The San Jose City Council is set to vote today on whether to seek proposals to expand areas of free wireless Internet access downtown.
However, San Jose has no plans at this point to follow the lead of San Francisco and other cities and provide free wireless access throughout the city. That apparently is because of opposition from so-called ``stakeholders,'' including business leaders as well as providers of fee-based high-speed Internet access services.
The proposed expansion would bring free wireless Internet, or WiFi, connections to the city's parks and public libraries as well as to several downtown corridors including First Street from William to Santa Clara streets; Santa Clara Street from Seventh Street to Highway 87; South Almaden Boulevard from Santa Clara Street to Woz Way; and a swath just west of Highway 87.
The city already operates free WiFi areas, or hotspots, at San Pedro Square, Plaza de Cesar Chavez and Circle of the Palms. At these locations, people can log onto the Internet for free, as long as their laptops have special hardware to pick up the Internet signals, which are transmitted via radio waves. The existing hotspots were installed in March 2004 and serve an average of 75 people a day, according to a city staff report.
With today's vote, San Jose steps further into what has become a sometimes controversial policy debate. Over the past few years, cities across America -- including Philadelphia and Cedar Rapids, Iowa -- have proposed city-operated Internet services. They sometimes have met strong resistance from cable and phone companies, which view these efforts as competition and an unnecessary increase in government bureaucracy.
Supporters of municipally owned wireless networks argue that delivering Internet access to every citizen should be of the same priority as delivering utilities like water and electricity.
If the city council decides to launch a formal request for proposals, companies will be invited to submit written plans for bringing WiFi to those areas.
It is not yet clear how fast an Internet connection the city would require for its expanded hotspots, or what technology it hopes to install. In August, San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom made an official call for companies to submit suggestions on how to bring WiFi to the entire 49-square-mile city, and specified a rate of 1 megabit per second, slightly faster than conventional DSL.
Internet search giant Google has offered to install a WiFi network in San Francisco at no cost, as has Mountain View's MetroFi, which operates citywide WiFi networks -- available for a monthly fee -- in Santa Clara and Cupertino.
Chris Sacca, Google's head of new business development, said Google was not aware of the San Jose proposal and has no plans at this time to get involved in any city initiative other than San Francisco's.
``But it's exciting for us to see other cities embracing the idea of providing Internet access to everyone,'' Sacca said.
In advance of today's vote, the city's Information Technology Department asked for input on WiFi from ``stakeholders,'' including downtown businesses, neighborhood business districts, airport officials and media opinion writers, as well as existing providers of high-speed Internet access such as SBC and Comcast.
The stakeholders seemed disinclined to launch an initiative as ambitious as San Francisco's, according to a staff report.
``They didn't think it was right for the city to use city funds to try to blanket the entire city,'' said John Bjurman, chief information officer of the IT Department. ``They felt it is really the realm of private industry to do that function.''
The city estimates that expanding its free WiFi hotspots will cost an estimated $100,000, which could come from the General Purpose Parking Fund and the Redevelopment Agency.
San Jose's Information Technology Department states that having larger areas of WiFi access downtown could greatly enhance city events such as the Zero-One technology festival, scheduled for August 2006, and the 2006 Grand Prix race.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/sv/20051025/tc_siliconvalley/_www12992088;_ylt=AuLA7NxTmaCJRkfE3kB5_lMjtBAF;_ylu=X3oDMTA5aHJvMDdwBHNlYwN5bmNhdA--
However, San Jose has no plans at this point to follow the lead of San Francisco and other cities and provide free wireless access throughout the city. That apparently is because of opposition from so-called ``stakeholders,'' including business leaders as well as providers of fee-based high-speed Internet access services.
The proposed expansion would bring free wireless Internet, or WiFi, connections to the city's parks and public libraries as well as to several downtown corridors including First Street from William to Santa Clara streets; Santa Clara Street from Seventh Street to Highway 87; South Almaden Boulevard from Santa Clara Street to Woz Way; and a swath just west of Highway 87.
The city already operates free WiFi areas, or hotspots, at San Pedro Square, Plaza de Cesar Chavez and Circle of the Palms. At these locations, people can log onto the Internet for free, as long as their laptops have special hardware to pick up the Internet signals, which are transmitted via radio waves. The existing hotspots were installed in March 2004 and serve an average of 75 people a day, according to a city staff report.
With today's vote, San Jose steps further into what has become a sometimes controversial policy debate. Over the past few years, cities across America -- including Philadelphia and Cedar Rapids, Iowa -- have proposed city-operated Internet services. They sometimes have met strong resistance from cable and phone companies, which view these efforts as competition and an unnecessary increase in government bureaucracy.
Supporters of municipally owned wireless networks argue that delivering Internet access to every citizen should be of the same priority as delivering utilities like water and electricity.
If the city council decides to launch a formal request for proposals, companies will be invited to submit written plans for bringing WiFi to those areas.
It is not yet clear how fast an Internet connection the city would require for its expanded hotspots, or what technology it hopes to install. In August, San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom made an official call for companies to submit suggestions on how to bring WiFi to the entire 49-square-mile city, and specified a rate of 1 megabit per second, slightly faster than conventional DSL.
Internet search giant Google has offered to install a WiFi network in San Francisco at no cost, as has Mountain View's MetroFi, which operates citywide WiFi networks -- available for a monthly fee -- in Santa Clara and Cupertino.
Chris Sacca, Google's head of new business development, said Google was not aware of the San Jose proposal and has no plans at this time to get involved in any city initiative other than San Francisco's.
``But it's exciting for us to see other cities embracing the idea of providing Internet access to everyone,'' Sacca said.
In advance of today's vote, the city's Information Technology Department asked for input on WiFi from ``stakeholders,'' including downtown businesses, neighborhood business districts, airport officials and media opinion writers, as well as existing providers of high-speed Internet access such as SBC and Comcast.
The stakeholders seemed disinclined to launch an initiative as ambitious as San Francisco's, according to a staff report.
``They didn't think it was right for the city to use city funds to try to blanket the entire city,'' said John Bjurman, chief information officer of the IT Department. ``They felt it is really the realm of private industry to do that function.''
The city estimates that expanding its free WiFi hotspots will cost an estimated $100,000, which could come from the General Purpose Parking Fund and the Redevelopment Agency.
San Jose's Information Technology Department states that having larger areas of WiFi access downtown could greatly enhance city events such as the Zero-One technology festival, scheduled for August 2006, and the 2006 Grand Prix race.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/sv/20051025/tc_siliconvalley/_www12992088;_ylt=AuLA7NxTmaCJRkfE3kB5_lMjtBAF;_ylu=X3oDMTA5aHJvMDdwBHNlYwN5bmNhdA--