No July 2008 Meeting

Date Published by Dana Spiegel on July 16, 2008 under News   Comments No Comments »

Most of us are out of town, so unfortunately we won’t be having a this month.


Using Common Sense When Sharing a Wireless Network

Date Published by Dana Spiegel on July 9, 2008 under From the Executive Director   Comments No Comments »

Today I received an email from an NYCwireless supporter about sharing out their organization’s network. I thought it was a general enough request for information that I’d share our viewpoint and suggestions with other NYCwireless readers:

Should we share our password-protected network with a neighbor???

Hi. Thanks for your advocacy.

We recently password-protected our Verizon wireless network. (We were having intermittency issues and this was one of the remedial measures we chose to take.) And we just got a call from someone who’ll be staying in the neighborhood for a few months, asking to share our network for a nominal fee. We are -minded and inclined to oblige such a request, but we are concerned about security breaches, given that we are a professional organization and have sensitive data on our network to protect, etc.

Can you advise as to the potential consequences?

I can recommend that you use common sense here. If you have private/sensitive data on your network, then common sense says you shouldn’t allow people onto the network unless you trust them or you have proper safeguards in place to protect the data even if someone gets access to your network. Such safeguards–disk encryption, strong passwords, moving the data to a computer that isn’t network accessible, segmenting the network so that only wired computers can get access to data on a server–are all good ideas regardless of whether you operate a public network or not.

Further, I doubt that your intermittency issues have any relation to whether your network is password protected or not. Far more likely are sources of interference, which can sometimes be addressed by either (a) moving your access point, or (b) changing the wireless channel of your access point. Putting a password on a network will do nothing to address connectivity issues.

If you are minded, and part of how you want to provide a service to the is to provide a free network to nearby people, I would recommend you put a proper online. We can help you out with that, and your neighbors will be able to access your free and clear of any passwords. Unfortunately, providing a password to a single member isn’t providing a service to your , it’s providing a service to a single person.


Monthly Meeting: Wed. June 25th @ 7pm

Date Published by Dana Spiegel on June 24, 2008 under Events   Comments No Comments »

June 25, 2008
7:00 pmto8:00 pm

Sorry for the late notice!

Bway.net
568 Broadway at Prince St, NE corner
Suite 404
New York, NY 10012
(lobby sign-in required)

Agenda

At our June , we will be talking about all of the recent happenings in the world, including the muni-wireless world.

We’ll also be talking about some new directions for NYCwireless, and are seeing feedback and input from our membership and .

Be sure to come with ideas for what you’d like to see NYCwireless become, and with subjects you’d like to discuss!

Show on map


Excellent documentary on Philadelphia/Earthlink Muni-Wi-Fi network

Date Published by Dana Spiegel on June 14, 2008 under News   Comments Comments Off

George Rausch has filmed an excellent documentary on ’s Muni-wireless network built by . Now that the network has been shut down (as of June 12), its a great time to gain some additional insight into what happened and why (on Philly’s side).



Change is in the Airwaves: A Documentary about the Philadelphia Wireless Initiative from George Rausch on Vimeo.


MNN Hosting OLPC Grassroots Jam

Date Published by Dana Spiegel on June 9, 2008 under News   Comments Comments Off

Forest Mars, from Manhattan Neighborhood Network, is hosting a OLPC Grassroots Jam on June 14 & 15. The Jam will be at Headquarters (537 West 59th Street). Come and help build an innovative new service for users. I’m sure there will be lots of interesting hardware to play with as well!

Now Recruiting for a Pilot In A Box kit team for the Grassroots Jam

One Laptop per Child will be holding a Grassroots Jam at the Manthattan Neighborhood Network studio from Saturday June 14 through Sunday June 15. In two days, we’ll be building a Pilot In A Box kit (focused on integrating XO use into specific curricular modules) and testing it with local children in preparation for deploying the Kit at an actual school pilot within 4 months - stay tuned for more on the specific deployment conditions we’ll be designing for. All materials will be provided.

We’re looking for a 50-person team of educators, content-creators, artists, writers, programmers, engineers, and others who can contribute to a Pilot In A Box kit. In addition to coming up for ways for teachers to use the things inside The Box, we’ll need to figure out (and make) what’s in The Box, how schools will repair equipment from The Box, how The Box is transported and stored, how its content can be localized, how The Box can be used for communication over a diverse set of networks, and more. We are also looking for young testers (ages 7-14, with their parents) to come in and try out the finished products on Sunday afternoon, June 15, from 3-6pm.

