single portable device to perform all functions in WIFI or
cellular footprint. Running 3rd party applications (like App Store)
that can be used for education and social interaction and roam
seamlessly in other words true Fixed Mobile Convergence.
One Year or Less Cloud Computing
The emergence of data farms has created a surplus of computing
capability. Development platforms once expensive will now be very
low cost enabling thin mobile clients to process any on the web.
The cloud will fundamentally change the idea of infrastructure and
distributed processing.
Two to Three Years Geo-Location Technology
Plotting and visualization technologies will become the de facto
tag of the future for all web-based data and media. This will
greatly increase storage, computing and application sophistication.
Caching of media and annotations attached to any web-based
application will become an ever-increasing requirement as
information on the internet becomes ultra-cross referenced and
semantic in nature.
.
Source: The Horizon Report 2009 Educause Learning
Initiative
31. stats
Business use of Wi-Fi hotspots grows by 46%, 3G use increases by
59%
iPass released the latest edition of its Mobile Broadband Index
which shows that business use of Wi-Fi hotspots (in the iPass
network) grew by 46% between the first half of 2007 and the first
half of 2008. 3G data use in the US increased by 59% between Q2
2007 and Q2 2008. Please note that the statistics come from the
iPass hotspot network; until recently, the iPass service was open
only to enterprises (as opposed to Boingos, which is open to
everyone), so the numbers reflect business use of Wi-Fi.
Other interesting findings:
(1) For the first time, in the first half of 2008 European business
use of Wi-Fi exceeded that of the US; it
now accounts for 47% of global use of Wi-Fi, up from 36% in 2007;
70% of the growth in worldwide Wi-Fi
use came from Europe. There are more Wi-Fi hotspots in Europe
(50,000 locations) than in the US (25,000);
usage pattern in Europe is different: European business people use
Wi-Fi to avoid data and voice roaming
charges; countries showing top Wi-Fi use: UK, Germany, France,
Switzerland, Netherlands.
(2) Airports account for 40% of Wi-Fi use, followed by hotels (34%)
and cafes/retail locations (26%).
in airports, average length of a session is 40 minutes, hotels 167
minutes, cafes 68 minutes;
average of the above three is 90 minutes. Top five airports in
Wi-Fi use: Chicago OHare, Atlanta,
Heathrow, Dallas, San Francisco, Minneapolis, Frankfurt, Schiphol
(Amsterdam) and Charles de Gaulle
Paris).
http://www.ipass.com/pressroom/pressroom_wifi.html
32. stats
Business use of Wi-Fi hotspots grows by 46%, 3G use increases by
59% - contd
(4) 3G broadband use in the US has also grown dramatically, up 59%
from last year (the average number of megabytes consumed per use is
211 megabytes per month). A small number of users consumes 1
gigabyte or more per month (possibly because they use it in lieu of
a DSL or cable connection) but their number more than doubled from
2007 to 2008. If more people use data hungry applications on 3G
networks, the operators will need to increase capacity
dramatically. The number of sessions on a 3G network increased from
74% (Q2 2007) to 86% (Q2 2008);
number of sessions on a 2.5G network decreased from 26% to 14% in
the same period.
The statistics show that more people have 3G phones and the 2.5G
networks are slowly being upgraded in the US.
(5) Use of Wi-Fi in train stations and other public transport
locations grew 110% between 2007 and 2008 with London city train
stations showing the largest number of sessions followed by Japan
Rails network. The Seattle Washington Ferry system came in third,
followed by Heathrow Express trains.
(6) Most dramatic growth in usage occurred in public hotspots such
as business parks and city centers. Use in these locations grew by
over 500%, with average session length of almost 3 hours. Cafes
were still the largest in the retail category but growth slowed to
18% (saturation, perhaps).
http://www.ipass.com/pressroom/pressroom_wifi.html
33. stats
Muni Wi-Fi 2.0: smaller targeted networks, flexible business
models
Many people were surprised to learn that in the third quarter of
2008, the iPhone was the best selling phone in the US, beating out
the Motorola RAZR and the Blackberry. iPhone owners have been
sending and receiving massive amounts of data via AT&Ts 3G and
Edge networks. Some claim that the massive data use has contributed
to outages in AT&Ts cellular networks and that AT&Ts recent
moves giving away free Wi-Fi at Starbucks to iPhone users and its
acquisition of Wayport (an operator of Wi-Fi networks in McDonalds
and various hotel chains shows that the company wants more people
to use Wi-Fi more often in lieu of the 3G network.
Business models are also evolving and becoming more flexible. For
some providers of Wi-Fi, its an amenity. Public transport operators
in Europe entice people away from cars, airplanes and their
competitors by giving away Wi-Fi service. Lower end hotel chains
have already been doing this for years. In some cities, Wi-Fi is
not so much a business, as a service to low income families. For
other firms such as iPass and Boingo, who charge their customers a
monthly fee in exchange for access to networks around the world,
the selling point is convenience and ubiquity. iPass goes one step
further: they target enterprise users who are concerned about
security on the networks.
http://www.muniwireless.com/2008/11/19/muni-wifi-smaller-more-targeted-networks/