Subscribe in NewsGator Online   Subscribe in Bloglines   

Rio Rancho chooses to make Wi-Fi system free

Mar 17, 2006 11:44 AM, By Donny Jackson

Residents of Rio Rancho, N.M., will be able to access the citywide Wi-Fi network for free after the city council this week voted to change the terms of its agreement with service provider Azulstar.

Under the new agreement, Rio Rancho citizens will be able to access the Internet via the Azulstar Wi-Fi network at no cost after viewing a short video commercial upon logging onto the system, Azulstar CEO Tyler van Houwelingen said.

Previously, Rio Rancho residents could use the Azulstar network at low cost and the city received a percentage of Azulstar’s revenues, van Houwelingen said. Under the new agreement, the revenue-sharing arrangement was dissolved and Azulstar will depend solely on targeted advertising-a strategy Google has said it would employ if it wins a municipal Wi-Fi contract in San Francisco-to generate revenues.

“In effect, the city traded revenues for free Internet,” van Houwelingen said.

Rio Rancho residents using the Wi-Fi network for free will access the Internet at speeds of 100 kb/s, but Azulstar can provision greater speeds during the time that the commercial plays, so an advertiser is not limited by bandwidth, van Houwelingen said. Users taking advantage of the free-access offer also will receive limited support from the Azulstar technical staff, he said.

Paid individual users on the network will realize data rates in excess of 1 MB/s, while enterprise customers-including the city of Rio Rancho-will pay for data rates of 3 MB/s. Access to the network currently is limited to 2.4 GHz technologies, but van Houwelingen said Azulstar is conducting tests with the city to prepare for the possibility of deploying a 4.9 GHz network for public safety.

ONLINE SHOWCASE

ONLINE SHOWCASE

Get vendor information in this special online showcase.

WHITE PAPERS

WHITE PAPERS

Download these free public safety white papers from Motorola.

TECH UPDATE

TECH UPDATE

Read this special report on Power over Ethernet.

More from Mobile Data

Essential Reading

A corner turned

Let the buyer beware

When measurements aren't feasible

Verizon, AT&T both plan 2010 launch for LTE networks

Motorola shuffles the deck

Most Popular Articles

Microwave Path Design: The Basics

The Real Life Of Adrian Cronauer

How Project 25 two-slot TDMA works

Bluetooth comes to walkie-talkies

Switching vs. linear power supplies

TECH SPEAK

Browse Back Issues