News From Terre Haute, Indiana

Editorials

February 16, 2012

EDITORIAL: An even better local ‘hotspot’

Agreement will boost city’s downtown wireless offerings

Traditionally, valuable infrastructure is tangible — something you can drive on, walk on or use to achieve basic needs such as moving water or sewage, etc.

But the revolution in information technology has changed the way we look at such things. In fact, you can’t “look at” most high-tech infrastructure at all. There is little to see. Yet it presents an invaluable service that takes communications to new and amazingly productive levels.

Wi-Fi — the term used to describe wireless Internet technology — is among the latest in high-tech infrastructure that is going beyond private usage and into the public realm. It will happen soon in downtown Terre Haute now that the city and Frontier Communications have reached an agreement which will provide the service free of charge — within certain limits — to anyone within set a boundary.

The agreement is a compromise between Frontier and the Board of Public Works. The company initially wanted to use the public traffic signal poles to mount Wi-Fi transmitters for its paid service. The city objected until Frontier then offered to make a free, limited version of the service available for up to 100 users at any one time.

That’s not a bad deal at all. While the free wireless Internet service — a “hotspot” as it’s known — won’t be as robust as the paid service and will have restricted capacity, it still opens a free Internet gateway that encourages people to hang out downtown without relinquishing a connection to the rest of their digital world.

The boundary for the free service will extend as far north as Union Hospital, as far south as Poplar Street and as far east as 10th Street. The western boundary will be at Third Street, but may eventually extend to the Wabash River.

We applaud the city and Frontier for reaching such a people-friendly Wi-Fi agreement. When the free service becomes available, which is expected around Memorial Day, downtown Terre Haute will become an even better place to be.

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