Registration is free but space is limited, so we have a rolling admissions process. To view more information, including how you or your group can participate, see http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Grassroots_Jam. We hope to see you there!

About

One Laptop per Child () is a non-profit organization created to design, manufacture, and distribute laptops that are sufficiently inexpensive to provide every child in the world access to knowledge and modern forms of education. The rugged, Linux-based, -networking-enabled, and power-efficient laptops have begun to be deployed to children by schools across the world on the basis of one laptop per child. is based on constructionist theories of learning pioneered by Seymour Papert and later Alan Kay, as well as the principles expressed in Nicholas Negroponte’s Being Digital.


Free Networks Podcast

Date Published by Laura Forlano on June 4, 2008 under News   Comments Comments Off

German techno-political blogger Markus Beckedahl, the founder of Newthinking, interviewed me for a podcast, which is available on Netzpolitik.  The podcast is about the failure of municipal wireless networks to identify sustainable business models and lessons that can be learned from wireless networks such as NYCwireless, Freifunk and Funkfeuer.


IS4CWN 2008 Followup

Date Published by Dana Spiegel on June 4, 2008 under News   Comments Comments Off

Laura Forlano, Joe Plotkin, and I went to the International Summit for Community Wireless Networks in Washington, D.C. last week, and (as usual) it was a great experience. We saw Commissioner Adelstein speak, and had lots of great conversations (many over beer) with a number of other CWN folks that came to the conference.

Of particular note was the significant forward progress that is being made to create a simple, unified router (built on OpenWRT, , and ). We’ve got a bunch of test units and will be trying it out soon.

Steven Mansour has posted a great slideshow of the conference, and there are plenty of Flickr photos and Twitter posts.


Earthlink Leaves Philly, Network to Go Away

Date Published by Dana Spiegel on May 13, 2008 under News   Comments 1 Comment »

today announced that they are discontinuing their muni-wireless network. Apparently, the company has been trying to work with the city and Wireless (the non-profit formed by the city originally to manage the network) to transition the wireless network assets and maintain its operation.

Those discussions have fallen apart, and now has notified customers that its decomissioning the network entirely, and removing all of the equipment.

So the poster-child of Muni-wireless is now back at square one.

Josh Breitbart has good coverage about the happenings in , and through New America Foundation released an excellent report on the subject, “The Philadelphia Story: Learning from a Municipal Wireless Pioneer”.

What does this say about muni-wireless in general?

Certainly, Philadelphians will need to find alternative broadband options, and the free public-space hotspots will be going away, taking away a valuable public resource for the city.

But the single most important lesson from this experience is that single-source solutions for muni-networks are a bad idea. If Wireless followed their founding purpose instead of being tempted into a devil’s bargain with to hand over the entirety of the network to the company, the story today would be very different. Wireless , which would have owned the network and contracted out its building and operations, would merely need to find a new partner to take over those roles. The city’s network would continue on, and users would have experienced few, if any, hiccups in service.

Instead, the network will now be disassembled and all of the work done over the past few years by the non-profit was for naught. People currently using the network (including a number of low-income families) will be left without a broadband connection, and Wireless will have to go back to the drawing board and come up with an alternative solution for bridging the , a process that will likely take months, if not years.

Contrast with Boston’s approach. In an insightful report, the Boston Wireless Task Force sketched out a plan for creating 2 competitive marketplaces that will drive the creation of the city-wide muni-wireless network. On one side, a number of infrastructure providers will all provide last mile networks, each within a different part of the city. Those networks will all wind up funnelling thorugh an network exchange managed by the Wireless Boston non-profit. On the other side, ISPs (and any other organization) will be able to purchase transport on the last-mile wireless network at competitive prices, and provide customers with a choice of companies from which to purchase retail wireless ISP service. Enabling all of this interconnectivity are standards-based hardware and software interfaces, and common routing and management interfaces.

In Boston, if an infrastructure provider exists the business, another company can step in an take over the operations of that part of the network–one that is likely already providing service in another part of the city. If an ISP decides to stop reselling the wireless network, there will be other ISPs who can provide service.

Looking back, its hard to miss the fact that chose the worst path. They had the option, early on, of taking a more Boston-like approach, but instead opted for a short term political win at the expense of a lasting solution. In reality, ’s muni-wireless network, if they choose to rebuild it, will likely cost even more than it would have if they took a more progressive approach from the beginning. And its not lost on anyone that ’s Wireless Task Force recommended a more competitive and holistic approach similar to (though different in certain ways) Wireless Boston’s current approach.