Thanks to Simon who linked this clip in his friendfeed. It’s part 4 of a 5 part series of the closing keynote of Webdirections South 2007 so, while it’s not new news – it’s a good clip worth the watch.
Comments?
Thanks to Simon who linked this clip in his friendfeed. It’s part 4 of a 5 part series of the closing keynote of Webdirections South 2007 so, while it’s not new news – it’s a good clip worth the watch.
Comments?
Cheers to Neil who pointed me toward this article in the Wellington Publication ‘Capital Times’.
It’s great to see these inititives getting some air time (if you’ll excuse the pun) and the co-ordinator of the group Mike Pearson interviews very well on the subject, the passion is obvious and I would hope that, on reading the article, more Wellingtonians get behind TheFreeNet and get themselves involved.
A well balanced article which extoles the virtues of ubiqutious connectivity, and also covers the realities that there are some abusers out there who will take advantage of others generosity (aren’t there Mr “I’ve leeched close on a Gb of data from your access point in a month” who got himself blocked from my node last night). The closing quote in the article summerises this viewpoint perfectly for me.
“It’s like the postal service – people use it for good and bad. We believe there are more good people in New Zealand than bad.”
What say you? – Are you ready to share your unused bandwidth with the community? Are you prepared/able to monitor usage and administer leechers?
The Sydney Morning herald has this report on the group behind the Free Sydney Wireless group on Facebook which briefly covers their origins and calls out to the community to let the writer know of similar inititives both in Australia and elsewhere. It’s not new news, but nonetheless, repetition of past stories serves it’s purpose to reinforce the desire to have such services available.
The opening quote probably parallels feelings the world over:
With Telstra and Optus looking like they were never going to get their act together, someone else was always going to.
The reason perhaps is that these publicly listed companies are required to return a profit to their shareholders, they are not charitable trusts. Because of this I would imagine that any official and large scale support for a service with little to no chance of returning any revenue would obviously be a long time in coming so, it really is incumbent on the community to ‘give a little for the greater good’ and perhaps then we may see the big companies lending a little support.
Hope for this corporate support is not such a long bow to draw as, something along these lines has happened in Franklin Road, Ponsonby in Auckland every Christmas for quite a few years. As I understand it, the residents of Franklin Road started decorating their houses with Christmas lights, it became something of a neighbourhood competition and, after awhile the local electricity supplier came to the party to help fund the power that these magnificent displays used. Franklin Road has now become a staple in our Christmas diet with us loading the kids into the car and doing a drive by for the last 4 years to see the displays.
Do you think something similar may happen to the WiFi project(s)?
About 2 years ago we came across the Meraki equipment as part of some research we were doing and were excited by the possibilities it presented.
Since that time, Meraki has become more ‘mainstream’ and there are a number of groups looking at the technology for similar projects. It was a topic of discussion at the 2008 FooCamp in Warkworth, NZ. There is also a Wellington based group called TheFreeNet
I want to be clear that I don’t want to splinter support for open access wireless in New Zealand, so this group is intended as a starting point for discussion – let’s see where we can take it.
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