Here's a little trick that works at some airports, and only with recent Apple computers that have the Airport wireless networking cards (and no, I don't think this is why they named it "Airport"). Seat yourself near one of those airline company "lounges" (e.g., Admirals Club, etc., the ones for which one pays an arm and a leg to join). Turn on the Airport networking function and let it scan for a signal. If it finds one, change your TCP/IP settings to DHCP, and you'll be on the Internet (much as we were able to be in Minneapolis thanks to Apple's help). Sometimes this works near Internet kiosks and restaurants that provide wireless connections. It works in other locations too, see this article at Slashdot: http://slashdot.org/articles/01/08/15/0150255.shtml Sj At 2:36 PM -0400 10/19/01, Jennifer Stromer-Galley wrote:
I have noticed few Internet Cafes per se, but as Brian Newberry points out, rooms or places where people can take their laptop and connect up. Indeed, when I was passing time in the MSP airport before flying home on Monday, I noticed that in the food court I was eating at, there was a telephone jack, that if I had a modem attached to my laptop, I could dial into my ISP. It was fairly innocuous, and if I hadn't been sitting right in front of the jack, I would not have noticed it.
A friend of mine worked for a company developing Internet kiosks at airports, where with the swipe of a credit card, a person could access the Web for 10 minutes at a time. His company went out of business after rolling out Kiosks in 3 cities' airports. The cost of the Kiosks themselves, the red tape at the airports, the cost of installing the fiber optics in the terminals, led to their demise (along with the drying up of venture capital . . . .).
It does seem to me that in this new age of air travel (with longer stays in the airports themselves before boarding) that Internet Cafes (where the Cafe offers jacks for those with laptops and computers for those who do not) would be quite popular.
~Jenny Stromer-Galley
Annenberg School for Communication University of Pennsylvania jstromer@asc.upenn.edu
-----Original Message----- From: Newberry, Brian Wayne [mailto:bnewberry@ku.edu] Sent: Friday, October 19, 2001 12:20 PM To: 'air-l@aoir.org' Subject: [Air-l] Internet Cafes in Airports
I too have done a fair bit of traveling in the past year or two and have noticed a lack of Internet Access in airports. I have never seen an Internet Cafe in an airport but several I have been to have had some sort of Internet access.
Specifically, Salt Lake City Utah has little rooms you can rent with computers and Internet access. Several airports I have been in have had Internet kiosks. I think Chicago is one airport with this system.
All of these require a credit card to use which can be a drawback. I would also think that the coffee shop atmosphere of a cafe would be a welcome addition to the process of communicating.
Ulla, can I invest?
Brian Newberry University of Kansas
<snip> Message: 10 From: "Bunz, Ulla K" <ulla@ukans.edu> To: "'air-l@aoir.org' '" <air-l@aoir.org> Date: Thu, 18 Oct 2001 19:42:05 -0500 Subject: [Air-l] internet cafes
In the last three months, I've traveled a bit. I've been at the following airports: Kansas City, Minneapolis, Dallas/Ft. Worth, Seattle, Newark, Frankfurt (Germany), Cologne (Germany), Amsterdam (Netherlands), and Stavanger (Norway). I'm also familiar with airports in major cities such as Munich, Brussels, London, Atlanta, Chicago, Los Angeles, Sydney, and Auckland.
And yet, at all these airports, one thing is missing.
How come I can't remember seeing any Internet Cafes in any of these airports?
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