How Will Muni-WiFi Impact Retail WiFi?
from the changing-times dept
We've noted in the past how bread maker Panera bread was quite happy with the results of its free WiFi offering, claiming that it improved business -- bringing in more customers and having them stay longer, especially during off-peak hours. That was a claim that was seen over and over again with early efforts at retail WiFi. However, times are changing in a variety of interesting ways. First, as more people have WiFi-enabled laptops and devices, suddenly what was just filling in the slow times means that some retail establishments are now getting upset at overcrowding by the laptop crowd. We noted this last year when one Seattle coffee shop decided it had had enough and simply turned off the free WiFi on weekends. Now, however, comes a report that Panera, one of the champions of free WiFi, may be turning off free WiFi during peak hours in order to keep the connected crew from clogging up the seating. It's unclear if this is a Panera-wide policy, or something that was just instituted at this one location. However, as the writer points out, the city of Santa Monica, where this took place, is offering free muni-WiFi in the same area -- meaning that turning off the WiFi won't necessarily stop people from connecting (though, it also means people can go to other nearby places and still use WiFi as well). This could raise some questions about how all of these muni-WiFi efforts will impact the various coffee shops and other retail establishments that have been using free WiFi to attract more business.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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muni wifi is awsome, too bad i dont have it, i might move to the city of fruits berries and alot of nuts(san fran) to get it, cuz personally cable is over expensie(i use it) and sbc....absolutely no comment, read up on their execs...
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I suspect that that is the real problem (informed) politicians have with open wifi. We are to the point that a (non-tech) person is no longer anonymous on the internet. When you have open wifi connections everywhere then you are no longer able to track down who did what (that virus didn't come from one of my machines - it must have come from my open wifi). I suppose they could hold the person who owns the connection responsible, but given the reaction to that so far...
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You don't see popular restaurants offering specials at 8pm on Saturday, but go to the restaurant at 6pm on Tuesday and most savvy restaurateurs will have a prixe fix special.
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