Thu Aug 30, 2007 7:09PM EDT
See Comments (6)
My, it's wonderful to live in one of the most wired cities in America. No FiOS availability and now no public Wi-Fi either: San Francisco's citywide Wi-Fi plan collapsed completely yesterday, following Earthlink's announcement that it would cut half its workforce and shut down its SF offices.
It's yet another frustrating setback in a city notorious for political gridlock. (The biggest public issue today (now that Barry Bonds hit #756) is how to deal with a city supervisor who somehow got elected despite allegedly not actually living in the district he represents (or the city of San Francisco at all, for that matter).)
One philosophy is that this is a blessing in disguise: Saddling San Francisco up to a nag of a company like Earthlink might well have been disastrous. No one really thought Earthlink was capable of building the network it promised, nor managing it once it was built, anyway. Earthlink's existing projects in Philadelphia and Anaheim, says SFGate, "have not produced expected profits." Chicago's similar plan was also canceled recently, and Houston's looks like it will get killed next.
What happens now? Mayor Gavin Newsom (pictured) says its back to the drawing board. In November voters will be able to vote whether they support free Internet access in the city, something which a) will pass absurdly easily and b) I would have thought was figured out years ago. You know, before the city got into bed with Earthlink in the first place.
Previously: Is Public Wi-Fi Heading Out to Pasture?
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
If the voters vote a landslide for "free Wi-Fi" who do they think will pay for it? California loves to first in everything...as long as someone else takes care of the bill.
They should just hire Google to do it...
Correct me if I'm wrong but I think google was in fact on board with this SF wifi plan. It's just that it was merely a partner with Earthlink as opposed to plans to become a full provider. I'm not even sure if Google can even provide internet access like Comcast or Yahoo.
I guess I missed the section in the Constitution (federal or state) or city charter where it says everyone has a right to free govt-supplied WiFi...
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1 Posted by somebodys_here on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:32PM EDT Report Abuse
Who didn't see this coming? anyone? nobody at all? alrighty then, I guess Earthlink isn't going anywhere productive in he future.